Membrane classification by pore size.
\\n\\n
IntechOpen was founded by scientists, for scientists, in order to make book publishing accessible around the globe. Over the last two decades, this has driven Open Access (OA) book publishing whilst levelling the playing field for global academics. Through our innovative publishing model and the support of the research community, we have now published over 5,700 Open Access books and are visited online by over three million academics every month. These researchers are increasingly working in broad technology-based subjects, driving multidisciplinary academic endeavours into human health, environment, and technology.
\\n\\nBy listening to our community, and in order to serve these rapidly growing areas which lie at the core of IntechOpen's expertise, we are launching a portfolio of Open Science journals:
\\n\\nAll three journals will publish under an Open Access model and embrace Open Science policies to help support the changing needs of academics in these fast-moving research areas. There will be direct links to preprint servers and data repositories, allowing full reproducibility and rapid dissemination of published papers to help accelerate the pace of research. Each journal has renowned Editors in Chief who will work alongside a global Editorial Board, delivering robust single-blind peer review. Supported by our internal editorial teams, this will ensure our authors will receive a quick, user-friendly, and personalised publishing experience.
\\n\\n"By launching our journals portfolio we are introducing new, dedicated homes for interdisciplinary technology-focused researchers to publish their work, whilst embracing Open Science and creating a unique global home for academics to disseminate their work. We are taking a leap toward Open Science continuing and expanding our fundamental commitment to openly sharing scientific research across the world, making it available for the benefit of all." Dr. Sara Uhac, IntechOpen CEO
\\n\\n"Our aim is to promote and create better science for a better world by increasing access to information and the latest scientific developments to all scientists, innovators, entrepreneurs and students and give them the opportunity to learn, observe and contribute to knowledge creation. Open Science promotes a swifter path from research to innovation to produce new products and services." Alex Lazinica, IntechOpen founder
\\n\\nIn conclusion, Natalia Reinic Babic, Head of Journal Publishing and Open Science at IntechOpen adds:
\\n\\n“On behalf of the journal team I’d like to thank all our Editors in Chief, Editorial Boards, internal supporting teams, and our scientific community for their continuous support in making this portfolio a reality - we couldn’t have done it without you! With your support in place, we are confident these journals will become as impactful and successful as our book publishing program and bring us closer to a more open (science) future.”
\\n\\nWe invite you to visit the journals homepage and learn more about the journal’s Editorial Boards, scope and vision as all three journals are now open for submissions.
\\n\\nFeel free to share this news on social media and help us mark this memorable moment!
\\n\\n\\n"}]',published:!0,mainMedia:{caption:"",originalUrl:"/media/original/237"}},components:[{type:"htmlEditorComponent",content:'
After years of being acknowledged as the world's leading publisher of Open Access books, today, we are proud to announce we’ve successfully launched a portfolio of Open Science journals covering rapidly expanding areas of interdisciplinary research.
\n\n\n\nIntechOpen was founded by scientists, for scientists, in order to make book publishing accessible around the globe. Over the last two decades, this has driven Open Access (OA) book publishing whilst levelling the playing field for global academics. Through our innovative publishing model and the support of the research community, we have now published over 5,700 Open Access books and are visited online by over three million academics every month. These researchers are increasingly working in broad technology-based subjects, driving multidisciplinary academic endeavours into human health, environment, and technology.
\n\nBy listening to our community, and in order to serve these rapidly growing areas which lie at the core of IntechOpen's expertise, we are launching a portfolio of Open Science journals:
\n\nAll three journals will publish under an Open Access model and embrace Open Science policies to help support the changing needs of academics in these fast-moving research areas. There will be direct links to preprint servers and data repositories, allowing full reproducibility and rapid dissemination of published papers to help accelerate the pace of research. Each journal has renowned Editors in Chief who will work alongside a global Editorial Board, delivering robust single-blind peer review. Supported by our internal editorial teams, this will ensure our authors will receive a quick, user-friendly, and personalised publishing experience.
\n\n"By launching our journals portfolio we are introducing new, dedicated homes for interdisciplinary technology-focused researchers to publish their work, whilst embracing Open Science and creating a unique global home for academics to disseminate their work. We are taking a leap toward Open Science continuing and expanding our fundamental commitment to openly sharing scientific research across the world, making it available for the benefit of all." Dr. Sara Uhac, IntechOpen CEO
\n\n"Our aim is to promote and create better science for a better world by increasing access to information and the latest scientific developments to all scientists, innovators, entrepreneurs and students and give them the opportunity to learn, observe and contribute to knowledge creation. Open Science promotes a swifter path from research to innovation to produce new products and services." Alex Lazinica, IntechOpen founder
\n\nIn conclusion, Natalia Reinic Babic, Head of Journal Publishing and Open Science at IntechOpen adds:
\n\n“On behalf of the journal team I’d like to thank all our Editors in Chief, Editorial Boards, internal supporting teams, and our scientific community for their continuous support in making this portfolio a reality - we couldn’t have done it without you! With your support in place, we are confident these journals will become as impactful and successful as our book publishing program and bring us closer to a more open (science) future.”
\n\nWe invite you to visit the journals homepage and learn more about the journal’s Editorial Boards, scope and vision as all three journals are now open for submissions.
\n\nFeel free to share this news on social media and help us mark this memorable moment!
\n\n\n'}],latestNews:[{slug:"webinar-introduction-to-open-science-wednesday-18-may-1-pm-cest-20220518",title:"Webinar: Introduction to Open Science | Wednesday 18 May, 1 PM CEST"},{slug:"step-in-the-right-direction-intechopen-launches-a-portfolio-of-open-science-journals-20220414",title:"Step in the Right Direction: IntechOpen Launches a Portfolio of Open Science Journals"},{slug:"let-s-meet-at-london-book-fair-5-7-april-2022-olympia-london-20220321",title:"Let’s meet at London Book Fair, 5-7 April 2022, Olympia London"},{slug:"50-books-published-as-part-of-intechopen-and-knowledge-unlatched-ku-collaboration-20220316",title:"50 Books published as part of IntechOpen and Knowledge Unlatched (KU) Collaboration"},{slug:"intechopen-joins-the-united-nations-sustainable-development-goals-publishers-compact-20221702",title:"IntechOpen joins the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Publishers Compact"},{slug:"intechopen-signs-exclusive-representation-agreement-with-lsr-libros-servicios-y-representaciones-s-a-de-c-v-20211123",title:"IntechOpen Signs Exclusive Representation Agreement with LSR Libros Servicios y Representaciones S.A. de C.V"},{slug:"intechopen-expands-partnership-with-research4life-20211110",title:"IntechOpen Expands Partnership with Research4Life"},{slug:"introducing-intechopen-book-series-a-new-publishing-format-for-oa-books-20210915",title:"Introducing IntechOpen Book Series - A New Publishing Format for OA Books"}]},book:{item:{type:"book",id:"4487",leadTitle:null,fullTitle:"Irrigation and Drainage - Sustainable Strategies and Systems",title:"Irrigation and Drainage",subtitle:"Sustainable Strategies and Systems",reviewType:"peer-reviewed",abstract:"The sustainability of irrigation and drainage in the face of many variants and constraints like availability of water as a resource, ecological balance, socio-cultural impacts, and climate change effects lies in the strategies adopted and systems emplaced. 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\r\n\tThis edited book will serve as an update to the various diagnostic, management and surgical advances that are seen in the field of glaucoma. In the last decade, the field and science of sub-specialty of Ophthalmology, has seen exponential growth in understanding basic mechanisms of pathology of the disease, new drug discoveries and approval, along with dozens of new surgical innovations and inventions.
\r\n\r\n\tGlaucoma is one of the leading causes of irreversible vision loss and a huge socioeconomic burden to the society. Early detection and prompt intervention with intraocular pressure lowering medications is the main stay. This is accomplished by both medical and/or surgical techniques and both these methodologies have seen great advances. This book will cover both. There are new combination agents and sustained released drugs that are FDA approved. Additionally, there are new drugs in development and potentially neuroprotective agents or adjunctive therapies that are in the horizon.
\r\n\r\n\tSurgical procedures has seen the greatest developments in the last decade with numerous new stents and micro invasive procedures that have been FDA approved. These have led to decrease in number of medications that are needed to achieve the target pressure to prevent progressive damage in glaucoma.
",isbn:"978-1-80355-535-5",printIsbn:"978-1-80355-534-8",pdfIsbn:"978-1-80355-536-2",doi:null,price:0,priceEur:0,priceUsd:0,slug:null,numberOfPages:0,isOpenForSubmission:!1,isSalesforceBook:!1,hash:"bfd1690946df5cf11695fa28466f5b67",bookSignature:"Prof. Pinakin Gunvant Gunvant Davey",publishedDate:null,coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/11304.jpg",keywords:"Optic Disc Blood Flow, Macular Blood Flow, Nitric Oxide, Neuroprotection, Diagnostic Procedures, Open Angle Glaucoma, Mechanism Of Damage, Intraocular Pressure, Clinical Management, Secondary Glaucoma, Selective Laser Trabeculoplasty, Minimally Invasive Glaucoma Surgery",numberOfDownloads:73,numberOfWosCitations:0,numberOfCrossrefCitations:0,numberOfDimensionsCitations:0,numberOfTotalCitations:0,isAvailableForWebshopOrdering:!0,dateEndFirstStepPublish:"September 17th 2021",dateEndSecondStepPublish:"November 26th 2021",dateEndThirdStepPublish:"January 25th 2022",dateEndFourthStepPublish:"April 15th 2022",dateEndFifthStepPublish:"June 14th 2022",remainingDaysToSecondStep:"6 months",secondStepPassed:!0,currentStepOfPublishingProcess:5,editedByType:null,kuFlag:!1,biosketch:"A pioneering researcher and clinician-scientist whose past accolades include Western University of Health Sciences Provost Distinguished Scholar, California Educator of the year, and Young OD of the year. Dr. Davey also serves as the Vice President of the Ocular Wellness and Nutrition Society.",coeditorOneBiosketch:null,coeditorTwoBiosketch:null,coeditorThreeBiosketch:null,coeditorFourBiosketch:null,coeditorFiveBiosketch:null,editors:[{id:"48794",title:"Prof.",name:"Pinakin Gunvant",middleName:"Gunvant",surname:"Davey",slug:"pinakin-gunvant-davey",fullName:"Pinakin Gunvant Davey",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/48794/images/system/48794.jpg",biography:"Dr. Pinakin Davey is a tenured full Professor and Director of Clinical Research at Western University of Health Sciences. He holds Doctor of Optometry (OD) degree from Southern College of Optometry and a Ph.D. from Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, England. His post-doctoral research fellowship at University of Louisville for three years was focused on improving imaging techniques in glaucoma. His research is focused on retinal physiology and glaucoma particularly improving visual function in disease states. He has authored over 75 international publications and has given over 300 conference and invited presentations both nationally and internationally. His research work is funded in past and present by the National Institute of Health and industry sponsored FDA trials. He serves as the Vice President of Ocular Wellness and Nutrition Society.",institutionString:"Western University of Health Sciences",position:null,outsideEditionCount:0,totalCites:0,totalAuthoredChapters:"1",totalChapterViews:"0",totalEditedBooks:"0",institution:{name:"Western University of Health Sciences",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"United States of America"}}}],coeditorOne:null,coeditorTwo:null,coeditorThree:null,coeditorFour:null,coeditorFive:null,topics:[{id:"16",title:"Medicine",slug:"medicine"}],chapters:[{id:"81106",title:"The Molecular Mechanisms of Trabecular Meshwork Damage in POAG and Treatment Advances",slug:"the-molecular-mechanisms-of-trabecular-meshwork-damage-in-poag-and-treatment-advances",totalDownloads:23,totalCrossrefCites:0,authors:[null]},{id:"81086",title:"Perspective on Gene Therapy for Glaucoma",slug:"perspective-on-gene-therapy-for-glaucoma",totalDownloads:18,totalCrossrefCites:0,authors:[null]},{id:"81287",title:"Factors Affecting Intraocular Pressure Measurement and New Methods for Improving Accuracy; What Can IOP Tell Us about Glaucoma? How Can Practitioners Improve IOP Utility and Glaucoma Outcomes?",slug:"factors-affecting-intraocular-pressure-measurement-and-new-methods-for-improving-accuracy-what-can-i",totalDownloads:32,totalCrossrefCites:0,authors:[null]}],productType:{id:"1",title:"Edited Volume",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"},personalPublishingAssistant:{id:"444315",firstName:"Karla",lastName:"Skuliber",middleName:null,title:"Mrs.",imageUrl:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/444315/images/20013_n.jpg",email:"karla@intechopen.com",biography:"As an Author Service Manager, my responsibilities include monitoring and facilitating all publishing activities for authors and editors. From chapter submission and review to approval and revision, copyediting and design, until final publication, I work closely with authors and editors to ensure a simple and easy publishing process. I maintain constant and effective communication with authors, editors and reviewers, which allows for a level of personal support that enables contributors to fully commit and concentrate on the chapters they are writing, editing, or reviewing. I assist authors in the preparation of their full chapter submissions and track important deadlines and ensure they are met. I help to coordinate internal processes such as linguistic review and monitor the technical aspects of the process. As an ASM I am also involved in the acquisition of editors. 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Venkateswarlu",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/371.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"58592",title:"Dr.",name:"Arun",surname:"Shanker",slug:"arun-shanker",fullName:"Arun Shanker"}],productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},{type:"book",id:"72",title:"Ionic Liquids",subtitle:"Theory, Properties, New Approaches",isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"d94ffa3cfa10505e3b1d676d46fcd3f5",slug:"ionic-liquids-theory-properties-new-approaches",bookSignature:"Alexander Kokorin",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/72.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"19816",title:"Prof.",name:"Alexander",surname:"Kokorin",slug:"alexander-kokorin",fullName:"Alexander Kokorin"}],productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},{type:"book",id:"314",title:"Regenerative Medicine and Tissue Engineering",subtitle:"Cells and Biomaterials",isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"bb67e80e480c86bb8315458012d65686",slug:"regenerative-medicine-and-tissue-engineering-cells-and-biomaterials",bookSignature:"Daniel Eberli",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/314.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"6495",title:"Dr.",name:"Daniel",surname:"Eberli",slug:"daniel-eberli",fullName:"Daniel Eberli"}],productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},{type:"book",id:"57",title:"Physics and Applications of Graphene",subtitle:"Experiments",isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"0e6622a71cf4f02f45bfdd5691e1189a",slug:"physics-and-applications-of-graphene-experiments",bookSignature:"Sergey Mikhailov",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/57.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"16042",title:"Dr.",name:"Sergey",surname:"Mikhailov",slug:"sergey-mikhailov",fullName:"Sergey Mikhailov"}],productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},{type:"book",id:"1373",title:"Ionic Liquids",subtitle:"Applications and Perspectives",isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"5e9ae5ae9167cde4b344e499a792c41c",slug:"ionic-liquids-applications-and-perspectives",bookSignature:"Alexander Kokorin",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/1373.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"19816",title:"Prof.",name:"Alexander",surname:"Kokorin",slug:"alexander-kokorin",fullName:"Alexander Kokorin"}],productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}}]},chapter:{item:{type:"chapter",id:"53169",title:"Membrane Separation Technology in Carbon Capture",doi:"10.5772/65723",slug:"membrane-separation-technology-in-carbon-capture",body:'\nGas separation by membrane is attractive in low carbon emission technologies, as it can be operated in a continuous system, which is preferred by industry, other than the conventional batch systems such as adsorption and absorption. Feeding of mixed gas and exiting of purified gas can happen at the same time. Membrane selectively permeates the desired components and retains the unwanted, resulting in separation of gas mixtures. In carbon capture and storage (CCS) processes, CO2 has to be separated from the exhaust gas streams before the subsequent transportation and storage. Membrane separation technology is one of efficient solutions for carbon capture.
