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Accelerating Decarbonization via Tailored Zeolitic Monoliths: Insights into Interfacial Physics of Carbon Dioxide Adsorption ProcessConventional packed bed carbon dioxide capture systems with randomly positioned solid sorbent beads suffer from wall channeling, early breakthroughs, excessive pressure drop penalties, and poor contact-limited thermal transport characteristics. Advanced 3D printing techniques enable monolithic lattice topologies made of sorbent that can be tailored to minimize the shortcomings of conventional packed bed systems. The full potential of the design freedom enabled by sorbent 3D printing can only be realized through a detailed understanding of the interfacial adsorption physics within sorbent lattice monoliths at the level of individual struts. In particular, the optimal topology of a 3D-printed monolithic sorbent bed is a complex function of sorbent length scale, permeability, and flow characteristics. A sorbent monolithic bed made of small-diameter struts offers a high sorbent-air interfacial-area-to-volume ratio augmenting the carbon capture adsorption rate but a low carbon uptake capacity. This implies a trade-off between carbon dioxide uptake rate and capacity, determined by whether the adsorption process is limited by reaction kinetics or diffusion. Results show that the carbon adsorption process of zeolitic struts is limited by reaction kinetics at high zeolite permeability values of 1.1×10-4 - 10-8 m2 while diffusion-limited at a zeolite permeability of 1.1×10-12 m2. Additionally, when the zeolite strut diameter decreases from 6 mm to 1 mm, the gravimetric CO₂ uptake rate increases tenfold, while the equilibrium volumetric uptake capacity decreases by 48%. The insights obtained from this study accelerate the development of next-generation 3D-printed carbon dioxide capture systems for industrial decarbonization and space life support applications.
Document ID
20250001570
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Accepted Manuscript (Version with final changes)
Authors
Chaitanya Anant Patil
(North Carolina State University Raleigh, United States)
Noah Agata
(North Carolina State University Raleigh, United States)
Joseph Cesarano
(Robocasting (United States) Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States)
Tra-My Justine Richardson
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, United States)
Sajjad Bigham
(North Carolina State University Raleigh, United States)
Date Acquired
February 11, 2025
Publication Date
April 2, 2025
Publication Information
Publication: ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Publisher: American Chemical Society
ISSN: 1944-8244
e-ISSN: 1944-8252
Subject Category
Engineering (General)
Geophysics
Computer Operations and Hardware
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 251546.04.06.21.02.04
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
carbon dioxide capture
zeolitic lattice monolith
3d printing
adsorption physics
breaktrhough
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