Techno-economic and life cycle assessment of membrane separation in post-combustion carbon capture: A review

Carbon capture after combustion requires a proper system design with techno-economic evaluation and life cycle assessment to achieve the targeted efficiency with minimum energy consumption, cost, and environmental impacts. Learning past system design strategies and operating conditions through a sys...

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Main Authors: Fu J., Ahmad N.N.R., Leo C.P., Aberilla J.M., Dela Cruz I.J., Alamani B., Koh S.P.
Other Authors: 57810925100
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier B.V. 2025
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LCA
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-364272025-03-03T15:42:22Z Techno-economic and life cycle assessment of membrane separation in post-combustion carbon capture: A review Fu J. Ahmad N.N.R. Leo C.P. Aberilla J.M. Dela Cruz I.J. Alamani B. Koh S.P. 57810925100 54408069300 57210845670 57208333997 57223139777 56047202100 22951210700 Carbon capture Carbon dioxide Energy efficiency Environmental impact Global warming Hybrid systems Life cycle Membranes Operating costs Systems analysis Economic life Energy-consumption LCA Membrane separation Membrane system Post-combustion Post-combustion carbon captures Targeted efficiency Techno-economic evaluation Techno-economics Energy utilization Carbon capture after combustion requires a proper system design with techno-economic evaluation and life cycle assessment to achieve the targeted efficiency with minimum energy consumption, cost, and environmental impacts. Learning past system design strategies and operating conditions through a systematic review of past studies is aimed at expanding novel membrane systems for post-combustion carbon capture in different industries and direct air capture. Past simulation studies revealed that membrane separation reduced energy consumption and carbon capture cost only if recycle streams, permeate at vacuum, and proper membrane selection were introduced into two-stage membrane systems. More than 90% of CO2 could be removed to produce CO2 with purity higher than 95%, using membrane systems with energy consumption as low as 1.0 MJ/kg CO2. Cryogenic, absorption, and other separation techniques could also be incorporated to form a hybrid carbon capture system with improved efficiency. However, the energy consumption of the hybrid systems should be well controlled. Studies on life cycle assessment showed that excessive energy consumption and synthetic polymeric membranes resulted in more environmental impacts, although the global warming effects were successfully reduced. Future membrane developments should focus on facilitated transport membranes derived from green materials, besides focusing on system design to bring down energy usage and operating costs in carbon capture. ? 2024 Elsevier B.V. Final 2025-03-03T07:42:22Z 2025-03-03T07:42:22Z 2024 Article 10.1016/j.jgsce.2024.205401 2-s2.0-85198115736 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85198115736&doi=10.1016%2fj.jgsce.2024.205401&partnerID=40&md5=ff322db402b96e3197df7a681004d210 https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/36427 129 205401 Elsevier B.V. Scopus
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
topic Carbon capture
Carbon dioxide
Energy efficiency
Environmental impact
Global warming
Hybrid systems
Life cycle
Membranes
Operating costs
Systems analysis
Economic life
Energy-consumption
LCA
Membrane separation
Membrane system
Post-combustion
Post-combustion carbon captures
Targeted efficiency
Techno-economic evaluation
Techno-economics
Energy utilization
spellingShingle Carbon capture
Carbon dioxide
Energy efficiency
Environmental impact
Global warming
Hybrid systems
Life cycle
Membranes
Operating costs
Systems analysis
Economic life
Energy-consumption
LCA
Membrane separation
Membrane system
Post-combustion
Post-combustion carbon captures
Targeted efficiency
Techno-economic evaluation
Techno-economics
Energy utilization
Fu J.
Ahmad N.N.R.
Leo C.P.
Aberilla J.M.
Dela Cruz I.J.
Alamani B.
Koh S.P.
Techno-economic and life cycle assessment of membrane separation in post-combustion carbon capture: A review
description Carbon capture after combustion requires a proper system design with techno-economic evaluation and life cycle assessment to achieve the targeted efficiency with minimum energy consumption, cost, and environmental impacts. Learning past system design strategies and operating conditions through a systematic review of past studies is aimed at expanding novel membrane systems for post-combustion carbon capture in different industries and direct air capture. Past simulation studies revealed that membrane separation reduced energy consumption and carbon capture cost only if recycle streams, permeate at vacuum, and proper membrane selection were introduced into two-stage membrane systems. More than 90% of CO2 could be removed to produce CO2 with purity higher than 95%, using membrane systems with energy consumption as low as 1.0 MJ/kg CO2. Cryogenic, absorption, and other separation techniques could also be incorporated to form a hybrid carbon capture system with improved efficiency. However, the energy consumption of the hybrid systems should be well controlled. Studies on life cycle assessment showed that excessive energy consumption and synthetic polymeric membranes resulted in more environmental impacts, although the global warming effects were successfully reduced. Future membrane developments should focus on facilitated transport membranes derived from green materials, besides focusing on system design to bring down energy usage and operating costs in carbon capture. ? 2024 Elsevier B.V.
author2 57810925100
author_facet 57810925100
Fu J.
Ahmad N.N.R.
Leo C.P.
Aberilla J.M.
Dela Cruz I.J.
Alamani B.
Koh S.P.
format Article
author Fu J.
Ahmad N.N.R.
Leo C.P.
Aberilla J.M.
Dela Cruz I.J.
Alamani B.
Koh S.P.
author_sort Fu J.
title Techno-economic and life cycle assessment of membrane separation in post-combustion carbon capture: A review
title_short Techno-economic and life cycle assessment of membrane separation in post-combustion carbon capture: A review
title_full Techno-economic and life cycle assessment of membrane separation in post-combustion carbon capture: A review
title_fullStr Techno-economic and life cycle assessment of membrane separation in post-combustion carbon capture: A review
title_full_unstemmed Techno-economic and life cycle assessment of membrane separation in post-combustion carbon capture: A review
title_sort techno-economic and life cycle assessment of membrane separation in post-combustion carbon capture: a review
publisher Elsevier B.V.
publishDate 2025
_version_ 1825816106086957056
score 13.244413