Effect of Temperature and CO2 Flowrate on the Formation of CaCO3 in the Hydration Reaction of CO2 Catalyzed by Immobilized Carbonic anhydrase into PVDF Membrane

CO2 conversion to mitigate CO2 emissions is of great importance to reduce the negative impact of CO2 on climate change. Different technologies have been developed for CO2 conversion, including chemical, photocatalytic, electrochemical, and biological transformation. Among them, biological conversion...

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Published in:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Main Author: Abdullah S.N.; Hamzah F.; Husain N.C.; Veny H.; Rodhi M.N.M.; Mohidem N.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Italian Association of Chemical Engineering - AIDIC 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85183503051&doi=10.3303%2fCET23106170&partnerID=40&md5=539a864f4b75519c8ed65f0362e64546
id 2-s2.0-85183503051
spelling 2-s2.0-85183503051
Abdullah S.N.; Hamzah F.; Husain N.C.; Veny H.; Rodhi M.N.M.; Mohidem N.A.
Effect of Temperature and CO2 Flowrate on the Formation of CaCO3 in the Hydration Reaction of CO2 Catalyzed by Immobilized Carbonic anhydrase into PVDF Membrane
2023
Chemical Engineering Transactions
106

10.3303/CET23106170
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85183503051&doi=10.3303%2fCET23106170&partnerID=40&md5=539a864f4b75519c8ed65f0362e64546
CO2 conversion to mitigate CO2 emissions is of great importance to reduce the negative impact of CO2 on climate change. Different technologies have been developed for CO2 conversion, including chemical, photocatalytic, electrochemical, and biological transformation. Among them, biological conversion by using Carbonic anhydrase (CA) to efficiently convert CO2 to HCO3– is a promising one, owing to its high specificity and selectivity under the mild condition and presenting environmentally friendly nature. The production of CO2 hydrates requires relatively high pressures and low temperatures, to make these applications feasible. However, free CA unable to withstand with too extreme temperature and pressure. Thus, the present work was conducted with the aim to determine the optimum parameter in the CO2 hydration using immobilized CA. In this research, CO2 hydrate were formed using CaCl biomimetic solution with an immobilized CA into PDVF membrane. Temperature variation from 30 to 85 °C and CO2 flowrate from 100 – 800 mL/min were evaluated for the CO2 hydration process. Time taken to reach pH 7 and the amount of CaCO3 precipitate formed during the process were used to elucidate the performance of the CO2 hydration process. The finding indicated that temperature plays an important role in reducing time taken for pH 7 to be reached. At 30 °C, 16 min was required for the CO2 hydration process and reaction time was decreased with the increasing of the temperature. At higher temperature of 85 °C, 3.4 min was recorded as an optimum time for the pH to turn to 7. Similar trend was observed with increasing of CO2 flowrate. Higher CO2 flowrate has shorter the time for the reaction to occur and 3 to 4 min was recorded as an optimum time for CO2 hydration process in the CO2 membrane reactor. This work might help comprehend CO2 hydrate storage technology, in separation of CO2 from methane gas and could give theoretical basis for subsequent applications in the sector. Copyright © 2023, AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
Italian Association of Chemical Engineering - AIDIC
22839216
English
Article

author Abdullah S.N.; Hamzah F.; Husain N.C.; Veny H.; Rodhi M.N.M.; Mohidem N.A.
spellingShingle Abdullah S.N.; Hamzah F.; Husain N.C.; Veny H.; Rodhi M.N.M.; Mohidem N.A.
Effect of Temperature and CO2 Flowrate on the Formation of CaCO3 in the Hydration Reaction of CO2 Catalyzed by Immobilized Carbonic anhydrase into PVDF Membrane
author_facet Abdullah S.N.; Hamzah F.; Husain N.C.; Veny H.; Rodhi M.N.M.; Mohidem N.A.
author_sort Abdullah S.N.; Hamzah F.; Husain N.C.; Veny H.; Rodhi M.N.M.; Mohidem N.A.
title Effect of Temperature and CO2 Flowrate on the Formation of CaCO3 in the Hydration Reaction of CO2 Catalyzed by Immobilized Carbonic anhydrase into PVDF Membrane
title_short Effect of Temperature and CO2 Flowrate on the Formation of CaCO3 in the Hydration Reaction of CO2 Catalyzed by Immobilized Carbonic anhydrase into PVDF Membrane
title_full Effect of Temperature and CO2 Flowrate on the Formation of CaCO3 in the Hydration Reaction of CO2 Catalyzed by Immobilized Carbonic anhydrase into PVDF Membrane
title_fullStr Effect of Temperature and CO2 Flowrate on the Formation of CaCO3 in the Hydration Reaction of CO2 Catalyzed by Immobilized Carbonic anhydrase into PVDF Membrane
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Temperature and CO2 Flowrate on the Formation of CaCO3 in the Hydration Reaction of CO2 Catalyzed by Immobilized Carbonic anhydrase into PVDF Membrane
title_sort Effect of Temperature and CO2 Flowrate on the Formation of CaCO3 in the Hydration Reaction of CO2 Catalyzed by Immobilized Carbonic anhydrase into PVDF Membrane
publishDate 2023
container_title Chemical Engineering Transactions
container_volume 106
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.3303/CET23106170
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85183503051&doi=10.3303%2fCET23106170&partnerID=40&md5=539a864f4b75519c8ed65f0362e64546
description CO2 conversion to mitigate CO2 emissions is of great importance to reduce the negative impact of CO2 on climate change. Different technologies have been developed for CO2 conversion, including chemical, photocatalytic, electrochemical, and biological transformation. Among them, biological conversion by using Carbonic anhydrase (CA) to efficiently convert CO2 to HCO3– is a promising one, owing to its high specificity and selectivity under the mild condition and presenting environmentally friendly nature. The production of CO2 hydrates requires relatively high pressures and low temperatures, to make these applications feasible. However, free CA unable to withstand with too extreme temperature and pressure. Thus, the present work was conducted with the aim to determine the optimum parameter in the CO2 hydration using immobilized CA. In this research, CO2 hydrate were formed using CaCl biomimetic solution with an immobilized CA into PDVF membrane. Temperature variation from 30 to 85 °C and CO2 flowrate from 100 – 800 mL/min were evaluated for the CO2 hydration process. Time taken to reach pH 7 and the amount of CaCO3 precipitate formed during the process were used to elucidate the performance of the CO2 hydration process. The finding indicated that temperature plays an important role in reducing time taken for pH 7 to be reached. At 30 °C, 16 min was required for the CO2 hydration process and reaction time was decreased with the increasing of the temperature. At higher temperature of 85 °C, 3.4 min was recorded as an optimum time for the pH to turn to 7. Similar trend was observed with increasing of CO2 flowrate. Higher CO2 flowrate has shorter the time for the reaction to occur and 3 to 4 min was recorded as an optimum time for CO2 hydration process in the CO2 membrane reactor. This work might help comprehend CO2 hydrate storage technology, in separation of CO2 from methane gas and could give theoretical basis for subsequent applications in the sector. Copyright © 2023, AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
publisher Italian Association of Chemical Engineering - AIDIC
issn 22839216
language English
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