\nThere have been a number of books regarding membrane technology. However, most of them are about liquid separation and very few are found for CCS. This chapter aims at introducing and demonstrating the membrane technology in CCS. The application of membrane in carbon capture mainly includes H2/CO2 separation for pre-combustion, CO2/N2 separation for post-combustion and O2/N2 separation (air separation) for oxy-fuel combustion. There is a wide variety of membrane types based on its physical and chemical property. Many of them have showed great potentials to fulfill the need of CCS.
Membrane performs as a filter. It allows certain molecules to permeate through, while blocks other specific molecules from entering the membrane as demonstrated in Figure 1. Membrane has already been widely used in liquid separations such as micro-filtration, ultra-filtration, reverse osmosis, forward osmosis, desalination and medical application. However, gas separation using membrane is still developing. Membrane gas separation has attracted intensive researches in CCS field during recent years.
The schematic of membrane separation for binary gas mixtures.
Gas permeation flux across unit membrane area under unit pressure difference through unit membrane thickness is called permeability (mol s−1 m−2 Pa−1) and the ratio of permeabilities of different gases through the same membrane is defined as selectivity. The gas separation mechanism varies from membrane to membrane. The selectivity of different gases may result from the difference in molecular size, affinity to membrane material, molecular weight, etc., depending on the gas and membrane of interest.
\nIn order to achieve high permeate flux, the feed gas is pressurized, while the permeate gas is connected to atmosphere or vacuum to obtain a higher driving force. However, since the thickness of a membrane is only several hundred nanometers to several microns, it is impossible to resist this force. So a membrane is normally coated onto a thick, porous substrate to achieve enough mechanical strength. The supporting substrate should offer minimum flow resistance, thus containing large pores, which allows free flow of gas that has permeated the top layer. In case of too large pores and highly rough surface on the substrate, membrane defects such as cracking and peeling may occur. An interlayer with much smaller pore size (than substrate pore size) can enable smoother transition in between. This design is referred to as asymmetric structure as shown in Figure 2.
The asymmetric structure of membrane coated on a substrate.
In the current Research & Developments (R&Ds) of membrane, the most popular mechanism is size sieving separation. Therefore, the key parameter of a membrane is its pore size. By pore size, membranes are classified into three categories that are listed in Table 1. In addition, one more type of membrane that is nonporous, therefore called dense membrane, is also discussed in this chapter.
\nCompared to conventional CO2 removal technologies, membrane has shown great potential in CCS owing to its characteristics listed below:
\nMembrane requires little material to coat. It does not need additional facilities such as large pretreatment vessel and solvent storage.
\nThe main operating cost for membrane separation unit is only membrane replacement. Due to the smaller size and weight of membrane, the cost is much lower than the conventional techniques, which replace the large amount of solvent or sorbent.
\nSince membrane does not show fast decay in performance that most likely occurs to the traditional solvents or sorbents, it can be running unattended for long periods. Another character of membrane is that gas does not stay and reacts with membrane, so membrane has no saturation and thus avoids frequent shut down and start-up.
\nMembrane system is designed and operated to remove the required percentage of CO2 instead of the absolute quantity of CO2 removal. Variations in the feed CO2 concentration can be adjusted by varying the space velocity to keep constant product quality.
\nMembrane system can integrate a number of processes into one unit, such as Hg vapor removal, H2S removal and dehydration. Traditional CO2 removal techniques have to operate these steps separately.
\nMultiple membranes could be packed into one module to reduce size and weight, which not only increases membrane area in unit volume but also makes it easier to transport to remote locations. Simple installation is feasible at which spare parts are rare, labors are unskilled and additional facilities (such as solvent storage, water supply and power generation) are short in supply.
Pore classification | Pore size range (nm) |
---|---|
Micropore | <2 |
Mesopore | 2–50 |
Macropore | >50 |
Membrane classification by pore size.
Membrane fabrication involves how to coat the selective layer onto the porous substrate. The fabrication process has significant influence on the membrane property such as membrane uniformity and thickness. The membrane coating technique includes dip-coating, chemical vapor deposition (CVD), spinning and spraying. Among them, the most popular and mature methods are dip-coating and CVD. This section will demonstrate these two technologies.
\nDip-coating involves dipping the macro-porous substrate in a solution and in turn, the solution is coated on the substrate, which is followed by a dehydration process at a lower temperature. It is the oldest and the simplest film deposition method. The dip-coating process can be separated into five stages: immersion, start-up, deposition, drainage and evaporation (Figure 3).
Dip-coating stages: (a) immersion; (b) start-up; (c) deposition; (d) drainage and (e) evaporation. Reproduced from Brinker [
Another common membrane coating technique is CVD. CVD modifies the properties of a substrate surface by depositing a thin layer of film via chemical reactions in a gaseous medium surrounding the substrate at elevated temperatures.
\nThe process of CVD includes transporting the reactant gases and/or carrier gas into a reaction chamber, which is followed by a deposition process to form a film. The film coating could be performed by decomposition, oxidation, hydrolysis or compound formation. The reactions normally take place in the gaseous phase and the intermediate gases adsorb on the substrate followed by surface reactions. The detailed steps of CVD process are demonstrated in Figure 4.\n
Reactant feeding: Delivering the reactant gaseous species into the reaction chamber.
Reaction: Chemical reactions of the reactant gas species under heating condition to form intermediates.
Diffusion to substrate: Diffusion of gases through the boundary layer to the substrate surface.
Adsorption on the substrate: Adsorption of reactant species or intermediates on substrate surface.
Surface migration: Inclusion of coating atoms into the growing surface and formation of by-product species.
By-product desorption: Desorption of by-product species of the surface reaction.
By-product diffusion: Diffusion of by-product species to the bulk phase.
By-product exiting: Transport of by-product gaseous species away from substrate and exit the reaction chamber.
Schematic model of a CVD process. Reproduced from Khatib et al. [
As illustrated above, CVD is more complicated technique than dip-coating, thus the manufacture cost of a membrane is relatively higher than that of dip-coating. The advantage of CVD is good reproducibility over dip-coating as the latter may suffer from a lack of reproducibility.
A membrane can separate gas mixture because different gases have different permeability through the membrane. The permeate flux across unit membrane area under unit pressure gradient is called permeability and the ratio between permeability of gas A and that of gas B is defined as selectivity of A to B. In order to achieve separation, a greater difference between gas permeabilities is preferred. This difference comes from their physical and/or chemical properties as well as the interaction with membrane.
\nThe most widely known separation mechanism is size sieving. The membrane pore size is just between the smaller gas molecule and larger gas molecule as depicted in Figure 5. The smaller gas molecule A passes the pore channel freely, while the counterpart gas B is not able to enter the pore. As a result, pure component A is obtained in the permeate stream from the gas mixture A–B. This mechanism applies to separating gas mixtures with very different molecular sizes such as H2 and CO2, H2 and hydrocarbons, etc. Some common gas kinetic diameters are given in Table 2. Size sieving basically performs in micro-porous membrane.
Gas | σ (nm) |
---|---|
He | 0.26 |
H2 | 0.289 |
CO2 | 0.33 |
Ar | 0.341 |
O2 | 0.346 |
N2 | 0.364 |
CH4 | 0.38 |
The kinetic diameter of different gases.
Size sieving separation mechanism.
When the membrane material has higher affinity to one particular component than the other, this affinitive component is preferentially adsorbed on the membrane surface and then the adsorbed gas molecules move along the pore surface to the permeate side until desorbing to the permeate gas. Since the membrane is occupied by the highly adsorbable component, the less adsorbed component has lower probability to access the pore, which results in a much lower permeability. In such a way, the more adsorbable gas is separated from the gas mixture (Figure 6). This type of mechanism is generally used to separate adsorbing gas with non-adsorbing gas such as CO2 with He, CO2 with H2. Surface diffusion generally acts in micro- and meso-porous membranes.
Surface diffusion separation mechanism.
Unlike membranes discussed above, dense membrane has no pore channel for gas transportation. However, it follows solution diffusion model. The process of gas separation using dense membranes occurs in a three-step process, which is similar to surface diffusion. The dense membrane has no pore to accommodate gas molecules, however, it can solve specific gas component. As shown in Figure 7, due to the difference in solubility or absorbability in the membrane material, gas A solves or absorbs in the membrane after they contact at the feed interface, while gas B still remains as gas phase at the interface. The second step is the solved A component diffusing across the membrane driven by the concentration gradient from feed interface to the permeate interface. Finally, component A desorbs from the permeate interface under a low pressure. This is a common mass transfer mechanism in polymeric membrane.
Solution diffusion separation mechanism.
The solution-diffusion process is often constrained by low permeate flux rates due to a combination of low solubility and/or low diffusivity. In contrast, facilitated transport that delivers the target component by a carrier can increase the permeate flow rate. As demonstrated in Figure 8, the gas A and carrier C form a temporary product A–C that is from a reversible chemical reaction. The product diffuses across the membrane under the concentration gradient of this product A–C instead of the concentration gradient of A. At the permeate interface, the reverse reaction takes place and A is liberated from this reverse reaction. A is released to the permeate stream and C diffuses back to the feed interface again to attach and deliver a new A. Facilitated transport mechanism normally exists in liquid membrane.
Facilitated transport separation mechanism.
Ion transport is usually applied in air separation (O2/N2). As Figure 9 shows, only oxygen gas molecule (O2) can be converted into two oxygen ions (2O2−) by the surface-exchange reaction on the feed interface. Nitrogen retains in the feed side. Oxygen ions are transported across by jumping between oxygen vacancies in the membrane lattice structure. At the permeate interface, electrons liberated as the oxygen ions recombine into oxygen molecules. To maintain electrical neutrality, there is a simultaneous electrons flux going back to the feed interface neutralizing the charge caused by oxygen flux.
Ion transport separation mechanism.
Pre-combustion capture is a process that separates CO2 from the other fuel gases before the gas combustion. First, it involves the processes of converting solid, liquid or gaseous fuels into a mixture of syngas (H2 and CO) and CO2 by coal gasification or steam reforming. Afterwards water-gas shift (WGS) reaction is conducted to reduce the content of CO, thus more H2 and CO2 are generated. Membrane separation is then applied to separate H2 and CO2. Upon compression, the CO2 rich stream is transported to a storage or utilization site. Meanwhile, the nearly pure H2 stream enters the combustion chamber for power generation that emits mainly water vapor in the exhaust.
\nComing from the upstream gasification, reforming and WGS, the feed gas of pre-combustion CO2 capture is hot with a temperature between 300 and 700°C. In addition, the pre-combustion separation can happen at high pressures up to 80 bar.
\nPre-combustion membranes are basically classified into two categories: H2-selective membrane and CO2-selective membrane. The former favors H2 permeation but retains CO2 in the feed side, while the latter preferentially permeates CO2.
\nIn principle, metallic membrane is the ideal candidate for separating H2/CO2 due to the infinite selectivity. H2 molecule dissociates as two H atoms at the membrane surface and then the atomic H diffuses to the permeate side of the membrane driven by the partial pressure drop, which is followed by the association and desorption at the permeate interface. The permeate flux is given by
\nThis mechanism is similar to solution diffusion and ion transport. The reason for the infinite selectivity of H2 over CO2 is that this dissociation-diffusion mechanism only applies to diatomic gases such as H2 and CO2 cannot permeate by the same mechanism. For ultrathin membrane, the rate-limiting step is the dissociation of hydrogen on the membrane surface and Pd material performs the best in hydrogen dissociation. Consequently, Pd membrane was intensively investigated in the past several decades. H2 permeability through palladium membrane varies in the range between 10−7 and 10−8mol s−1 m−1 Pa−0.5 (Table 3). However, the permeability was not satisfactory for the industrial requirement yet. This is due to the slow permeation of H atom in the lattice of Pd, which is one order of magnitude lower than in other metals. In order to promote the permeability, a number of palladium-based alloys have been examined. A list of reported permeability data are summarized in Table 4. The alloy membranes dramatically improve the H2 permeability by 2–3 orders of magnitude.
Membrane | Permeability (mol s−1 m−1 Pa−0.5) | Temperature (°C) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Pd | 9 × 10−9 | 227 | [3] |
Pd on sliver disk | 1.47 × 10−7 | 407 | [4] |
Pd disk | 1.08 × 10−7 | 300 | [5] |
Pd disk | 1.06 × 10−7 | 350 | [6] |
Pd disk from Pd sheet | 7.25 × 10−7 | 400 | [7] |
Pd on Vycor support | 3.10 × 10−7 | 350 | [8] |
Pd on Nickel | 2.00 × 10−12 | 200 | [9] |
Pd on Vycor support | 1.18 × 10−7 | 500 | [10] |
Pd on γ alumina | 1.47 × 10−7 | 480 | [11] |
Pd on alumina | 6.27 × 10−8 | 300 | [12] |
Pd on alumina | 3.75 × 10−8 | 400 | [13] |
Hydrogen permeability through palladium membrane.
Membrane | Permeability (mol s−1 m−1 Pa−0.5) | Temperature (°C) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Pd59Cu41 | 1.59 × 10−7 | 400 | [6] |
Pd60Cu40 | 1.57 × 10−7 | 350 | [5] |
Pd60Cu40 | 1.78 × 10−7 | 400 | [5] |
Pd94Cu6 | 3.65 × 10−8 | 400 | [14] |
Pd50Ni50 | 7.00 × 10−6 | 450 | [15] |
Pd69Ag30Ru1 | 1.03 × 10−6 | 400 | [13] |
Pd70Ag30 | 2.35 × 10−7 | 400 | [13] |
Pd77Ag23 | 1.35 × 10−7 | 350 | [16] |
Pd77Ag23 | 5.00 × 10−5 | 450 | [17] |
Pd93Ag7 | 7.25 × 10−8 | 400 | [14] |
Hydrogen permeability through palladium-based alloy.
