https://chemrxiv.org/engage/chemrxiv/article-details/68f2480cdfd0d042d11a7903
Authors: Mattia Galanti, Kiia Kaaresvirta, Ivo Roghair, Martin van Sint Annaland
23 October 2025
Abstract
Direct Air Capture (DAC) is a leading carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technology that extracts CO2 directly from ambient air, independent of emission sources. Among the various process designs, temperature–vacuum swing adsorption (TVSA) has emerged as the most mature technology and is currently deployed at commercial scale, particularly in its steam-assisted configuration. However, the DAC-TVSA process has often been evaluated with incomplete models, where critical aspects such as the O2 purity constraint was ignored or the condenser energy cost was neglected, potentially leading to misleading feasibility assessments. This work develops a comprehensive TVSA modeling framework that unifies detailed adsorption thermodynamics for both dry and humid conditions, refined heat-transfer descriptions accounting for wall-driven regeneration, realistic treatment of auxiliary equipment, and explicit oxygen-purity constraints. The model was benchmarked against literature data, demonstrating that the omission of stricter process constraints can severely underestimate the actual energy–productivity trade-offs. Additionally, the study identified the pre-heating step required to meet the O2 specification as the critical bottleneck in both wall-heated and steam- assisted configurations. The impact of this limitation was further analyzed by systematically varying the adsorber aspect ratio. This revealed the existence of an optimal region, governed by the trade-off between enhanced heat transfer in flatter geometries and increased pressure drop associated with longer beds. In parallel, the benefits of steam injection were visualized through minimum work envelopes, which clearly highlighted the performance gains achievable by improving the desorption step. Overall, the results highlight the substantial potential that can be realized by directly addressing the critical bottlenecks of DAC.
Source: ChemRxiv