Cai Xuqing, Coletti Mark A, Sholl David S, Allen-Dumas Melissa R
School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia 30332, United States.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, 1 Bethel Valley Road. Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831, United States.
JACS Au. 2024 May 1;4(5):1883-1891. doi: 10.1021/jacsau.4c00082. eCollection 2024 May 27.
The cost and efficiency of direct air capture (DAC) of carbon dioxide (CO) will be decisive in determining whether this technology can play a large role in decarbonization. To probe the role of meteorological conditions on DAC we examine, at 1 × 1° resolution for the continental United States (U.S.), the impacts of temperature, humidity, atmospheric pressure, and CO concentration for a representative amine-based adsorption process. Spatial and temporal variations in atmospheric pressure and CO concentration lead to strong variations in the CO available in ambient air across the U.S. The specific DAC process that we examine is described by a process model that accounts for both temperature and humidity. A process that assumes the same operating choices at all locations in the continental U.S. shows strong variations in performance, with the most influential variables being the HO gas phase volume fraction and temperature, both of which are negatively correlated with DAC productivity for the specific process that we consider. The process also shows a moderate positive correlation of ambient CO with productivity and recovery. We show that optimizing the DAC process at seven representative locations to reflect temporal and spatial variations in ambient conditions significantly improves the process performance and, more importantly, would lead to different choices in the sites for the best performance than models based on a single set of process conditions. Our work provides a framework for assessing spatial variations in DAC performance that could be applied to any DAC process and indicates that these variations will have important implications in optimizing and siting DAC facilities.
二氧化碳(CO₂)直接空气捕获(DAC)的成本和效率将对该技术能否在脱碳过程中发挥重要作用起到决定性作用。为探究气象条件对DAC的作用,我们在美国大陆以1×1°分辨率研究了温度、湿度、大气压力和CO₂浓度对一种代表性胺基吸附过程的影响。大气压力和CO₂浓度的时空变化导致美国各地环境空气中可利用的CO₂存在强烈差异。我们所研究的特定DAC过程由一个考虑了温度和湿度的过程模型描述。一个假设在美国大陆所有地点都采用相同操作选择的过程表现出性能上的强烈差异,其中最具影响力的变量是H₂O气相体积分数和温度,对于我们所考虑的特定过程,这两个变量都与DAC生产率呈负相关。该过程还显示出环境CO₂与生产率和回收率之间存在适度的正相关。我们表明,在七个代表性地点优化DAC过程以反映环境条件的时空变化,可显著提高过程性能,更重要的是,与基于单一过程条件集的模型相比,这将导致在性能最佳的地点选择上有所不同。我们的工作提供了一个评估DAC性能空间变化的框架,该框架可应用于任何DAC过程,并表明这些变化将对优化DAC设施选址具有重要意义。