Still, a few barriers need to be overcome for the commercialization of palladium-based membrane. First, the cost of palladium is around 18,000 US$/Ounce (in June 2016), which is 150 times more expensive than silica membrane. Second, the H2 permeation driving force is not from pressure; instead, it is from the root square of pressure (Eq. (1)). Therefore, the effect of compressing feed gas is not as significant as in other permeation mechanisms. In addition, at temperatures lower than 300°C, hydrogen embrittlement causes catastrophic failure. Furthermore, the contaminations such as CO, NH3 and sulfur compounds inhibit H2 permeation through palladium membrane. Currently, palladium membrane separation still remains in small laboratory scale.
\nBesides metal membrane, inorganic membrane also plays an important role in separating H2/CO2 at elevated temperatures. The separation by inorganic membrane is generally achieved by the molecular size sieving effect. Carbon molecular sieve membrane has demonstrated in pilot scale to separate H2 from refiner gas streams in the early 1990s. The disadvantage of carbon membrane is that it is only feasible in non-oxidizing condition. Another type of inorganic membrane is alumina membrane. However, the majority pore size is not in the range of micropore and cannot separate gas by the size sieving mechanism. Due to the large pore size, the selectivity of alumina membrane is fairly low.
\nSilica membrane shows great commercial potential for separating H2 and CO2. It is one of the most abundant materials on the planet, thus the cost is significantly reduced. Also the good thermal and chemical stability makes it possible to work in long term without frequent replacement or maintenance. The pore diameter could be controlled around 0.3 nm by proper coating-calcining process, which is the ideal size for separating H2 (σ = 0.26 nm) and CO2 (σ = 0.33 nm). The performance of some reported silica membranes is summarized in Table 5. Due to the difficulty in measuring the membrane thickness on porous substrate, permeability of H2 divided by thickness is lumped together as permeance.
Membrane | Permeance (mol s−1 m−2 Pa−1) | H2/CO2 selectivity | Temperature (°C) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Silica (Si400) | 2.01 × 10−6 | 7 | 200 | [18] |
Silica (hydrophobic) | 1.51 × 10−6 | 6 | 200 | [19] |
Silica on zirconia | 1.34 × 10−6 | 4 | 300 | [20] |
Silica | 1.34 × 10−6 | 8 | 300 | [20] |
Silica (Si600) | 5.02 × 10−7 | 200 | [18] | |
Silica (hydrophilic) | 6.70 × 10−9 | 11 | 200 | [19] |
Silica with Co | 5.00 × 10−9 | 1000 | 250 | [21] |
Silica | 1.80 × 10−8 | 15–80 | 150 | [22] |
Silica with Co&Pd | 6.00 × 10−6 | 200 | 500 | [23] |
Silica (ES40) | 1.01 × 10−6 | 12 | 450 | [24] |
AKP-30 tubular silica | 1.8 × 10−6 | 3.5 | 200 | [25] |
Silica with C6 surfactant | 1.5 × 10−6 | 6 | 200 | [19] |
Silica without C6 surfactant | 7.0 × 10−9 | 10 | 200 | [19] |
H2/CO2 separation performance by silica-based membrane.
The H2 permeance of silica membrane could reach up to the order of 10−6 mol s−1 m−2 Pa−1, which strongly suggests that silica membrane is competitive in pre-combustion capture. However, exposure to high concentration water vapor leads to a decline in performance of silica membrane. Such a steady decay over long time can cause the H2 permeance decrement by an order of magnitude. This still inhibits the commercialization of silica membrane.
\nAs a nonporous membrane, polymeric membrane permeates gases via the solution-diffusion mechanism. Permeability is a function of gas diffusivity and solubility. The hydrogen molecules diffuse faster than other gases due to the small molecular size. However, the lower solubility of hydrogen within the polymeric membrane reduces its permeability. For H2-selective polymeric membranes, the permeability is limited by the low solubility of H2. There is a wide range of polymeric membranes available for H2 separation from CO2. The performance of some polymeric membranes is shown in Table 6. High permeabilities are observed for polyimides such as 6FDA-durene. Higher selectivities are reported for polybenzimidazole and poly(vinyl chloride), but H2 permeability is compromised.
Membrane | Permeability (mol s−1 m−2 Pa−1) | H2/CO2 selectivity | Temperature (°C) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
6FDA-Durene | 1.89 × 10−9 | 1 | 35 | [26] |
Polybenzimidazole | 3.15 × 10−12 | 45 | 35 | [27] |
Poly(vinyl chloride) | 5.36 × 10−12 | 11 | 35 | [28] |
Poly(vinyl chloride) | 6.30 × 10−12 | 11 | 30 | [29] |
Polybenzimidazole | 2.89 × 10−13 | 9 | 20 | [30] |
4.10 × 10−11 | 20 | 270 | ||
3.41 × 10−11 | 3 | 300 |
H2/CO2 separation performance by polymeric membrane.
The only shortcoming of polymeric membranes is the poor thermal stability at operating temperatures more than 100°C. Only polybenzimidazole was examined at the temperature range (300–700°C) for syngas purification. For polybenzimidazole membrane, the greatest performance in H2 permeability and H2/CO2 selectivity is observed between 200 and 270°C. This peak performance can be related to the increasing diffusivity of the smaller H2 molecule as temperature increases. More importantly, the performance of polymeric membranes depends on its stability in the environment of the real process. For example, exposure to gases such as CO2, water vapor and H2S may results in plasticization and mechanical fouling.
\nDue to the good thermal and hydrothermal stability, zeolite membranes were also viewed as another possible candidate for separation of H2 and CO2. Zeolite has ordered pore structure. If the pore channel size is proper, efficient size sieving could be achieved. Despite the relative simple concept, only a few types of zeolite are workable since this molecular sieve mechanism requires perfect membranes. This remains a challenge for zeolite membranes. The performance of a number of reported H2/CO2 separation using zeolite membranes is summarized in Table 7. In general, neither H2 permeance nor H2/CO2 selectivity can exceed ~106 mol s−1 m−2 Pa−1 and ~50 to meet the industrial demands.
Membrane | Permeancea (mol s−1 m−2 Pa−1) or Permeabilityb (mol s−1 m−1 Pa−1) | H2/CO2 selectivity | Temperature (°C) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
MFI | 2.82 × 10−7a | 42.6 | 500 | [31] |
MFI | 1.50 × 10−7a | 5 | 200 | [32] |
MFI template free | 1.50 × 10−8a | 3 | 500 | [33] |
DDR | 5.00 × 10−8a | 5 | 500 | [34] |
DDR by CVD | 2.24 × 10−8a | 5.9 | 500 | [35] |
Zeolite-A | 9.45 × 10−10a | 10 | 35 | [36] |
MFI | 1.76 × 10−9a | 18 | 450 | [37] |
AIPO4-5 Zeolite | 3.15 × 10−9a | 24 | 35 | [38] |
ZSM-5 | 5.68 × 10−8a | 110 | [39] | |
ZIF-69 | 6.60 × 10−8a | 1.8 | 25 | [40] |
13X with PI | 6.93 × 10−11b | 2.8 | 25 | [41] |
H2/CO2 separation performance by zeolite membranes.
aPermeance.
bPermeability.
Metal organic framework (MOF) membrane has been an emerging candidate for H2/CO2 separation. In MOF materials, metal or metal oxide cluster cations are interconnected by organic anions. The coordination polymers form flexible frameworks, therefore such MOFs are called ‘soft porous crystals’. Table 8 summarizes the H2 permeance and H2/CO2 selectivity using different MOF membranes. Despite relatively moderate permselectivity, attractively high permeances are observed. The operating temperature for MOF membranes is normally lower than the pre-combustion temperatures, owing to organic ligands. The synthesis of MOF membranes is relatively sophisticated so that the cost has to be notably reduced toward commercialization. There is still a long way for MOF membranes to fulfill the demands of industrial applications.
Membrane | Permeance (mol s−1 m−2 Pa−1) | H2/CO2 selectivity | Temperature (°C) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
MOF5 | 2.80 × 10−6 | 4.3 | 25 | [42] |
MOF5 | 4.40 × 10−7 | 4.4 | 25 | [43] |
MOF5 | 8.00 × 10−7 | 3.5 | 25 | [44] |
Ni-MOF-74 | 1.27 × 10−5 | 9.1 | 25 | [45] |
NH2-MIL-53 (Al) | 1.98 × 10−6 | 30.9 | 25 | [46] |
MIL-53 | 5.00 × 10−7 | 4 | 25 | [47] |
ZIF-7 | 7.40 × 10−7 | 6.7 | 200 | [48] |
ZIF-7 | 4.55 × 10−7 | 13 | 220 | [49] |
ZIF-7 | 4.57 × 10−6 | 9.6 | 25 | [50] |
ZIF-7 | 3.05 × 10−6 | 18.3 | 170 | [50] |
ZIF-8 | 5.00 × 10−8 | 3.5 | 25 | [51] |
ZIF-8 | 1.80 × 10−7 | 3 | 25 | [52] |
ZIF-8 | 2.66 × 10−5 | 8.8 | 100 | [53] |
ZIF-22 | 2.00 × 10−7 | 7.2 | 25 | [54] |
ZIF-90 | 2.95 × 10−7 | 16.9 | 225 | [55] |
ZIF-95 | 1.90 × 10−6 | 25.7 | 52 | [56] |
JUC-150 | 1.83 × 10−7 | 38.7 | 25 | [57] |
HKUST-1 | 1.10 × 10−6 | 5.5 | 190 | [58] |
MMOF | 2.00 × 10−9 | 5 | 190 | [59] |
H2/CO2 separation performance by MOF membranes.
Unlike H2-selective membranes, CO2-selective membranes preferentially permeate CO2 and thus they also enable the separation of CO2 and H2. Separating CO2 from H2 can only be realized through surface diffusion or solution diffusion driven by the difference in adsorb-ability or solubility between the gases. However, retaining the small molecules of H2 but permeating the larger CO2 is really challenging. To maximize the difference of adsorption or solution between the two gases, the temperature is required to be low, however, low temperatures are not favored by pre-combustion processes. From this point of view, CO2-selective membranes are much less applicable than H2-selective ones.
Another situation where we need to separate CO2 is after the fuel combustion. The exhaust gas (flue gas) mainly contains CO2, H2O and N2. H2O vapor is easy to be removed by condensation. More efforts are required to separate CO2 and N2 prior to further treatments such as compression. Unlike pre-combustion capture, post-combustion capture separates CO2/N2 at moderate temperatures and ambient atmosphere pressure. Such operating conditions seem less severe than those of pre-combustion processes. As a result, post-combustion capture has encountered much less difficulties and is therefore rather closer to practical application. The major challenge for post-combustion capture is the low CO2 volumetric fraction in flue gas, that is, ~15%, which results in a low driving force of CO2 permeation.
\nThe separation of CO2/N2 mainly rely on surface diffusion and solution diffusion, which is driven by the difference in adsorb-ability and solubility between the gases. The good thing is that, compared to N2, CO2is more likely to be favored by majority of the membrane materials via adsorption or absorption. Furthermore, the diameter of CO2 is slightly smaller than that of N2, which also enhances the diffusion of CO2 (see Table 2). Therefore, for post-combustion capture, CO2-selective membranes are generally used.
\nTo capture CO2 from flue gas, a membrane should satisfy a few requirements such as high CO2 permeability, high CO2/N2 selectivity, high thermal and chemical stability and acceptable costs. So far, polymer-based membranes are the only commercially viable type for CO2 removal from flue gas. The membrane materials include cellulose acetate, polymides, polysulfone and polycarbonates. Table 9 shows the performance of several such membranes.
Membrane | Permeancea (mol s−1 m−2 Pa−1) or Permeabilityb (mol s−1 m−1 Pa−1) | CO2/N2 selectivity | Temperature (°C) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cellulose acetate | 2.48 × 10−7a | 40.17 | Not reported | [60] |
Polymides-TMeCat | 6.30 × 10−10b | 25 | 30 | [61] |
Polymides-TMMPD | 1.89 × 10−9b | 17.1 | Not reported | [62] |
Polymides-IMDDM | 6.17 × 10−10b | 18.1 | Not reported | [62] |
Polysulfone-HFPSF-o-HBTMS | 3.31 × 10−10b | 18.6 | 35 | [63] |
Polysulfone-HFPSF-TMS | 3.47 × 10−10b | 18 | 35 | [64] |
PolysulfoneTMPSF-HBTMS | 2.27 × 10−10b | 21.4 | 35 | [65] |
Polycarbonates-TMHFPC | 3.50 × 10−10b | 15 | 35 | [66] |
Polycarbonates-FBPC | 4.76 × 10−11b | 25.5 | 35 | [67] |
CO2/N2 separation performance by polymer-based membranes.
aPermeance.
bPermeability.
Selectivity larger than 20 was observed for all the polymer-based membranes with decent permeability. The high solubility of CO2 in polymers ensures sufficient CO2/N2 selectivity. Furthermore, polymers with a high fractional free volume present excellent gas transport properties.
\nMixed-matrix membrane is a new option to enhance the properties of polymeric membranes. The microstructure consists of an inorganic material in the form of micro- or nano-particles in discrete phase incorporated into a continuous polymeric matrix. The addition of inorganic materials in a polymer matrix offers improved thermal and mechanical properties for aggressive environments and stabilizes the polymer membranes against the changes in chemical and physical environments. Carbon molecular sieves membranes also show interesting performance for CO2 separation applications. Polyimide is the most used precursor for carbon membranes. Carbon membranes improved gas transport properties for light gases (molecular size smaller than 4.0–4.5Å) with thermal and chemical stability. The major disadvantages of mixed-matrix and carbon membranes that hinder their commercialization include brittleness and the high cost that is 1–3 orders of magnitude greater than polymeric membranes.
In oxy-fuel combustion, oxygen is supplied for combustion instead of air. This avoids the presence of nitrogen in the exhaust gas, the major issue to be solved by post-combustion CO2 capture technologies. With the use of pure oxygen for the combustion, the major composition of the flue gases is CO2, water vapor, other impurities such as SO2. Water vapor can be easily condensed and SO2 can be removed by conventional desulphurization methods. The remained CO2-rich gases (80–98 vol.% CO2 depending on fuel used) can be compressed, transported and stored. This process is technically feasible but consumes large amounts of oxygen coming from an energy intensive air separation (O2/N2) unit.
