Assessment of CO2 capture and storage onboard LNG vessels driven by energy recovery from engine exhaust

Jaafar Ballout, Ma'moun Al-Rawashdeh, Dhabia Al-Mohannadi, Joseph Rousseau, Gareth Burton, Patrick Linke*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

The pressing need to significantly reduce global CO2 emissions requires the decarbonization of the shipping industry. Currently, shipping relies on fossil fuels with a shift from heavy oil to liquefied natural gas. The main engine is the primary energy user onboard vessels, and its exhaust is the main CO2 emission source. A potential path to reduce emissions onboard vessels is the capture, compression, and storage of CO2 from the exhaust gases. This requires effective integration across the engine, the capture technology, the CO2 compression, cooling, and storage. The integration of four alternative capture technology options is conceptually explored and assessed: chemical absorption, membranes, temperature swing adsorption, and cryogenic distillation. Integration schemes are developed for each of the four technologies that achieve carbon capture, compression, and storage driven by the exhaust gas waste heat as the only energy source. Heat and power requirements are met through heat integration and heat-to-power conversions using organic Rankine cycles (ORCs). The study was performed on an LNG vessel using LNG fuel in its main engine. Thermal capture technologies (absorption and adsorption) are observed to significantly outperform their alternatives (membranes and cryogenic distillation) and capture, compress, and store more than twice the amount of CO2 emissions from the engine exhaust stream. Finally, the proposed integration schemes resulted in self-sustainable onboard capture systems without combusting additional fuel.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100802
JournalCleaner Engineering and Technology
Volume22
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • CO2 capture
  • LNG vessel
  • Organic rankine cycle
  • Process integration
  • Technology assessment

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