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Carbon Capture and Storage

  • 2nd Edition - September 5, 2017
  • Latest edition
  • Author: Steve A. Rackley
  • Language: English

Carbon Capture and Storage, Second Edition, provides a thorough, non-specialist introduction to technologies aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fu… Read more

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Description

Carbon Capture and Storage, Second Edition, provides a thorough, non-specialist introduction to technologies aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels during power generation and other energy-intensive industrial processes, such as steelmaking. Extensively revised and updated, this second edition provides detailed coverage of key carbon dioxide capture methods along with an examination of the most promising techniques for carbon storage.

The book opens with an introductory section that provides background regarding the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, an overview of carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies, and a primer in the fundamentals of power generation. The next chapters focus on key carbon capture technologies, including absorption, adsorption, and membrane-based systems, addressing their applications in both the power and non-power sectors.

New for the second edition, a dedicated section on geological storage of carbon dioxide follows, with chapters addressing the relevant features, events, and processes (FEP) associated with this scenario. Non-geological storage methods such as ocean storage and storage in terrestrial ecosystems are the subject of the final group of chapters. A chapter on carbon dioxide transportation is also included.

This extensively revised and expanded second edition will be a valuable resource for power plant engineers, chemical engineers, geological engineers, environmental engineers, and industrial engineers seeking a concise, yet authoritative one-volume overview of this field. Researchers, consultants, and policy makers entering this discipline also will benefit from this reference.

Key features

  • Provides all-inclusive and authoritative coverage of the major technologies under consideration for carbon capture and storage
  • Presents information in an approachable format, for those with a scientific or engineering background, as well as non-specialists
  • Includes a new Part III dedicated to geological storage of carbon dioxide, covering this topic in much more depth (9 chapters compared to 1 in the first edition)
  • Features revisions and updates to all chapters
  • Includes new sections or expanded content on: chemical looping/calcium looping; life-cycle GHG assessment of CCS technologies; non-power industries (e.g. including pulp/paper alongside ones already covered); carbon negative technologies (e.g. BECCS); gas-fired power plants; biomass and waste co-firing; and hydrate-based capture

Readership

Power plant, chemical, geological, environmental and industrial engineers; upper-level undergraduates and graduate students

Table of contents

Part I Introduction

1. Introduction

2. Overview of CCS technologies

3. Power generation fundamentals

Part II Carbon capture technologies

4. Carbon capture from power generation

5. Carbon capture from industrial processes

6. Absorption capture systems

7. Adsorption capture systems

8. Membrane separation systems

9. Cryogenic and distillation systems

10. Mineral carbonation

Part III Geological storage

11. Introduction to Geological Storage

12. Geological and Geomechanical FEP

13. Fluid properties and rock-fluid interaction FEP

14. Geochemical and Biogeochemical FEP

15. Hydrological and Environmental FEP

16. Engineered system FEP

17. Saline aquifer geological storage

18. Other geological storage options

19. Site characterization and monitoring technologies

Part IV Other storage options

20. Ocean storage

21. Storage in terrestrial ecosystems

22. Other sequestration and use options

23. Carbon dioxide transportation

Product details

  • Edition: 2
  • Latest edition
  • Published: September 5, 2017
  • Language: English

About the author

SR

Steve A. Rackley

Steve Rackley completed a PhD in Experimental Physics at the Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge. Following a career spanning four decades in the energy industry, gaining experience in some of the main technologies that are key to geological carbon storage, he is currently a technical author, project consultant, and independent researcher into carbon capture and storage, and negative emissions technologies, with a particular interest in ocean based approaches.
Affiliations and expertise
Independent Consultant

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