\nThe O2/N2separation follows the ion transport mechanism as depicted in Figure 9 for air separation membrane. Oxygen molecules are converted to oxygen ions at the surface of the membrane and transported through the membrane by an applied electric voltage or oxygen partial pressure difference; these ions are reverted back to oxygen molecules after passing through the membrane. These membranes are O2-selective in principle. Generally, fluorite-based and perovskite-based membranes are used to deliver oxygen through this mechanism.
\nAir separation is mostly carried out at atmosphere and meanwhile the permeate side connects to high speed sweep gas or vacuum. So, for convenience, the membrane performance is generally described as permeate flux instead of permeance. Table 10 shows a list of oxygen permeation flux for the fluorite membranes. The oxygen permeation flux of fluorite-based membranes ranges from 10−4 to 10−6 mol s−1 m−2 between 650 and 1527°C. The highest oxygen flux was observed for Bi1.5Y0.3Sm0.2O3 compounds.
Membrane | O2 flux (mol s−1 m−2) | Thickness (mm) | Temperature (°C) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bi0.75Y0.5Cu0.75O3 | 2.80 × 10−5–1.06 × 10−4 | 2 | 650–850 | [68] |
Bi1.5Y0.3Sm0.2O3 | 4.40 × 10−3–6.36 × 10−3 | 1.2 | 825–875 | [69] |
Ce0.8Pr0.2O2-δ | 1.33 × 10−4–3.35 × 10−4 | 1 | 850–950 | [70] |
(ZrO2)0.85(CaO)0.15 | 1.70 × 10−4 | 1 | 870 | [71] |
[(ZrO2)0.8(CeO2)0.2]0.9(CaO)0.1 | 1.36 × 10−6–9.44 × 10−5 | 2 | 1127–1527 | [72] |
Oxygen permeation flux data for fluorite membranes.
Performance of perovskite membranes are displayed in Table 11. Oxygen permeation flux with the magnitude of 10−2–10−5 mol s−1 m−2 between 700 and 100°C was reported. The overall oxygen flux through perovskite membrane is superior to fluorite membrane. SrCo0.8Fe0.2O3-δ exhibits the best oxygen flux.
Membrane | O2 flux(mol s−1 m−2) | Thickness (mm) | Temperature (°C) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
BaBi0.4Co0.2Fe0.4O3-δ | 3.064 × 10−3–5.985 × 10−3 | 1.5 | 800–925 | [73] |
BaCo0.4Fe0.5Zr0.1O3-δ | 1.908 × 10−3–6.813 × 10−3 | 1 | 700–950 | [74] |
CaTi0.8Fe0.2O3-δ | 7.976 × 10−5–2.185 × 10−4 | 1 | 800–1000 | [75] |
Gd0.6Sr0.4CoO3-δ | 1.179 × 10−2 | 1.5 | 820 | [76] |
LaCo0.8Fe0.2O3-δ | 1.786 × 10−4 | 1.5 | 860 | [76] |
La0.6Sr0.4Co0.8Cu0.2O3-δ | 1.417 × 10−2 | 1.5 | 860 | [76] |
SrCo0.8Fe0.2O3-δ | 2.485 × 10−2 | 1 | 870 | [77] |
Oxygen permeation flux data for perovskite membranes.
In spite of a great number of works that attempt to efficiently separate air using membrane, the membrane technology for oxy-fuel combustion is still at its early stage of development. Compared to the conventional cryogenic air separation technique, the high temperature requirement and the resulting high costs of air separation membrane are unfavorable for commercialization. Some other issues such as high temperature sealing, chemical and mechanical stability and so on also need to be addressed prior to practical application. At present, there has not been any full scale oxy-fuel membrane project reported.
The aforementioned membranes are compared in Table 12. Their application situation, advantages and disadvantages are summarized accordingly.
Membrane type | Application | Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|---|---|
Metal membrane | Pre-combustion | Infinite H2/CO2 selectivity | High cost; poisoning; low driving force |
Carbon membrane | Pre-combustion | Size sieving effect; high H2/CO2 selectivity | High cost; susceptible to oxygen; brittleness |
Alumina membrane | Pre-combustion | Low cost; chemical and physical stability | Low H2/CO2 selectivity |
Zeolite membrane | Pre-combustion and post-combustion | Low cost; chemical and physical stability | Low H2/CO2 selectivity |
MOF membrane | Pre-combustion and post-combustion | Large pore volume and surface area | High cost |
Silica membrane | Pre-combustion | Proper pore size; low cost; high thermal stability | Poor hydrothermal stability |
Polymeric membrane | Post-combustion | Low cost; high CO2/N2 selectivity | Low chemical and physical stability; too thick |
Fluorite membrane | Oxy-fuel combustion | High O2/N2 selectivity | Energy intensive; hard to seal |
Perovskite membrane | Oxy-fuel combustion | High O2/N2 selectivity | Energy intensive; hard to seal; poisoning |
The summarization of membranes in CCS.
Membrane separation technique has been intensified with the growing needs for CCS. The major two targets of membrane are chasing high permeability and selectivity. The understanding of gas transport through membrane is of great importance in providing the guidance of membrane material design and synthesis improvement.
\nFor all mass transfer problems, a general form is always expressed as a coefficient multiplied by a driving force as
\nwhere
Membrane thickness
When the pore size is large, the gas molecule-molecule collision is relatively dominant than gas molecule-wall collision. That means the mean free path is far less than the pore size
\nwhere
In such situation, viscosity plays an important role in the mass transfer and the permeate flux across the membrane is described by viscous flow model:
\nwhere
When the pore size is reduced down to the scale much smaller than mean free path, the molecular-wall collision is more dominating than intermolecular collision. In this situation, the viscosity is not playing a role for the gas transportation. Instead, the pore geometry and gas molecule velocity influence more significantly in the mass transfer. This type of transport is called Knudsen diffusion. If the molecule to wall collisions is dominant over intermolecular collision, the Knudsen number must be much higher than 1.
\nwhere
where
Based on Eq. (3) the permeance of Knudsen diffusion is
\nFor the same pore at a fixed temperature, the permeate flux is determined by the molar weight and in principle, the selectivity is the root square of the reciprocal of molar weights. However, due to the limited selectivity, Knudsen diffusion is rarely used in practice for separating real gas mixtures.
For ultra-micro-porous (dp < 5Å) material, the Lennard-Jones (L-J) potential from atoms, which forms the pore wall starts to overlap inside the pore. Consequently, there is a very deep potential well around the wall and the distance from wall to the well is around the scale of gas molecule diameter. In this situation, the gas molecule’s motion is significantly affected by the potential fields. Since the intrinsic nature of gas is seeking for lower potential, thus adsorption preferentially takes place around the pore wall due to the existence of the potential well. As such, the model is called surface diffusion. A brief introduction has been given in Section 2.3.2. of this chapter, but here a more analytical and mathematical description of surface diffusion will be provided.
\nThe original expression of mass transfer across the membrane is given by
\nwhere
Assuming equilibrium between the membrane surface concentration and the bulk gas phase, the following relationship for the chemical potential is applicable
\nwhere
Using Eq. (10), Eq. (9) is converted to
\nwhere
where
However, with elevated temperature, the adsorption is getting weaker and Langmuir isotherm is approaching to Henry’s law.
\nwhere
Diffusivity
where
where
Eqs. (14)–(17) can be combined as
\nApparent activation energy determines whether the permeate flux is an increasing function to temperature or not, so this type of diffusion is called activated transport.
\nAssuming a uniform pressure gradient, Eq. (18) is simplified to
\nThe permeance
Activated transport is generally used to separate gas mixtures, which has different sign of apparent activation energy and the separation performance will be enhanced at elevated temperatures.
If the pore size is further reduced to the molecular level, there is no potential well inside the pore. Instead, the positive potential overlaps, which forms a potential barrier. Only the gas molecules, which have kinetic energy higher than the potential barrier, are possible to make a successful jump to complete permeation. This model is called gas translation diffusion. The permeate flux of gas translation follows Fick’s first law as derived in Eq. (15) with the difference in diffusion coefficient term.
\nwhere
Gas translation permeance should rewrite as
\nIf we assume the pore is a cylinder, the gas molecules are hopping in the pore cylinder from entrance to the exit. The gas molecule trajectory looks like oscillating on the pore cross section. The gas travels with speed between collisions and loses all the momentum when colliding on the wall. This model is a more recent development in mass transfer theory by Bhatia et al. [78, 79].
\nFrom Newton’s law,
\nthe gas diffusivity in the pore is derived
\nwhere 〈
where
Combining Eqs. (28) and (29) gives the radial momentum
\nConsidering a canonical distribution for
The diffusion coefficient expression is obtained from Eqs. (26), (30) and (31)
\nOscillator model is a pure theoretical and analytical approach without any empirical or semi-empirical factors. It takes account adsorption effect and applies to all pore sizes, pressure and temperatures.
\nBesides the mass transfer models introduced above, there are some other methods to study the membrane gas transport from a theoretical perspective. Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics are also major techniques to investigate the micropore mass transfer. Because this chapter focused on membrane CCS technology rather than transport phenomena, other sophisticated theories are not demonstrated here.
The membrane separation for pre-combustion is not a mature technology so far. There has not been industry-scale membrane system. However, a few pilot scale pre-combustion membrane systems have demonstrated the potential of extending the system to enlarged scale.
\nEltron Research & Development Inc. developed a pilot-scale pre-combustion membrane with 100 kg day−1 H2 production from 2005. They employed alloy membrane to separate H2 according to Sieverts’ Law. This project successfully improved membrane-based integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) flow sheets, achieving carbon capture greater than 95%.
\nAnother pilot-scale pre-combustion membrane set-up was constructed by Worcester Polytechnic Institute’s (WPI) in 2010. More than 566 L H2 was produced per day. Stable H2 fluxes were achieved in actual syngas atmospheres at 450°C for more than 470 h under 12 bar pressure difference. The implement MembraGuardTM (T3’s technology) inhibited surface poisoning by hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and H2 permeation showed good stability for more than 250 h.
Membrane separation for post-combustion is a relatively mature technique. In 1995, the largest membrane-based natural gas processing plant in the world was built in Kadanwari, Pakistan. Cellulose acetate membrane was applied in this project to separate CO2. The Kadanwari system is a two-stage unit designed to treat 25 × 105 m3 h−1 of feed gas at 90 bar. The CO2 content is reduced from 12% to less than 3%.
\nAfter Kadanwari plant, the Qadirpur plant started in the same year and the processing capacity exceeded Kadanwari plant with 31 × 105 m3 h−1 of feed gas at 59 bar. The CO2 content is reduced from 6.5 to 2%. The Qadirpur plant was upgraded to 64 × 105 m3 h−1 of feed gas in 2003.
Air separation membrane is still in its early stage. In view of the high energy requirement of ion transport mechanism, air separation membrane can hardly challenge the traditional cryogenic air separation for large scale product.
\nAir products, which have been developing ion transport membrane technology since 1988 and the DOE (US Department of Energy) are collecting data from a pilot plant near Baltimore in Maryland, with the capacity of 5 tons of oxygen per day. This facility will lead to the next step of designing and building a larger membrane air separation unit (150 tons oxygen per day).
The conventional CO2 capture process is absorption (with ammines). Amine-based absorption is the most common technology. However, the corrosion, degradation and high regeneration energy of amine significantly increase the electricity cost. Substantial technological improvements and alternative technologies are highly needed to lower the CO2 capture cost.
\nThe economic indicator CO2 avoided ($/ton) is an established term for measuring and comparing different CO2 capture strategies such as absorption, adsorption, cryogenic separation and membrane separation. It is the additional cost of establishing and running a CO2 capture facility for an industrial plant or power plant compared to the respective plant without CO2 capture. The CO2 avoided is expressed as:
\nwhere ref. and capture mean the reference plant without capture and the respective plant with CO2 capture facility. LCOE is the levelized cost of electricity which is expressed as:
\nA brief techno-economic comparison was made between two power plants using conventional amine scrubbers in and a power plant using polymer membrane (Table 13). The estimates are subject to uncertainty because we cannot accurately predict all input parameters such as fuel price, operational and maintenance cost. The aim of the comparison is not to give absolute costs, but to illustrate indicatively that the costs per ton CO2 avoided. The overall comparison indicates that the case employing membrane separation results in slightly lower LCOE and CO2 avoided than traditional amine-based solvent scrubbing. Although this cannot judge the membrane economical advantage, the comparison at least indicates that membrane separation is competitive to the amine-based solvent scrubbing. However, significant efforts are still required to improve the membrane properties so as to achieve higher stability, permeate purity and recovery.
Organization | Carnegie Mellon University | Electric Power Research Institute | Membrane Technology and Research, Inc | |
---|---|---|---|---|
CCS technology | Amine-based | Amine-based | Membrane-based | |
Location | USA | USA | USA | |
Coal type | Bitcoal | Bitcoal | Illinois#6 | |
Plant size (MW) | 575 | 600 | 580 | |
Designed CO2 capture rate (%) | 90 | 85 | 90 | |
CO2 emission (kg/MWh) | Reference | 811 | 836 | 760 |
Capture | 107 | 126 | 87 | |
Net power output (MW) | Reference | 528 | 600 | 550 |
Capture | 493 | 550 | 461 | |
Net plant efficiency (LHV, %) | Reference | 41.4 | 40 | 41.4 |
Capture | 31.5 | 29.1 | 34.4 | |
Efficiency penalty (%) | 9.9 | 10.9 | 7 | |
Capital costs ($/kW) | Reference | 1696 | 2104 | 1727 |
Capture | 2759 | 3516 | 2627 | |
LCOE ($/MWh) | Reference | 62 | 77 | 62 |
Capture | 104 | 127 | 93 | |
CO2 avoided ($/ton) | 58 | 71 | 46 |
Techno-economic comparisons between amine-based CO2 removal and membrane separation.
Natural ecosystems provide innumerable services which make human civilization possible. Unfortunately, many, if not most, people believe these services are provided for free and are, therefore, valueless and have no direct traditional economic value [1–3]. We, as a community, may not pay directly for these ecosystem services but we do pay significantly for their loss through infrastructure and policy costs (e.g., construction and operation of wastewater treatment facilities, increased illness, losses in soil fertility and reductions in basic human well-being). Everyday decisions made by communities and their constituents have some effect on the amount and quality of these services. We, as a scientific community and members of larger governance communities, must emphasize the interrelated aspects of human well-being and the functioning of ecosystems (i.e., natural and human-altered) [1].
