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Solubility and Heat of Absorption of CO<sub>2</sub> into Diisopropylamine and <i>N</i>,<i>N</i>-Diethylethanolamine Mixed with Organic Solvents

Ricardo R. Wanderley, Gonzalo J. C. Ponce, Hanna K. Knuutila

2020Energy & Fuels26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We have evaluated the vapor–liquid equilibrium and heat of absorption of CO2 over water-lean mixtures of the amines diisopropylamine and N,N-diethylethanolamine (DEEA). This extends our previous research on water-lean solvents containing ethanolamine. The organic diluents N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) and ethylene glycol (MEG) have been employed for solvent formulation. Since both diisopropylamine (a hindered amine) and N,N-diethylethanolamine (a tertiary amine) react with CO2 to form mainly bicarbonate in aqueous solutions, their behavior in nonaqueous mixtures is quite different from that of monoethanolamine. While MEG seems to maintain the reactivity of both diisopropylamine and DEEA even in nonaqueous mixtures, nonaqueous solvents with NMP act essentially as physical absorbents. This is an important indication that MEG is able to take part in the reaction mechanism between these amines and CO2, perhaps through alkylcarbonate formation, a fact that can be traced back to its relatively low autoprotolysis constant (pKS). This study represents a departure from our previous treatment on loss of CO2 solubility in water-lean solvents with monoethanolamine based on solvation phenomena alone, as it has become clear that the shift in equilibria in solvents with hindered and tertiary amines must account for Le Chatelier's principle.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistrySolubilityEthanolamineSolventSolvationAmine gas treatingAqueous solutionDiluentReactivity (psychology)Ethylene glycolOrganic chemistryInorganic chemistryAlkanolamineTertiary amineAbsorption (acoustics)BicarbonateAlternative medicinePhysicsPathologyMedicineAcousticsCarbon Dioxide Capture TechnologiesPhase Equilibria and ThermodynamicsMembrane Separation and Gas Transport