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Brandon5485. You can use it for testing or practicing edits. This is not the sandbox where you should draft your assigned article for a dashboard.wikiedu.org course. To find the right sandbox for your assignment, visit your Dashboard course page and follow the Sandbox Draft link for your assigned article in the My Articles section. |
Welcome to our group's project on ionic liquids as applied to carbon capture and storage.
Please feel free to edit this page any time. Bring up any problems on the talk page.
The biggest obstacle in large-scale implementation of CCS technology is cost, as many absorption, adsorption, and membrane technologies are either too costly or impractical. Costs arise through parasitic energy (ranging from 15-30% of the total energy produced by the plant), as well as through expenditures on transportation and infrastructure. Ionic liquids have potential applications in carbon capture and sequestration as absorbents. Thus, through this project, we are investigating the use of ionic liquids in the carbon capture process, as it demonstrates promising results in reversible capture. Ionic liquids have many desirable properties that can potentially be the catalyst to realizing CCS technology. In the article we are editing, we plan to delineate the benefits of ionic liquids, and how they are the result of its properties. Then, we plan to discuss future work to expand its capability specifically related to carbon capture. Finally, we will investigate the economic aspect of using ionic liquids on an industrial scale, and hope to include sample calculations.
Ionic liquids are simply the liquid state of ionic solids. Molten salts are ionic liquids. Most ionic solids have very high melting points: for example, table salt (NaCl) melts at 810°C. Though ionic liquids have been studied for over a century, recently, within the past 20 years, research interest has grown in their potential applications. Besides separations, ionic liquids can be used in molten salt nuclear reactors, batteries, and thermal storage, such as that used in solar-thermal power plants. The urgency of climate change has spurred research into these energy-related applications. One of the main drawbacks of ionic liquids is their high viscosity, which complicates their use in industrial operations. Supported ionic liquid phases (SILPs) are one proposed solution to this problem. Ionic liquids are versatile and tunable, making them an interesting area of research into novel materials.
![]() | Go to Ionic liquids in carbon capture for the article! |
![]() | This is a user sandbox of
Brandon5485. You can use it for testing or practicing edits. This is not the sandbox where you should draft your assigned article for a dashboard.wikiedu.org course. To find the right sandbox for your assignment, visit your Dashboard course page and follow the Sandbox Draft link for your assigned article in the My Articles section. |
Welcome to our group's project on ionic liquids as applied to carbon capture and storage.
Please feel free to edit this page any time. Bring up any problems on the talk page.
The biggest obstacle in large-scale implementation of CCS technology is cost, as many absorption, adsorption, and membrane technologies are either too costly or impractical. Costs arise through parasitic energy (ranging from 15-30% of the total energy produced by the plant), as well as through expenditures on transportation and infrastructure. Ionic liquids have potential applications in carbon capture and sequestration as absorbents. Thus, through this project, we are investigating the use of ionic liquids in the carbon capture process, as it demonstrates promising results in reversible capture. Ionic liquids have many desirable properties that can potentially be the catalyst to realizing CCS technology. In the article we are editing, we plan to delineate the benefits of ionic liquids, and how they are the result of its properties. Then, we plan to discuss future work to expand its capability specifically related to carbon capture. Finally, we will investigate the economic aspect of using ionic liquids on an industrial scale, and hope to include sample calculations.
Ionic liquids are simply the liquid state of ionic solids. Molten salts are ionic liquids. Most ionic solids have very high melting points: for example, table salt (NaCl) melts at 810°C. Though ionic liquids have been studied for over a century, recently, within the past 20 years, research interest has grown in their potential applications. Besides separations, ionic liquids can be used in molten salt nuclear reactors, batteries, and thermal storage, such as that used in solar-thermal power plants. The urgency of climate change has spurred research into these energy-related applications. One of the main drawbacks of ionic liquids is their high viscosity, which complicates their use in industrial operations. Supported ionic liquid phases (SILPs) are one proposed solution to this problem. Ionic liquids are versatile and tunable, making them an interesting area of research into novel materials.