Life, as well as the economy, is dependent upon goods and services provided by natural ecosystems [2]. One of society’s greatest challenges is to maintain natural ecosystems while promoting economic growth and the quality of life [3]. Ecosystem services like cleansing, renewal and recycling coupled with ecosystem goods like food and fiber, timber, and esthetics have significant tangible and intangible value. Yet, in the name of economic growth, humans stress the environment by disrupting its natural functioning and provision of these basic services in oceans and fisheries [4], wetland resources [5], habitat loss and trophic collapse [6], pollinator declines [7], soil quality and agricultural production [8]. We have changed ecosystems massively in the last several decades [2] in order to meet growing demands for freshwater, food, and fuel (to name but a few commodities). While these changes have clearly supported the needs of billions of people, the changes have caused irreparable losses in ecosystem structure and function (e.g., diversity loss, ecosystem capacity for service generation) as well as our perceptions of place, comfort and well-being [9, 10, 11].
Over the decades described above, well-being research has received increased attention as a contributor to “good” or “quality life” [12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20]. Unfortunately, researchers’ determinations of what constitutes well-being have largely been ignored by decision makers and governments [21]. While well-being indices are often linked to social and economic policies (with the intent of progress), environmental drivers, particularly ecosystem services, are not included in these human well-being measures despite the proven role that the environment and ecosystem services play in the quality of well-being [22, 23, 24, 25]. Examining ecosystem goods and services in relation to sustainability and their contributions to social, economic and environmental well-being becomes clear, particularly when related to basic needs and subjective well-being [11]. In short, regardless of economic utility theory [26, 27] ecosystem goods and services can only be partially “monetized” and a consideration of well-being is necessary to determine a full valuation.
There is no single definition of human well-being but, at a generalized level, it is useful to distinguish between the dimensions of subjective and objective well-being. Broadly, objective well-being includes basic social, economic and environmental needs and can be directly measured [28, 29], while subjective well-being encompasses often what humans feel and think [30]. Well-being, whether individual or group (community), must be treated as a multidimensional aspect focusing on circumstances that can be both objectively and subjectively assessed [31]. This approach requires that elements of emotions, engagement, and satisfaction as well as economics, environmental and social issues be incorporated into our vision of well-being.
The interaction of ecosystem services and community well-being includes the relationship of these topics to global issues as well. Alterations in climate (on large and small temporal scales), biodiversity and general sustainability affect both services and well-being. Community resilience to acute meteorological events [32] represents a major issue involving ecological services, overall well-being and community sustainability. Natural disasters, as well as investments in natural disaster protection, impose significant and long-lasting stress on financial, social and ecological systems that drive human well-being. From hurricanes to tornadoes to wildfires, no corner of the globe is immune from the threat of a devastating climate-event. Across the globe, there is a recognition that the benefits of creating and supporting environments (built and natural) resilient to adverse climate events helps promote and sustain community well-being over time. The challenge for communities is in finding ways to balance the need to preserve the socio-ecological systems on which they depend in the face of constantly changing natural hazard threats. The Climate Resilience Screening Index (CRSI) [32, 33] is an endpoint for characterizing resilience outcomes that are based on risk profiles and responsive to changes in governance, societal, built and natural system characteristics. The Climate Resilience Screening Index (CRSI) framework serves as a conceptual roadmap showing how acute climate events impact resilience after factoring in the community characteristics. By evaluating the factors that influence vulnerability and recoverability, an estimation of resilience can quantify how changes in these characteristics will impact resilience given specific hazard profiles. Ultimately, this knowledge will help communities identify potential areas to target for increasing resilience to acute climate events and enhancing their sustainability. Other services, such as green infrastructure, can similarly contribute to climate adaptation at a variety of spatial scales [34].
Changes in biodiversity can also affect community well-being by altering the complexity and resilience of natural ecosystems and changing their long-term sustainability. Sustainable development equally includes environmental protection including biodiversity, economic growth and social equity, both within and between generations [35, 36, 37]. Reductions in biodiversity and habitat fragmentation decrease gene flow, increase genetic drift and the potential for inbreeding and increase the probability of patch extinction [38]. Unfortunately, the relationship between ecosystem services and biodiversity is often confusing resulting in damaged efforts to create coherent policy formulation [38]. Biodiversity has key roles as a regulator of ecosystem processes, as a major ecosystem service and as an ecosystem good that could be subject to valuation (economic or otherwise). As a result of this potential for valuation in policy formulation, this service can easily impact planning for sustainable community well-being.
Understanding the relationships among ecosystem goods and services that contribute to and shape well-being is a core task for both researchers and policy makers. Our understanding of this relationship has evolved over the last several decades from being synonymous with income and consumption of marketed goods [39, 40] to a broader view incorporating non-economic issues like gender [41, 42], sustainability [43, 44, 45], and the environment [44, 46]. Given this evolution of thought, it is amazing that many still view the most reliable measure of human well-being to be income [47]. Yet, the importance of ecosystem services as a driver for well-being has been well established in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment [23]. The World Economic Forum’s [48] environmental sustainability index, Wackernagel’s et al.’s [49] national estimates of ecological footprints, and the New Economics Foundation report [50] all emphasize the importance of the role of environmental factors (e.g., ecosystem goods and services) in the establishment of well-being.
Much of the drive to include ecological information in the estimation of well-being derived from ongoing discussions of whether humans are a part of an ecosystem rather than simply a stressor on ecosystems [51]. This approach termed Ecosophy T is a view of the central role of ecosystems and states that every being, whether human, animal or plant has an equal right to live and prosper [51]. This holistic emphasis requires that the self-realized Ecological Self should not act without understanding how that action will affect other living beings. An understanding of the unintended consequences of actions is the equivalent of the liberal harm principle [52, 53]. To go from an understanding of unintended environmental consequences (i.e., humans as stressors) to an inclusion of ecosystems and ecological understanding in well-being (i.e., humans as part of ecosystems) is a logical and fairly straightforward thought process.
The HWBI framework illustrates the relationship between service flows provided through social, economic and environmental sectors and the domains of HWBI (Figure 1). Collectively, the components of HWBI are similar to Maslow’s pyramid of self-actualization [54] where basic human needs represent physiological and safety needs; economic needs represent employment, education, wealth, infrastructure, growth and trade; environmental needs represent clean air and water, and low risks of contamination; and, subjective happiness needs represent life satisfaction, freedom, solastalgia [55], topophilia [56], and biophilia [57]. The Human Well-being Index (HWBI) is intended to be used as an endpoint measure responsive to changes in service flows from natural, human and built capital [18].
Conceptual model of the human well-being index (from [
HWBI was developed as a composite measure based on eight dimensions of well-being (domains) characterized by 20 multi-metric indicators reflecting both objective and subjective measures [18, 58]. The HWBI domains are sub-indices that serve as proxy measures representing various aspects of human well-being (Table 1) which are aggregated into the composite index. In a nutshell, The HWBI calculation follows these four steps as summarized by Harwell et al. [59]:
Indicator scores are calculated as population weighted averages of related standardized metric values.
Domain scores are obtained by averaging indicator scores related to a specific domain.
Relative importance values (RIVs) are optional factors that may be included in HWBI calculations to represent stakeholder priorities associated with well-being domains.
The HWBI is calculated as the geometric mean of equally or unequally weighted domain scores.
Domain | Description |
---|---|
Connection to nature | Describes how people feel about nature. It is measured by people’s perception of nature and how it affects them. |
Cultural fulfillment | Describes people’s cultural involvement. Measures include how often people participate in the arts and spiritual activities. |
Education | Covers basic skills in reading, math and science. Measures of student safety and health are also included. |
Health | Characterizes people’s involvement in healthy behaviors, prevalence of illness, access to healthcare, mortality and life expectancy. |
Leisure time | Describes how time is spent including: employment, care for seniors and activities that people partake in for personal enjoyment. Measures represent work-life balance. |
Living standards | Contains information about lifestyles. It includes measures of basic necessities, wealth and income. |
Safety and security | Covers information about perceived safety, actual safety and potential for danger. |
Social cohesion | Describes people’s connection to each other and their community through measures of involvement in family, civic engagement, and the community as a whole. |
Description of domains used in the HWBI.
Substitutions at the metric level in the HWBI allow for the index to be adapted to include data that more closely reflect characteristics in specific use case applications (e.g., geographical locations or population groups) while maintaining the integrity of the index at the indicator level [59, 60, 61].
The HWBI framework is designed to reflect stakeholder viewpoints regarding the relative importance of each of the eight domains. Since the domains are relevant to characterizing human well-being, regardless of time, space and culture [18], communities can easily “relate” to these well-being dimensions, making prioritization a fairly straight-forward exercise in developing relative importance values (RIVs) as weighting factors to customize HWBI. Applications of stakeholder RIVs utilized in a real community case studies are presented in Fulford et al. [62]. The foundational research in the development of HWBI [11, 25, 63, 64] has also been used to inform community-based landscape planning via the valuation ecosystem services [64]. Additionally, ecosystem services have been linked to community well-being priorities based on HWBI domains for the purpose of setting conservation targets for coastal ecosystems to deliver ecosystem and human benefits [65].
The HWBI framework demonstrates that ecosystem, economic and social services can be linked to the domains of well-being by relationship functions (Figure 1). Summers et al. [66] demonstrated that relationship functions can be derived between services information and well-being domain information at the county level. Similarly, relationships exist among indicators and metrics of well-being domains that were used to develop the ecosystem, economic and social services/well-being relationships (Table 2). Achieving balanced decisions requires techniques to examine the potential consequences (both intended and unintended; both positive and negative) on well-being associated with changing services. Summers et al. [66] used an approach for forecasting that employs (1) models derived from ecological, social and economic production functions (e.g., [67, 68]) and (2) models examining how communities feel about decision outcomes [69, 70]. Such models require a framework for linking changes in service production to changes in well-being.
Types of capital | Community goods and services | Domains of well-being |
---|---|---|
Social | Re-distribution (Ec) | Connection to nature |
Natural | Production (Ec) | Cultural fulfillment |
Human | Innovation (Ec) | Social cohesion |
Built | Finance (Ec) | Safety and security |
Employment (Ec) | Living standards | |
Consumption (Ec) | Education | |
Capital investment (Ec) | Health | |
Air quality (E) | Leisure time | |
Food, fiber and fuel provisioning (E) | ||
Greenspace (E) | ||
Water quality (E) | ||
Water quality (E) | ||
Public works (S) | ||
Labor (S) | ||
Justice (S) | ||
Healthcare (S) | ||
Family services (S) | ||
Emergency preparedness (S) | ||
Education (S) | ||
Community and faith-based initiatives (S) | ||
Communication (S) | ||
Activism (S) |
Types of capital, community good and services, and well-being domains used to construct forecasting models [66].
Ec = Economic services, E = Ecosystem services, S = Social services.
The functional equations for each well-being domain were determined through the use of bidirectional step-wise regression [71]. This process identified main effects and primary pair-wise interactions of service indicators and identified predictive variables based on adjusted R2 and sequenced F-tests [72]. The forecasts for each year in all counties of all states were compared to actual data for model fit and construction (7 of 10 available years) with 3 years of data withheld for validation. In addition, simple Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients were determined among the eight well-being domains to address likely co-occurrences of changes in multiple domains.
The results of these evaluations are documented in Summers et al. [66] regarding forecast inclusion of service indicators, model fit and validation, and scenario building using the forecasting tools. Overall examples of the forecasting applications are depicted in Figure 2 where observed and predicted are shown for the 3 years of withheld data for all 50 states (3 years of data not used in construction). Similarly, the strong inter-correlations among well-being domains are shown in Table 3. The use of the forecasting regressions in concert with the inter-domain correlation permits the evaluation of intended and unintended consequences of specific decisions to augment services or potentially improve well-being domains and overall well-being.
Comparison of observed and predicted values from forecast models for well-being based on ecosystem. Economic and social services (from [
D1 | D2 | D3 | D4 | D5 | D6 | D7 | D8 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
D1 | – | −0.581* | −0.616* | −0.392* | 0.075 | −0.438* | −0.499* | −0.703* |
D2 | – | 0.415* | 0.407* | −0.088 | 0.334* | 0.326* | 0.346* | |
D3 | – | 0.642* | 0.004 | 0.120 | 0.605* | 0.407* | ||
D4 | – | 0.157 | 0.202 | 0.680* | 0.159 | |||
D5 | – | −0.199* | −0.017 | −0.206 | ||||
D6 | – | 0.355* | 0.104 | |||||
D7 | – | 0.387* | ||||||
D8 | – |
Correlations (Pearson product moment) among human well-being domains (* = p < 0.0001; N = 561) (from [66]).
D1 = Connection to nature; D2 = Cultural fulfillment; D3 = Education; D4 = Health; D5 = Leisure time; D6 = Living standards; D7 = Safety and security; D8 = Social cohesion.
Effective measures of human well-being can be useful to decision making at the community level. Community decision-making is based on a shared commitment to achieving realizable improvements in family, child and neighborhood conditions in order to build accountability and capacity to achieve those results. This type of decision-making achieves the best results when it:
Uses timely, relevant and reliable data
Authentically involves community stakeholders
Assists communities in establishing and monitoring progress toward objectives
Develop a community agenda for investment
Assesses accurately community resources and assets
Accurately reflect community priorities
Engages multiple networks to support well-being
Reports regularly to stakeholders.
These attributes can be accomplished through effective engagement with community stakeholders. Stakeholder engagement is a necessary process of evaluation because effective use of the HWBI as an assessment tool requires information on the relative importance of the domains of HWBI for any given community (i.e., their community value structure), as well as the baseline value of well-being against which we can measure change.
Using the Relative Valuation of Multiple Ecosystem Services method (RESVI), Jordan et al. [3] queried three respondent groups to determine their overall value judgments related to various ecosystem services. The RESVI method uses an assessment where respondents are (1) briefed about policy questions to be examined with regard to the extent and nature of the ecosystem(s) and services involved, (2) asked to assign relative values to a list of ecosystem services in terms of what proportional dollar value for one service versus another, (3) application of a dollar value based on literature or research for each service type, and (4) creation of an index for all services using reference and relative values determined by the respondents.
The RESVI was used with three respondent groups – programmatic regulators, research scientists, and community stakeholders. The results compared the relative values of eight ecosystem services (Figure 3) – habitat functions, water quality regulation, water supply, recreation, flood control, esthetics, biodiversity and climate regulation. The test groups valued habitat functions and water quality regulation more than the other ecosystem services by a wide margin. However, some differences were observed among the respondent types with regard to their valuation systems. Regulators tended to more heavily value regulatory services while researchers tended to place higher values on ecosystems functions. Finally, general community stakeholders tended to value services that impacted landscapes.
