• Title of article

    Amine contaminants removal using alginate clay hybrid composites and its efect on foaming

  • Author/Authors

    Edathil, Anjali Achazhiyath Department of Chemical Engineering - Khalifa University - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates , Pal, Priyabrata Department of Chemical Engineering - Khalifa University - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates , Banat, Fawzi Department of Chemical Engineering - Khalifa University - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

  • Pages
    14
  • From page
    145
  • To page
    158
  • Abstract
    Heat stable salts such as total organic acids (TOA) and heavy metals are well known contaminants in the acid gas removal systems operating using alkanolamines such as methyldiethanolamine (MDEA, 50 wt%). Decontamination of TOA and heavy metals from lean MDEA always remain as a challenge to the gas industry, as accumulation of TOA deteriorates the solvent quality, weakens the absorption capacity and enhances foaming problems leading to huge loss of MDEA and presence of heavy metals results in corrosion and fouling of equipment. Equilibrium batch adsorption were carried out using calcium alginate clay hybrid composites (CAH) containing sepiolite and bentonite for assessing the sorption performance of TOA and heavy metals such as chromium and iron from industrial lean MDEA solutions. The physiochemical properties of the adsorbent were elucidated using SEM, EDX and FTIR analysis. The efects of operational parameters such as amount of sorbent, contact time and temperature on the sorption capacity were also investigated. Kinetics results indicated that the chemisorption nature. The pseudo-second order model gave the best ft. The adsorption efciency increased with increasing the temperature. Adsorption followed type VI isotherm according to the IUPAC classifcation, with sorption taking place in diferent stages. Regeneration studies revealed that 4% CaCl2 acts as an efective eluting agent and no reduction in capacity was observed even after 3 cycles of regeneration. Foaming studies carried out with treated lean MDEA confrmed the reduction in foam of MDEA solutions owing to the efective removal of foam creators such as TOA from lean MDEA by CAH composites. A 15.8% reduction in TOA content was found to decrease the foam height by 37.5%. Thus, CAH composites containing bentonite and sepiolite are having the potential to reclaim industrial lean MDEA solutions.
  • Keywords
    Alginate , Clay composites , Adsorption , Lean amine , Foaming
  • Journal title
    International Journal of Industrial Chemistry (IJIC)
  • Serial Year
    2019
  • Record number

    2500935