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Published byJoel Bradley Modified over 9 years ago
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Introducing carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) to the University of Southampton Lindsay-Marie Armstrong Research Fellow Rm 1051, Building 25 Highfield Southampton SO17 1BJ L.Armstrong@soton.ac.uk
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Why is CCS needed? What is global warming? Increase in average global temperatures which can lead to a change in the climate. Key indicators that the world is warming up include: The what’s and why’s.. What is CCS? CCS involves the extraction and storage of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emissions from industrial processes somewhere other than the atmosphere. Increased global dependence on energy requires technologies to be developed that not only reduce CO 2 emissions but maintain current levels of energy production. CO 2 extraction is considered the future mitigating method to prevent global warming but needs to be thoroughly researched before it can be fully accepted as a long term solution. (Source: NOAA)NOAA (Source: NOAA)NOAA Natural events and human activities are all contributors, but increased CO 2 levels is considered the primary factor. Levels have peaked considerably since the industrial revolution.
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CCS Technologies CO 2 CAPTURE: 1. Post-combustion CO 2 SEQUESTRATION: CO 2 is removed from the atmosphere by three ways: Biosphere sinks – natural CO 2 reservoirs such as oceans, forests and soils. Geosphere sinks - occur naturally but require anthropogenic operations to utilise them, e.g., depleted oil reservoirs. Material sinks - anthropogenically created carbon materials such as chemicals and plastics. 2. Pre-combustion 3. Oxy-fuel CO 2 Amine Clean gas CO 2 stored Heat CO 2 Flue gas Pressure difference Coal H2H2 CO Stored CO 2 H2H2 POWER STATION Amine Absorption Membrane Absorption Adsorption Coal Air Gasification H 2 O (Water shift) Gas separation N2N2 O2O2 Combustion H2OH2O Stored CO 2
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What next? RESEARCH Carry out research in the technologies with the greatest impact: Post-combustion has the greatest applicability across industrial to their existing Pre-combustion research should continue to improve to develop advanced future applications Currently have a PhD student and myself working on amine absorption technologies Currently have 4 papers on pre-combustion technologies and two papers in post-combustion technologies Recently received an EPSRC grant of £728,000 to carry out a four year project in the computational modelling of computational modelling amine absorption processes and also to develop a lab-scale carbon capture lab for validation purposes. Involves a collaboration with Cranfield University and E.ON. EDUCATION Looking to set up modules to form an MSc in CCS Technologies Work with existing modules to consider CCS from an environmental point of view: SESM6021: Introduction to Energy Technologies CENV6087: Environmental Impact Assessment ENVS6006: Environmental Pollution For engineering development in carbon capture, the modules would fit well with: SESG6018: Design Search and Optimisation 1: Principles, methods and parameterizations SESG6019: Design Search and Optimisation 2: Case studies Group design project (GDP) SESS6007: Computational Fluid Dynamics
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