Overall mean relative values for three respondent groups using to RESVI to ascertain relative values of ecosystem services (from [
Similarly, Fulford et al. [62] found that different community types could reflect different attitudes with regard to the relative importance of domains of well-being and the services that drive that well-being. There is an increasing understanding that decisions made by local communities can have significant impacts on community well-being and require a degree of understanding regarding local impact as well as cumulative impact across multiple communities [73, 74, 75, 76]. All communities have unique characteristics resulting in the potential for varying views regarding the importance of different ecosystem services as well as the components of well-being. Similarly, different communities can have beliefs and value systems in common. Using a community typology approach, Fulford et al. [62] developed a system to inform decision makers about sustainable decision outcomes based on the similarities and differences of communities’ priorities, belief systems, and values. Communities can be divided into one of eight types, which differ both in their baseline HWBI scores and in the relative importance of the different domains of HWBI (Figure 4). The developed approach aids communities by defining meaningful changes in well-being across similar communities through the establishment of reference points that can provide information regarding investment in activities like conservation, restoration of natural capital and mitigation [77, 78, 79].
Analytical comparison of human well-being among categorical groups of U.S. coastal counties based on a multivariate community topology (dashed arrows = data dependency; solid arrows = outcomes) (adapted from [
The holistic suite of indicators used in the Human Well-Being Index (HWBI) represent a synergistic measure of the outcome of ecosystem good and services production and delivery [11, 19, 25]. However, measures of well-being and their constituents (e.g., civic engagement, social cohesion, connection to nature) are not always easily understood and are not a direct measure of the delivery of services. The key at a community level is linking these broader well-being measures to community-specific desires and values. Fulford et al. [62] took a comparative approach toward well-being points of references based on an ecosystem goods and services-based community topology and Bayesian model-based cluster analysis [80] The HWBI was compared among community cluster groups to detect patterns in well-being as a function of the ecosystem goods and services community types (Figure 4). The key differences among community groups were population density and composition, economic dependence on local resources (e.g., forestry, fishing, agriculture), and to some extent geography. Differences among coastal county groupings indicated both strong and weak similarities resulting in three major clusters among the eight topological types (Figure 5). Fulford et al. [62] determined that community decision makers could use the classification system to identify well-being values from which to gauge impact of decisions that could shift well-being.
Map showing example of Gulf of Mexico coastal counties separated into eight classification types and bar chart indicating differences in unweighted HWBI composite scores average (SE) by classification group. See [
Similarly, Fulford et al. [81] used a keyword-based approach to determine common terminology used by 97 counties in three regions of the U.S. (Gulf of Mexico, western Great Lakes and Northwest) to refer to community fundamental objectives closely aligned with the domains of HWBI. They analyzed strategic planning documents using the eight domains of human well-being described by Summers et al. [19] and listed in Table 2. Living Standards and Safety and Security were the most common well-being domains referred to in community strategic plans. Health and Cultural Fulfillment were the least commonly addressed domains in these documents. Major community type (same typology as used in Fulford et al. [62] differences were largely between urban and rural areas with urban community types focusing on Living Standards and Education while rural communities tended toward Leisure Time and Social Cohesion.
Ecosystem goods and services (EGS) are the result of processes that can contribute to social welfare [82]. Social welfare can easily be translated into elements of human well-being as defined by Summers et al. [19, 20]; particularly, health, social cohesion and cultural fulfillment. Over 50 recent reviews relating human health and ecosystem services [83] showcase the focus of connecting ecosystem goods and services (EGS) with this aspect of well-being. However, fewer studies exist directly linking physical or mental health to natural systems via ecosystem goods and services, tracing the full pathways from ecosystem structure and function to EGS to health [83]. One recent review uses causal criteria analysis (CCA) to link health and EGS [1, 84].
Causal criteria analysis was developed in epidemiology to support health decision making often based on weak but independent information [85, 86]. One study [84] conducted a CCA focusing on the effects of EGS provided by greenspaces on human disease (Figure 6). Green spaces included any vegetation with an environment dominated by humans [87] – urban trees, wetlands, and green roofs. The health endpoints included gastro-intestinal disease, respiratory illness, cardiovascular disease, and heat morbidity. Simply put, green spaces can abate floods and storm surge hazards by reducing runoff through natural percolation or physically limiting the influence of waves and storm surge [88]. This type of mitigation can lower human exposure to contaminated flood waters potentially reducing gastrointestinal diseases and reducing conditions that can lead to asthma through mold growth [89]. Green spaces potentially remove toxicants, reduce the prevalence of gastrointestinal disease, trap contaminants and mitigate extreme temperatures [90, 91, 92, 93, 94]. CCA results showed sufficient evidence for causality for all tested greenspace-EGS pairings (heat hazard mitigation, clean air, water hazard mitigation and clean water), three of six EGS-health pairings (heat hazard-heat morbidities, water hazard mitigation-gastrointestinal disease and clean water-gastrointestinal disease) and two of four direct greenspace-health pairings (heat morbidities and cardiovascular disease). This work indicates that most current literature supports intermediate pathway connections between ecosystems and ecosystem goods and services as well as ecosystem goods and services and health. However, very few studies support a direct connection between the presence of ecosystems and health outcomes. Of those studies that exist, few simultaneously measure the mediation by ecosystem goods and services (Figure 6).
Proposed linkages between green spaces, the ecosystem services provided by green spaces and human health conditions (from [
As a specific example, ongoing studies in the San Juan Bay Estuary, Puerto Rico are evaluating the role of wetlands on Dengue fever by means of ecosystem services (e.g., biological control, clean water, and heat hazard mitigation) [95] (Figure 7). Ecosystem goods and services associated with heat hazard mitigation may help reduce mosquito biting, oviposition rate, and viral load. Clean surface water provides habitat for wildlife and healthier ecosystems, favoring bio-control of mosquitoes [96, 97, 98, 99]. Preliminary findings suggest that wetlands and wetland services are negatively associated with Dengue cases even after controlling for potentially confounding variables (Figure 8). Wetlands and wetland services were also found to help reduce temperature which is an environmental driver of Dengue transmission [98]. These findings help support a connection between an important ecosystem in the San Juan Bay area, and an ecosystem service that directly influences human health. In the future, this and other eco-health research may help inform predictive models to estimate changes in health benefits under different decision scenarios.
Hypothesized conceptual model of wetlands and Dengue fever occurrence through wetland ecosystem services (adapted from [
Predicted relationship between two wetland types ((A) grassy and (B) woody) and dengue cases in San Juan, Puerto Rico (Figure adapted from [
Many obstacles exist in developing useful and informative relationships between ecosystem services and community well-being including cultural differences in the perception of ecosystem services and well-being, lack of consistently available data to demonstrate a causal connection between services and well-being. This is often the case when combining natural sciences and social sciences data, approaches and interpretations. Even within these disciplines, the integration of data representing indicators to create indices or demonstrate connections is highly contentious. Some policy makers suggest that summary tools (e.g., models, indices, statistical assessments) lack meaningful interpretation and have little value in the real world [100, 101]. Others argue that the time is ripe for pushing these concepts into public policy – that the real world is a complex interaction of social, economic, and environmental activities where focus on single issues is insufficient to represent reality [102, 103, 104]. No matter who we are, or where we live, our well-being depends on the way ecosystems function. Defining, classifying and integrating ecosystem services into community decision making [105, 106] and, hence, community well-being is necessary for a holistic policy view that minimizes unintended consequences [66].
The research described in this chapter provides a management roadmap for linking ecosystem services to human wellbeing, but significant work still needs to be accomplished. The complexity of the relationship between ecosystem services and community well-being signifies an urgent need to develop further the transdisciplinary science of ecosystem management bringing together ecologists, biologists, resource economists, social scientists, and holistic systems specialists. A primary goal of this transdisciplinary research is the development of a valuation system potentially based on well-being and well-being improvement through the provision of goods and service A focus on the underpinning processes is necessary to understand where there are trade-offs and synergies and how these outcomes change with environmental variation. All members of the transdisciplinary team described above need to build a stronger science for stocks and flows, link this work to natural capital studies and create a stronger socio-ecological science that reflects the fact that ecosystems are coupled human-environmental systems.
The information in this chapter has been funded wholly (or in part) by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. It has been subjected to review by the National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory and approved for publication. Approval does not signify that the contents reflect the views of the Agency nor does mention of trade names or commercial products constitute endorsement or recommendation for use. Parts of this chapter are reproduced from the authors’ previous publications [11, 18, 19, 20, 25, 58, 60, 62, 63, 66, 81, 84, 95].
The views expressed in this manuscript are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Any mention of trade names, products, or services does not imply an endorsement by the U.S. Government or the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The EPA does not endorse any commercial products, services, or enterprises.
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Mahruf C. Shohel",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/9974.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",publishedDate:"May 18th 2022",editors:[{id:"94099",title:"Dr.",name:"M. Mahruf C.",middleName:null,surname:"Shohel",slug:"m.-mahruf-c.-shohel",fullName:"M. Mahruf C. Shohel"}],equalEditorOne:null,equalEditorTwo:null,equalEditorThree:null,productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}}]},subject:{topic:{id:"1164",title:"Sexology",slug:"urology-sexology",parent:{id:"204",title:"Urology",slug:"urology"},numberOfBooks:1,numberOfSeries:0,numberOfAuthorsAndEditors:17,numberOfWosCitations:3,numberOfCrossrefCitations:1,numberOfDimensionsCitations:4,videoUrl:null,fallbackUrl:null,description:null},booksByTopicFilter:{topicId:"1164",sort:"-publishedDate",limit:12,offset:0},booksByTopicCollection:[{type:"book",id:"5529",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",subtitle:null,isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"0975454a14d04823d05d12d95cc9f619",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",bookSignature:"Berend Olivier",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/5529.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"71579",title:"Prof.",name:"Berend",middleName:null,surname:"Olivier",slug:"berend-olivier",fullName:"Berend Olivier"}],equalEditorOne:null,equalEditorTwo:null,equalEditorThree:null,productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}}],booksByTopicTotal:1,seriesByTopicCollection:[],seriesByTopicTotal:0,mostCitedChapters:[{id:"55509",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.69105",title:"Sexual Dysfunction, Depression and Antidepressants: A Translational Approach",slug:"sexual-dysfunction-depression-and-antidepressants-a-translational-approach",totalDownloads:2138,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:3,abstract:"Major depression is frequently associated with sexual dysfunctions. Most antidepressants, especially selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), induce additional sexual side effects and, although effective antidepressants, deteriorate sexual symptoms, which are the main reason that patients stop antidepressant treatment. Many strategies have been used to circumvent the additional sexual side effects, but results are rather disappointing. Recently, new antidepressants have been introduced, vilazodone and vortioxetine, which seem to lack sexual side effects in the early registration trials. Much research with large numbers of depressed patients and adequate methodological tools still has to confirm in daily use the absence of sexual side effects of new antidepressants. Animal models that in an early phase of drug development may predict putative sexual side effects of new antidepressants are extremely useful and could speed up development of new antidepressants. A rat model of sexual behavior is described that has a very high predictive validity for sexual side effects in man. Several characteristics of present antidepressants with regard to sexual dysfunctions are also present in the rat model and establish its validity. The animal model can also be used in the search for new psychotropics without sexual side effects or for drugs with sexual stimulating activity.",book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Jocelien D.A. Olivier, Diana C. Esquivel Franco, Marcel D. Waldinger\nand Berend Olivier",authors:[{id:"71579",title:"Prof.",name:"Berend",middleName:null,surname:"Olivier",slug:"berend-olivier",fullName:"Berend Olivier"},{id:"157663",title:"Prof.",name:"Marcel",middleName:null,surname:"Waldinger",slug:"marcel-waldinger",fullName:"Marcel Waldinger"},{id:"197644",title:"Dr.",name:"Jocelien D.A.",middleName:null,surname:"Olivier",slug:"jocelien-d.a.-olivier",fullName:"Jocelien D.A. Olivier"},{id:"197646",title:"MSc.",name:"Diana C.",middleName:null,surname:"Esquivel Franco",slug:"diana-c.