Atmospheric Methane Research problem statements are shared to build community and knowledge around key challenges to accelerate progress.
Submit a problem statementView all problem statementsYat Li (University of California Santa Cruz)
This problem statement was submitted to the first round of the Exploratory Grants for Atmospheric Methane Research funding opportunity, and isn't endorsed, edited, or corrected by Spark.
The core challenge in atmospheric methane (CH4) removal is selectively extracting CH4 amidst the significantly more abundant nitrogen (N2). Current technologies, such as photo- oxidation, microbial conversion, and solid sorption, exhibit drastic performance decline at low CH4% [1]. Solid capture (some followed by in situ oxidation) is considered promising due to good capacity (mostly 0.5-1 mol/kg, the best: ~3 mol/kg in pure CH4) and CH4/N2 selectivity (mostly 2-6, the best: 12 at a 1:1 molar ratio) [2-6]. However, both values would decrease by ~6 orders of magnitude in ppm-level CH4 based on sorption mechanisms [7]. Liquid capture was deemed impractical due to CH4's low solubility in most known liquid solvents. Yet, many organic solvents exhibit decent CH4/N2 selectivity >5 (defined by Henry’s constant), comparable to most solid sorbents [2]. For atmospheric removal, we argue that the evaluation criteria should emphasize selectivity over capacity. This is justified by the scarcity of CH4, where even material with moderate capacity could process a significant air volume. Hence, we advocate reassessing the strategy for the liquid capture of atmospheric CH4.
The core problem of atmospheric methane removal by solid sorbents lies in the competitive binding of CH4 and N2 molecules on the surfaces due to their similar physical and chemical properties, with CH4 disadvantaged by extreme scarcity. Dissolutions of N2 and CH4 in a liquid solvent are independent and eliminate such competition, as a result, the scarcity of CH4 prolongs equilibrium yet does not affect its selectivity. This converts the challenge of selectivity under ppm-level CH4 into a gas-to-liquid mass transfer issue, which we propose to address by converting bulk liquid into high-surface area, gas-permeable geometries, or “structured liquid”.
The primary goals by which success will be the delivery of the best solvent geometries, optimal reactor prototypes and quantitative characterization of sorption performance as a function of solvent geometries and process conditions. If the concept is validated, the knowledge gained in the studies will help fill the gap and stimulate investigations of methane solvents and process developments, which in turn could benefit more efficient atmospheric methane removal.
This proposal involves high risks and promises high rewards and impacts, including,
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