April 27, 2017
Journal Article

Hierarchical Calibration and Validation for Modeling Bench-scale Solvent-based Carbon Capture: Part 1. Non-reactive Physical Mass Transfer across the Wetted Wall Column

Abstract

A hierarchical model calibration and validation is proposed for quantifying the confidence level of mass transfer prediction using a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model, where the solvent-based carbon dioxide (CO2) capture is simulated and simulation results are compared to the parallel bench-scale experimental data. Two unit problems with increasing level of complexity are proposed to breakdown the complex physical/chemical processes of solvent-based CO2 capture into relatively simpler problems to separate the effects of physical transport and chemical reaction. This paper focuses on the calibration and validation of the first unit problem, i.e. the CO2 mass transfer across a falling ethanolamine (MEA) film in absence of chemical reaction. This problem is investigated both experimentally and numerically using nitrous oxide (N2O) as a surrogate for CO2. To capture the motion of gas-liquid interface, a volume of fluid method is employed together with a one-fluid formulation to compute the mass transfer between the two phases. Bench-scale parallel experiments are designed and conducted to validate and calibrate the CFD models using a general Bayesian calibration. Two important transport parameters, e.g. Henry’s constant and gas diffusivity, are calibrated to produce the posterior distributions, which will be used as the input for the second unit problem to address the chemical adsorption of CO2 across the MEA falling film, where both mass transfer and chemical reaction are involved.

Revised: August 24, 2020 | Published: April 27, 2017

Citation

Wang C., Z. Xu, C. Lai, G.A. Whyatt, P. Marcy, and X. Sun. 2017. Hierarchical Calibration and Validation for Modeling Bench-scale Solvent-based Carbon Capture: Part 1. Non-reactive Physical Mass Transfer across the Wetted Wall Column. Greenhouse Gases: Science and Technology 7, no. 4:706-720. PNNL-SA-122798. doi:10.1002/ghg.1682