-esquivel-franco",fullName:"Diana C. Esquivel Franco"}]},{id:"55430",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.69106",title:"A “Snip” in Time: Circumcision Revisited",slug:"a-snip-in-time-circumcision-revisited",totalDownloads:1408,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:1,abstract:"The publication of an Italian study on etiology and interactions of frenulum breve, frenulectomy, and premature ejaculation, and the results of a popular Austrian sex study initiated a survey on this topic, accompanied by collecting a small sample of data in an urban practice environment in Germany. Since frenulectomy, for practical reasons, often leads to a complete removal of the prepuce, circumcision has come to the fore anew. Moreover, under the heading, “Ending a myth: male circumcision is not associated with higher prevalence of erectile dysfunction,” a recent study relating circumcision to sexual dysfunction has been published. In this chapter, an overview of research results as well as of psychological and clinical aspects of circumcision and associated subjects is given. There seem to be advantages of circumcision as to sexual dysfunction and premature ejaculation. Depending on etiopathology, some treatment options may require psychosomatic reasoning.",book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Götz Egloff",authors:[{id:"194175",title:"M.A.",name:"Götz",middleName:null,surname:"Egloff",slug:"gotz-egloff",fullName:"Götz Egloff"}]},{id:"55210",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.69107",title:"Hypogonadism in Male Sexual Dysfunction",slug:"hypogonadism-in-male-sexual-dysfunction",totalDownloads:1332,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,abstract:"Normal testosterone level is influencing all the steps of the male psychosexual development: intrauterine neonatal and final psychosexual development.. At pubertal stage, the quality of testosterone secretion is conditioning the development of the mature male phenotype. In adult life, eugonadism sustains desire, arousal, determines spontaneous erections, facilitates stimulated erection, influencing the response rate to medication. Moreover, eugonadism sustain daydreaming and phantasies, both needed for a normal sexual life. The pathogenic mechanism of all these actions is presented. Talking about hypogonadism means not only the classical types of hypogonadism: due to classical testicular disease of central, hypothalamic and hypophysis disease, but also the partial testosterone deficiency induces by aging (late onset hypogonadism), weight increase (up to 30% of males with metabolic syndrome and 50% of males with diabetes) or secondary hypogonadism described in chronic use of steroids or after long exposure to stress, especially in young males. All these types of hypogonadism, that affect young, middle aged or old males will be presented separately. A therapeutic approach that is individualized for each type of hypogonadism, should consider positive and possible negative effects and all alternatives will be presented: life style changes, sustained weight loss, increase exercise, supplemental therapy, pro fertility treatment.",book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Dana Stoian, Ioana Mozos, Marius Craina, Corina Paul, Iulian Velea,\nAdalbert Schiller and Mihaela Craciunescu",authors:[{id:"71595",title:"Dr.",name:"Ioana",middleName:null,surname:"Mozos",slug:"ioana-mozos",fullName:"Ioana Mozos"},{id:"182103",title:"Dr.",name:"Dana",middleName:"I",surname:"Stoian",slug:"dana-stoian",fullName:"Dana Stoian"},{id:"182104",title:"Prof.",name:"Marius",middleName:null,surname:"Craina",slug:"marius-craina",fullName:"Marius Craina"},{id:"182245",title:"Dr.",name:"Mihaela",middleName:null,surname:"Craciunescu",slug:"mihaela-craciunescu",fullName:"Mihaela Craciunescu"},{id:"183185",title:"Prof.",name:"Adalbert",middleName:null,surname:"Schiller",slug:"adalbert-schiller",fullName:"Adalbert Schiller"},{id:"194084",title:"Dr.",name:"Puiu",middleName:null,surname:"Velea",slug:"puiu-velea",fullName:"Puiu Velea"},{id:"194085",title:"Dr.",name:"Corina",middleName:null,surname:"Paul",slug:"corina-paul",fullName:"Corina Paul"}]},{id:"55391",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.69092",title:"Introductory Chapter: Sexual Dysfunction - Introduction and Perspective",slug:"introductory-chapter-sexual-dysfunction-introduction-and-perspective",totalDownloads:1794,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,abstract:null,book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Berend Olivier",authors:[{id:"71579",title:"Prof.",name:"Berend",middleName:null,surname:"Olivier",slug:"berend-olivier",fullName:"Berend Olivier"}]},{id:"55700",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.69104",title:"Erectile Dysfunction Associated with Cardiovascular Risk Factors",slug:"erectile-dysfunction-associated-with-cardiovascular-risk-factors",totalDownloads:1420,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,abstract:"Objectives: (1) Determine erectile dysfunction (ED) prevalence in patients with cardiovascular risk factors (CVRF). (2) Assess ED incidence in relation to the extent of controlling CVRF. Methodology: Patients: Enrolled participants came to the health centres in the study area. In accordance with the incidence of diseases with cardiovascular risks (CVR) in the Basic Health Regions of the study area, sample size was calculated with a 95% confidence interval and an alpha error of 0.005, resulting in a sample of 210 people, of which 30 could not complete the study for various reasons (change of address, death, refused to complete questionnaire, etc.). A full awareness and diffusion campaign was organized with talks and leaflets. Letters: A standard letter was given to patients which explained the importance of sexual health, offering them an appointment with a DUE (Diploma in Nursing) survey taker. The questionnaire was devised by the research group and was given by a fully trained DUE survey taker. Previously, contact was made with all the health centres, physicians and nursing staff to give them information on ED and CVRF and to inform them about the work to be done in their health region. Those patients who did not come to the appointment were telephoned to insist on the importance of attending and completing the questionnaire. Variables analysis: We analysed age, level of education, civil status, height, weight and body mass index (BMI), SBP, DBP, smoking habit, number cigarettes/day, year smoking began, ex‐smoker, year smoking stopped, alcohol consumption, grams alcohol/week, as well as consumption of other drugs, frequency and type. Blood test: glucose, haemoglobin glycated haemoglobin, total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, artherogenic index, creatinine, urea, GOT, GPT, gamma‐GT and PSA. Urine test: micro‐albuminuria, proteinuria and creatinine clearance. ECG: Diabetes diagnosed at least 1 year ago and prescribed drugs to treat it. High blood pressure diagnosed at least 1 year ago and prescribed drugs to treat it. Dyslipidaemia (hypercholesterolaemia) diagnosed at least 1 year ago and prescribed drugs to treat it. Concomitant diseases of at least 1 year and drugs (up to 3) SHIM questionnaire and ED according to SHIM. Statistical analysis: an observational, descriptive, analytical, cross‐sectional study. Qualitative variables are presented as exact values and a percentage; quantitative variables as the mean and standard deviation (SD). A means comparison was done with the Student’s t‐test for independent groups, or the Mann‐Whitney U test if normality conditions (using the Kolmogorov‐Smirnoff or Shapiro‐Wilks test) were not fulfilled. The chi‐squared test was used for qualitative variables. Results: Of the 210 selected people, 179 completed the questionnaire (85.2%). The mean age was 64.5 ± 11.6 years. When analysing all the study variables in relation to the main variable, presence or absence of ED, age played an important role in ED appearing as ED incidence rises with age. Blood pressure had no significant relationship with the studied variable, and the same hold for BMI and its subdivision into normal weight and obesity. As regards toxic habits, neither cigarette smoking nor alcohol consumption influenced the presence of ED. The same hold for the sociological‐type variables (civil states, level of education). Regarding the biochemical variables from blood tests, a significant relationship with the atherogenic index and its recoded variable at high and low atherogenic risk (p < 0.04) was noted. In the glycaemic profile, a glycaemia mean of 126 mg/dl was obtained in the ED presence group, which is the cut‐off point proposed by ADA117 (American Diabetes Association) to consider a subject diabetic. Likewise, glycated haemoglobin presented figures in the two groups can be considered an alternation of a practically diabetic glucose metabolism. In our study, the presence of diabetic disease, high blood pressure (HBP) and dyslipidaemia showed no significant relationship with ED presence for each disease. However, in the combination of these diseases, a statistically significant relationship was seen when CVR increases, according to the Framinghan tables. Neither did each disease’s duration show a significant relationship with ED presence nor significant differences for the drugs used to treat the three pathologies were found. The coronary risk calculated according to the Framinghan tables indicated a statistically significant result, as did excessive risk (the difference between the coronary risk and the average assigned per age) for ED presence. The LISAT 8 test suggested that ED affected health‐associated quality of life and was statistically significant in two items of sex life and economic situation and was borderline statistically significant in the general life and working life items. Conclusions: There is a high ED prevalence in patients with high CVR. When ED improves, the better CVRFs are controlled. These patients’ pluripathology implies aggressive polymedication which doctors must consider as it increases the risk of ED.",book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Ángel Celada Rodríguez, Pedro Juan Tárraga López, José Antonio\nRodríguez Montes, Ma Loreto Tarraga Marcos and Carmen Celada\nRoldan",authors:[{id:"193842",title:"Prof.",name:"Pedro J",middleName:null,surname:"Tarraga Lopez",slug:"pedro-j-tarraga-lopez",fullName:"Pedro J Tarraga Lopez"},{id:"193850",title:"Prof.",name:"Angel",middleName:null,surname:"Celada",slug:"angel-celada",fullName:"Angel Celada"},{id:"203619",title:"Dr.",name:"Jose Antonio",middleName:null,surname:"Rodriguez Montes",slug:"jose-antonio-rodriguez-montes",fullName:"Jose Antonio Rodriguez Montes"},{id:"203623",title:"Dr.",name:"Carmen",middleName:null,surname:"Celada",slug:"carmen-celada",fullName:"Carmen Celada"}]}],mostDownloadedChaptersLast30Days:[{id:"55430",title:"A “Snip” in Time: Circumcision Revisited",slug:"a-snip-in-time-circumcision-revisited",totalDownloads:1407,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:1,abstract:"The publication of an Italian study on etiology and interactions of frenulum breve, frenulectomy, and premature ejaculation, and the results of a popular Austrian sex study initiated a survey on this topic, accompanied by collecting a small sample of data in an urban practice environment in Germany. Since frenulectomy, for practical reasons, often leads to a complete removal of the prepuce, circumcision has come to the fore anew. Moreover, under the heading, “Ending a myth: male circumcision is not associated with higher prevalence of erectile dysfunction,” a recent study relating circumcision to sexual dysfunction has been published. In this chapter, an overview of research results as well as of psychological and clinical aspects of circumcision and associated subjects is given. There seem to be advantages of circumcision as to sexual dysfunction and premature ejaculation. Depending on etiopathology, some treatment options may require psychosomatic reasoning.",book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Götz Egloff",authors:[{id:"194175",title:"M.A.",name:"Götz",middleName:null,surname:"Egloff",slug:"gotz-egloff",fullName:"Götz Egloff"}]},{id:"55509",title:"Sexual Dysfunction, Depression and Antidepressants: A Translational Approach",slug:"sexual-dysfunction-depression-and-antidepressants-a-translational-approach",totalDownloads:2138,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:3,abstract:"Major depression is frequently associated with sexual dysfunctions. Most antidepressants, especially selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), induce additional sexual side effects and, although effective antidepressants, deteriorate sexual symptoms, which are the main reason that patients stop antidepressant treatment. Many strategies have been used to circumvent the additional sexual side effects, but results are rather disappointing. Recently, new antidepressants have been introduced, vilazodone and vortioxetine, which seem to lack sexual side effects in the early registration trials. Much research with large numbers of depressed patients and adequate methodological tools still has to confirm in daily use the absence of sexual side effects of new antidepressants. Animal models that in an early phase of drug development may predict putative sexual side effects of new antidepressants are extremely useful and could speed up development of new antidepressants. A rat model of sexual behavior is described that has a very high predictive validity for sexual side effects in man. Several characteristics of present antidepressants with regard to sexual dysfunctions are also present in the rat model and establish its validity. The animal model can also be used in the search for new psychotropics without sexual side effects or for drugs with sexual stimulating activity.",book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Jocelien D.A. Olivier, Diana C. Esquivel Franco, Marcel D. Waldinger\nand Berend Olivier",authors:[{id:"71579",title:"Prof.",name:"Berend",middleName:null,surname:"Olivier",slug:"berend-olivier",fullName:"Berend Olivier"},{id:"157663",title:"Prof.",name:"Marcel",middleName:null,surname:"Waldinger",slug:"marcel-waldinger",fullName:"Marcel Waldinger"},{id:"197644",title:"Dr.",name:"Jocelien D.A.",middleName:null,surname:"Olivier",slug:"jocelien-d.a.-olivier",fullName:"Jocelien D.A. Olivier"},{id:"197646",title:"MSc.",name:"Diana C.",middleName:null,surname:"Esquivel Franco",slug:"diana-c.-esquivel-franco",fullName:"Diana C. Esquivel Franco"}]},{id:"55700",title:"Erectile Dysfunction Associated with Cardiovascular Risk Factors",slug:"erectile-dysfunction-associated-with-cardiovascular-risk-factors",totalDownloads:1420,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,abstract:"Objectives: (1) Determine erectile dysfunction (ED) prevalence in patients with cardiovascular risk factors (CVRF). (2) Assess ED incidence in relation to the extent of controlling CVRF. Methodology: Patients: Enrolled participants came to the health centres in the study area. In accordance with the incidence of diseases with cardiovascular risks (CVR) in the Basic Health Regions of the study area, sample size was calculated with a 95% confidence interval and an alpha error of 0.005, resulting in a sample of 210 people, of which 30 could not complete the study for various reasons (change of address, death, refused to complete questionnaire, etc.). A full awareness and diffusion campaign was organized with talks and leaflets. Letters: A standard letter was given to patients which explained the importance of sexual health, offering them an appointment with a DUE (Diploma in Nursing) survey taker. The questionnaire was devised by the research group and was given by a fully trained DUE survey taker. Previously, contact was made with all the health centres, physicians and nursing staff to give them information on ED and CVRF and to inform them about the work to be done in their health region. Those patients who did not come to the appointment were telephoned to insist on the importance of attending and completing the questionnaire. Variables analysis: We analysed age, level of education, civil status, height, weight and body mass index (BMI), SBP, DBP, smoking habit, number cigarettes/day, year smoking began, ex‐smoker, year smoking stopped, alcohol consumption, grams alcohol/week, as well as consumption of other drugs, frequency and type. Blood test: glucose, haemoglobin glycated haemoglobin, total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, artherogenic index, creatinine, urea, GOT, GPT, gamma‐GT and PSA. Urine test: micro‐albuminuria, proteinuria and creatinine clearance. ECG: Diabetes diagnosed at least 1 year ago and prescribed drugs to treat it. High blood pressure diagnosed at least 1 year ago and prescribed drugs to treat it. Dyslipidaemia (hypercholesterolaemia) diagnosed at least 1 year ago and prescribed drugs to treat it. Concomitant diseases of at least 1 year and drugs (up to 3) SHIM questionnaire and ED according to SHIM. Statistical analysis: an observational, descriptive, analytical, cross‐sectional study. Qualitative variables are presented as exact values and a percentage; quantitative variables as the mean and standard deviation (SD). A means comparison was done with the Student’s t‐test for independent groups, or the Mann‐Whitney U test if normality conditions (using the Kolmogorov‐Smirnoff or Shapiro‐Wilks test) were not fulfilled. The chi‐squared test was used for qualitative variables. Results: Of the 210 selected people, 179 completed the questionnaire (85.2%). The mean age was 64.5 ± 11.6 years. When analysing all the study variables in relation to the main variable, presence or absence of ED, age played an important role in ED appearing as ED incidence rises with age. Blood pressure had no significant relationship with the studied variable, and the same hold for BMI and its subdivision into normal weight and obesity. As regards toxic habits, neither cigarette smoking nor alcohol consumption influenced the presence of ED. The same hold for the sociological‐type variables (civil states, level of education). Regarding the biochemical variables from blood tests, a significant relationship with the atherogenic index and its recoded variable at high and low atherogenic risk (p < 0.04) was noted. In the glycaemic profile, a glycaemia mean of 126 mg/dl was obtained in the ED presence group, which is the cut‐off point proposed by ADA117 (American Diabetes Association) to consider a subject diabetic. Likewise, glycated haemoglobin presented figures in the two groups can be considered an alternation of a practically diabetic glucose metabolism. In our study, the presence of diabetic disease, high blood pressure (HBP) and dyslipidaemia showed no significant relationship with ED presence for each disease. However, in the combination of these diseases, a statistically significant relationship was seen when CVR increases, according to the Framinghan tables. Neither did each disease’s duration show a significant relationship with ED presence nor significant differences for the drugs used to treat the three pathologies were found. The coronary risk calculated according to the Framinghan tables indicated a statistically significant result, as did excessive risk (the difference between the coronary risk and the average assigned per age) for ED presence. The LISAT 8 test suggested that