Monday 24 October 2016

Chapter 12 ̶ Environmental Issues



Chapter 12  ̶  Environmental Issues
12.1 Important Environment Issues
i.                    Production of Greenhouse Gases like CO2, CH4, chlorofluoro carbon (CFC) and nitrous oxide.
ii.                  Greenhouse gases absorb infrared radiation of sun and prevent the heat reflection into space from earth surface. Thus these gases are responsible for temperature rise of environment.
iii.                Global warming due to green house effect.
iv.                Acid rain
v.                  Pollution
12.2 Components of Environment
12.2.1.  Producers – Plants, which produce the food and liberate oxygen.
12.2.2.  Consumers- Animals
12.2.3.  Decomposers-Micro-organisms (bacteria and fungi) decompose waste material, dead plants and animals and produce CO2 which are again utilised for making food. Hence play an important role in material re-cycling in eco-system.
12.3 Biogeochemical Cycles
12.3.1 Water cycle
12.3.2 Carbon Cycle
12.3.3 Oxygen Cycle
12.3.4 Nitrogen Cycle
12.4 Carbon Capture Technology
12.4.1 Steps of Carbon Capture and Storage
          Carbon capture and storage (CCS) involves the separation and capture of CO2 from flue gas, or syngas in the case of  IGCC (integrated gasification combined cycle). CCS is a three-step process that includes:
1. Capture of CO2 from electric generating units (or other industrial processes);
2. Compression and transport of the captured CO2 (usually in pipelines);
3. Underground injection and geologic sequestration (also referred to as storage) of the CO2 into deep underground rock formations. These formations are often a mile or more beneath the surface and consist of porous rock that holds the CO2. Overlying these formations are impermeable, non-porous layers of rock that trap the CO2 and prevent it from migrating upward.
12.4.2  Methods of CO2 Capture Technology
In general, CO2 capture technologies applicable to fossil-fuel fired power generation can be categorized into three approaches:
i.   Post-combustion systems are designed to separate CO2 from the flue gas produced by fossil-fuel combustion in air.
ii. Pre-combustion systems are designed to separate CO2 and H2 in the high-pressure syngas produced at IGCC power plants.
iii.  Oxy-combustion uses high-purity oxygen (O2), rather than air, to combust coal and therefore produces a highly concentrated CO2 stream.
The post- and pre-combustion CO2-capture processes typically use solvents, solid sorbents, and membrane-based technologies for separating and capturing CO2. Solvents chemically absorb the CO2 which is separated from the solvent in a regeneration step. Solid sorbents capture CO2 through chemical adsorption, physical adsorption, or a combination of the two effects. Membrane-based capture uses permeable or semi-permeable materials to produce a highly concentrated CO2 stream that does not require a separation/capture step.

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