2015
DOI: 10.1299/jsmeicope.2015.12._icope-15-_84
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ICOPE-15-1123 Development of an Adsorption Process for Energy-saving CO2 Capture Utilizing Waste Heat

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“…In Norway, a project with CCS was implemented since 1996, and from there, it was implemented much more in the industry and allowed to know the CO2 storage operations, the CO2 capture tests and how to improve that [19]. For the capture and storage of carbon dioxide, a large amount of energy is required for the process to take place, with which an energy-saving system was built that used waste heat to capture CO2 using low-temperature steam, tested in banks of a mobile roof system that successfully captured 3.1 tpd of CO2 from the exhaust gases and a feasibility study of the system where the waste heat from the gas engine was 1.3 GJ/t-CO2, demonstrating that the mobile bed system is an effective means of capturing carbon dioxide [20]. In this research, publications and citations are reviewed Bibliometric analysis on CO2 capture research from 2007 to 2018 2623 using the HistCite tool to assess trends and current status of published work in this area.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Norway, a project with CCS was implemented since 1996, and from there, it was implemented much more in the industry and allowed to know the CO2 storage operations, the CO2 capture tests and how to improve that [19]. For the capture and storage of carbon dioxide, a large amount of energy is required for the process to take place, with which an energy-saving system was built that used waste heat to capture CO2 using low-temperature steam, tested in banks of a mobile roof system that successfully captured 3.1 tpd of CO2 from the exhaust gases and a feasibility study of the system where the waste heat from the gas engine was 1.3 GJ/t-CO2, demonstrating that the mobile bed system is an effective means of capturing carbon dioxide [20]. In this research, publications and citations are reviewed Bibliometric analysis on CO2 capture research from 2007 to 2018 2623 using the HistCite tool to assess trends and current status of published work in this area.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%