Technical and Environmental Study of Calcium Carbonate Looping versus Oxy-fuel Options for Low CO2 Emission Cement Plants

2018 
Abstract The process of cement production emits large amounts of CO 2 through both chemical reactions and fossil fuel combustion. Reducing CO 2 emissions from the cement industry is becoming a global imperative. This work focuses on the technical and environmental evaluation for the integration of calcium carbonate looping (CCL) and oxy-fuel combustion processes into a cement plant for carbon capture and storage. Three scenarios have been established: 1. the base case cement plant without CO 2 capture, 2. Cement plant with integrated CCL and 3. Oxy-fuel cement plant. The process models of the CCL capture plant and the oxy-fuel cement plant are developed. To better understand the technical parameters and benefits of each scenario, the ECLIPSE modelling software is used to a technical analysis. Life cycle analysis (LCA) has been conducted using the SimaPro software to determine the environmental impact of the capture technologies. Technical results showed that the cement plant equipped with the CCL illustrated better performance with specific CO 2 emissions avoided of 1.21 t CO 2 /t Clinker and the specific primary energy consumption of 2.39 GJ/t CO 2 compared with the oxy-fuel cement plant with 0.71 t CO 2 /t Clinker and 3.31 GJ/t CO 2 . The main conclusion indicated that the CCL unit had a lesser environmental impact than the oxy-fuel combustion because of the additional benefit of electricity generation through the heat recovery system.
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