TY - EJOU AU - Li, Luling AU - Li, Minghui AU - Xu, Zhengxiang AU - Lin, Haofeng AU - Lang, Xuemei AU - Li, Peiming AU - Zhang, Hengrong AU - Ji, Dongxu AU - Liu, Jian AU - Liu, Jianhui AU - Yang, Guang AU - Fan, Shuanshi TI - Simulation and Optimization of Urban Small-Scale Centralized Bio-Gas Purification Process Based on Methyl Diethanolamine Absorbent T2 - Frontiers in Heat and Mass Transfer PY - 2026 VL - 24 IS - 1 SN - 2151-8629 AB - This study addresses the energy-intensive challenge of small-scale biogas upgrading by optimizing a chemical absorption process employing methyl diethanolamine (MDEA). Focusing on a typical distributed application of 300 Nm3/d, we developed an integrated simulation-optimization framework using Aspen HYSYS 14.0 to systematically evaluate the effects of critical operating parameters—absorption pressure, MDEA concentration, flow rate, temperature, number of trays, and reboiler duty—on methane purity and energy consumption. The key finding is the identification of an optimal parameter set: absorption pressure of 1200 kPa, MDEA concentration of 20 mol%, lean flow rate of 2.5 kmol/h, temperature of 298.15 K, 20 absorber trays, 10 regenerator trays, and a reboiler duty of 4 kW, which enabled the product gas to achieve a high CH4 concentration of 97 mol%, compliant with pipeline standards. A detailed energy consumption analysis revealed that the reboiler is the most energy-intensive unit, accounting for 75.40% of the total 5.29 kW energy consumption, followed by the gas compressor (23.38%). The specific energy consumption for CH4 recovery and the Energy Consumption Index (ECI) were quantified at 0.8852 kWh/kg CH4 and 6.82, respectively. This work provides a validated optimization strategy and critical energy breakdown, offering practical guidance for enhancing the technical and economic viability of small-scale, centralized biogas purification systems. KW - Chemical absorption process; CO2 capture; bio-gas; optimization; MDEA DO - 10.32604/fhmt.2026.075692