ED affected health‐associated quality of life and was statistically significant in two items of sex life and economic situation and was borderline statistically significant in the general life and working life items. Conclusions: There is a high ED prevalence in patients with high CVR. When ED improves, the better CVRFs are controlled. These patients’ pluripathology implies aggressive polymedication which doctors must consider as it increases the risk of ED.",book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Ángel Celada Rodríguez, Pedro Juan Tárraga López, José Antonio\nRodríguez Montes, Ma Loreto Tarraga Marcos and Carmen Celada\nRoldan",authors:[{id:"193842",title:"Prof.",name:"Pedro J",middleName:null,surname:"Tarraga Lopez",slug:"pedro-j-tarraga-lopez",fullName:"Pedro J Tarraga Lopez"},{id:"193850",title:"Prof.",name:"Angel",middleName:null,surname:"Celada",slug:"angel-celada",fullName:"Angel Celada"},{id:"203619",title:"Dr.",name:"Jose Antonio",middleName:null,surname:"Rodriguez Montes",slug:"jose-antonio-rodriguez-montes",fullName:"Jose Antonio Rodriguez Montes"},{id:"203623",title:"Dr.",name:"Carmen",middleName:null,surname:"Celada",slug:"carmen-celada",fullName:"Carmen Celada"}]},{id:"55210",title:"Hypogonadism in Male Sexual Dysfunction",slug:"hypogonadism-in-male-sexual-dysfunction",totalDownloads:1331,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,abstract:"Normal testosterone level is influencing all the steps of the male psychosexual development: intrauterine neonatal and final psychosexual development.. At pubertal stage, the quality of testosterone secretion is conditioning the development of the mature male phenotype. In adult life, eugonadism sustains desire, arousal, determines spontaneous erections, facilitates stimulated erection, influencing the response rate to medication. Moreover, eugonadism sustain daydreaming and phantasies, both needed for a normal sexual life. The pathogenic mechanism of all these actions is presented. Talking about hypogonadism means not only the classical types of hypogonadism: due to classical testicular disease of central, hypothalamic and hypophysis disease, but also the partial testosterone deficiency induces by aging (late onset hypogonadism), weight increase (up to 30% of males with metabolic syndrome and 50% of males with diabetes) or secondary hypogonadism described in chronic use of steroids or after long exposure to stress, especially in young males. All these types of hypogonadism, that affect young, middle aged or old males will be presented separately. A therapeutic approach that is individualized for each type of hypogonadism, should consider positive and possible negative effects and all alternatives will be presented: life style changes, sustained weight loss, increase exercise, supplemental therapy, pro fertility treatment.",book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Dana Stoian, Ioana Mozos, Marius Craina, Corina Paul, Iulian Velea,\nAdalbert Schiller and Mihaela Craciunescu",authors:[{id:"71595",title:"Dr.",name:"Ioana",middleName:null,surname:"Mozos",slug:"ioana-mozos",fullName:"Ioana Mozos"},{id:"182103",title:"Dr.",name:"Dana",middleName:"I",surname:"Stoian",slug:"dana-stoian",fullName:"Dana Stoian"},{id:"182104",title:"Prof.",name:"Marius",middleName:null,surname:"Craina",slug:"marius-craina",fullName:"Marius Craina"},{id:"182245",title:"Dr.",name:"Mihaela",middleName:null,surname:"Craciunescu",slug:"mihaela-craciunescu",fullName:"Mihaela Craciunescu"},{id:"183185",title:"Prof.",name:"Adalbert",middleName:null,surname:"Schiller",slug:"adalbert-schiller",fullName:"Adalbert Schiller"},{id:"194084",title:"Dr.",name:"Puiu",middleName:null,surname:"Velea",slug:"puiu-velea",fullName:"Puiu Velea"},{id:"194085",title:"Dr.",name:"Corina",middleName:null,surname:"Paul",slug:"corina-paul",fullName:"Corina Paul"}]},{id:"55391",title:"Introductory Chapter: Sexual Dysfunction - Introduction and Perspective",slug:"introductory-chapter-sexual-dysfunction-introduction-and-perspective",totalDownloads:1794,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,abstract:null,book:{id:"5529",slug:"sexual-dysfunction",title:"Sexual Dysfunction",fullTitle:"Sexual Dysfunction"},signatures:"Berend Olivier",authors:[{id:"71579",title:"Prof.",name:"Berend",middleName:null,surname:"Olivier",slug:"berend-olivier",fullName:"Berend Olivier"}]}],onlineFirstChaptersFilter:{topicId:"1164",limit:6,offset:0},onlineFirstChaptersCollection:[],onlineFirstChaptersTotal:0},preDownload:{success:null,errors:{}},subscriptionForm:{success:null,errors:{}},aboutIntechopen:{},privacyPolicy:{},peerReviewing:{},howOpenAccessPublishingWithIntechopenWorks:{},sponsorshipBooks:{sponsorshipBooks:[],offset:8,limit:8,total:0},allSeries:{pteSeriesList:[{id:"14",title:"Artificial Intelligence",numberOfPublishedBooks:9,numberOfPublishedChapters:87,numberOfOpenTopics:6,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2633-1403",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.79920",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"7",title:"Biomedical Engineering",numberOfPublishedBooks:12,numberOfPublishedChapters:98,numberOfOpenTopics:3,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2631-5343",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71985",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],lsSeriesList:[{id:"11",title:"Biochemistry",numberOfPublishedBooks:27,numberOfPublishedChapters:287,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2632-0983",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.72877",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"25",title:"Environmental Sciences",numberOfPublishedBooks:1,numberOfPublishedChapters:9,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2754-6713",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100362",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"10",title:"Physiology",numberOfPublishedBooks:11,numberOfPublishedChapters:139,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2631-8261",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.72796",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],hsSeriesList:[{id:"3",title:"Dentistry",numberOfPublishedBooks:8,numberOfPublishedChapters:129,numberOfOpenTopics:0,numberOfUpcomingTopics:2,issn:"2631-6218",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71199",isOpenForSubmission:!1},{id:"6",title:"Infectious Diseases",numberOfPublishedBooks:13,numberOfPublishedChapters:107,numberOfOpenTopics:3,numberOfUpcomingTopics:1,issn:"2631-6188",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71852",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"13",title:"Veterinary Medicine and Science",numberOfPublishedBooks:10,numberOfPublishedChapters:103,numberOfOpenTopics:3,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2632-0517",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.73681",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],sshSeriesList:[{id:"22",title:"Business, Management and Economics",numberOfPublishedBooks:1,numberOfPublishedChapters:12,numberOfOpenTopics:2,numberOfUpcomingTopics:1,issn:null,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100359",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"23",title:"Education and Human Development",numberOfPublishedBooks:0,numberOfPublishedChapters:0,numberOfOpenTopics:2,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:null,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100360",isOpenForSubmission:!1},{id:"24",title:"Sustainable Development",numberOfPublishedBooks:0,numberOfPublishedChapters:10,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:1,issn:null,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100361",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],testimonialsList:[{id:"13",text:"The collaboration with and support of the technical staff of IntechOpen is fantastic. 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",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series/covers/22.jpg",latestPublicationDate:"May 18th, 2022",hasOnlineFirst:!0,numberOfPublishedBooks:1,editor:{id:"356540",title:"Prof.",name:"Taufiq",middleName:null,surname:"Choudhry",slug:"taufiq-choudhry",fullName:"Taufiq Choudhry",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0033Y000036X2hvQAC/Profile_Picture_2022-03-14T08:58:03.jpg",biography:"Prof. Choudhry holds a BSc degree in Economics from the University of Iowa, as well as a Masters and Ph.D. in Applied Economics from Clemson University, USA. In January 2006, he became a Professor of Finance at the University of Southampton Business School. He was previously a Professor of Finance at the University of Bradford Management School. He has over 80 articles published in international finance and economics journals. His research interests and specialties include financial econometrics, financial economics, international economics and finance, housing markets, financial markets, among others.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Southampton",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"United Kingdom"}}},editorTwo:null,editorThree:null},subseries:{paginationCount:3,paginationItems:[{id:"86",title:"Business and Management",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series_topics/covers/86.jpg",isOpenForSubmission:!0,editor:{id:"128342",title:"Prof.",name:"Vito",middleName:null,surname:"Bobek",slug:"vito-bobek",fullName:"Vito Bobek",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/128342/images/system/128342.jpg",biography:"Dr. Vito Bobek works as an international management professor at the University of Applied Sciences FH Joanneum, Graz, Austria. He has published more than 400 works in his academic career and visited twenty-two universities worldwide as a visiting professor. Dr. Bobek is a member of the editorial boards of six international journals and a member of the Strategic Council of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Slovenia. He has a long history in academia, consulting, and entrepreneurship. His own consulting firm, Palemid, has managed twenty significant projects, such as Cooperation Program Interreg V-A (Slovenia-Austria) and Capacity Building for the Serbian Chamber of Enforcement Agents. He has also participated in many international projects in Italy, Germany, Great Britain, the United States, Spain, Turkey, France, Romania, Croatia, Montenegro, Malaysia, and China. Dr. Bobek is also a co-founder of the Academy of Regional Management in Slovenia.",institutionString:"Universities of Applied Sciences FH Joanneum, Austria",institution:null},editorTwo:{id:"293992",title:"Dr.",name:"Tatjana",middleName:null,surname:"Horvat",slug:"tatjana-horvat",fullName:"Tatjana Horvat",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002hXb0hQAC/Profile_Picture_1642419002203",biography:"Tatjana Horvat works as a professor for accountant and auditing at the University of Primorska, Slovenia. She is a Certified State Internal Auditor (licensed by Ministry of Finance RS) and Certified Internal Auditor for Business Sector and Certified accountant (licensed by Slovenian Institute of Auditors). At the Ministry of Justice of Slovenia, she is a member of examination boards for court expert candidates and judicial appraisers in the following areas: economy/finance, valuation of companies, banking, and forensic investigation of economic operations/accounting. At the leading business newspaper Finance in Slovenia (Swedish ownership), she is the editor and head of the area for business, finance, tax-related articles, and educational programs.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Primorska",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Slovenia"}}},editorThree:null},{id:"87",title:"Economics",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series_topics/covers/87.jpg",isOpenForSubmission:!0,editor:{id:"327730",title:"Prof.",name:"Jaime",middleName:null,surname:"Ortiz",slug:"jaime-ortiz",fullName:"Jaime Ortiz",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0033Y00002zaOKZQA2/Profile_Picture_1642145584421",biography:"Dr. Jaime Ortiz holds degrees from Chile, the Netherlands, and the United States. He has held tenured faculty, distinguished professorship, and executive leadership appointments in several universities around the world. Dr. Ortiz has previously worked for international organizations and non-government entities in economic and business matters, and he has university-wide globalization engagement in more than thirty-six countries. He has advised, among others, the United Nations Development Program, Inter-American Development Bank, Organization of American States, Pre-investment Organization of Latin America and the Caribbean, Technical Cooperation of the Suisse Government, and the World Bank. Dr. Ortiz is the author, co-author, or editor of books, book chapters, textbooks, research monographs and technical reports, and refereed journal articles. He is listed in Who’s Who in the World, Who’s Who in America, Who’s Who in Finance and Business, Who’s Who in Business Higher Education, Who’s Who in American Education, and Who’s Who Directory of Economists. Dr. Ortiz has been a Fulbright Scholar and an MSI Leadership Fellow with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. His teaching interests revolve around global economies and markets while his research focuses on topics related to development and growth, global business decisions, and the economics of technical innovation.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Houston",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"United States of America"}}},editorTwo:null,editorThree:null},{id:"88",title:"Marketing",coverUrl:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/series_topics/covers/88.jpg",isOpenForSubmission:!1,editor:null,editorTwo:null,editorThree:null}]},overviewPageOFChapters:{paginationCount:1,paginationItems:[{id:"81831",title:"Deep Network Model and Regression Analysis using OLS Method for Predicting Lung Vital Capacity",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.104737",signatures:"Harun Sümbül",slug:"deep-network-model-and-regression-analysis-using-ols-method-for-predicting-lung-vital-capacity",totalDownloads:2,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,authors:null,book:{title:"Decision Science - Recent Advances and Applications",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/11604.jpg",subseries:{id:"86",title:"Business and Management"}}}]},overviewPagePublishedBooks:{paginationCount:1,paginationItems:[{type:"book",id:"11392",title:"Leadership in a Changing World",subtitle:"A Multidimensional Perspective",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/11392.jpg",slug:"leadership-in-a-changing-world-a-multidimensional-perspective",publishedDate:"May 11th 2022",editedByType:"Edited by",bookSignature:"Muhammad Mohiuddin, Bilal Khalid, Md. Samim Al Azad and Slimane Ed-dafali",hash:"86a6d33cf601587e591064ce92effc02",volumeInSeries:1,fullTitle:"Leadership in a Changing World - A Multidimensional Perspective",editors:[{id:"418514",title:"Dr.",name:"Muhammad",middleName:null,surname:"Mohiuddin",slug:"muhammad-mohiuddin",fullName:"Muhammad Mohiuddin",profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0033Y000038UqSfQAK/Profile_Picture_2022-05-13T10:39:03.jpg",biography:"Dr. Muhammad Mohiuddin is an Associate Professor of International Business at Laval University, Canada. He has taught at Thompson Rivers University, Canada; University of Paris-Est, France; Osnabruck University of Applied Science, Germany; and Shanghai Institute of Technology and Tianjin University of Technology, China. He has published research in Research Policy, Applied Economics, Review of Economic Philosophy, Strategic Change, International Journal of Logistics, Sustainability, Journal of Environmental Management, Journal of Global Information Management, Journal of Cleaner Production, M@N@GEMENT, and more. He is a member of CEDIMES Institut (France), Academy of International Business (AIB), Strategic Management Society (SMS), Academy of Management (AOM), Administrative Science Association of Canada (ASAC), and Canadian council of small business and entrepreneurship (CCSBE). He is currently the director of the Research Group on Contemporary Asia (GERAC) at Laval University. 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Behind these definitions are hidden all the aspects of normal and pathological functioning of all processes that the topic ‘Metabolism’ will cover within the Biochemistry Series. 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Thus proteomics, an area of research that detects all protein forms expressed in an organism, including splice isoforms and post-translational modifications, is more suitable than genomics for a comprehensive understanding of the biochemical processes that govern life. The most common proteomics applications are currently in the clinical field for the identification, in a variety of biological matrices, of biomarkers for diagnosis and therapeutic intervention of disorders. From the comparison of proteomic profiles of control and disease or different physiological states, which may emerge, changes in protein expression can provide new insights into the roles played by some proteins in human pathologies. Understanding how proteins function and interact with each other is another goal of proteomics that makes this approach even more intriguing. Specialized technology and expertise are required to assess the proteome of any biological sample. Currently, proteomics relies mainly on mass spectrometry (MS) combined with electrophoretic (1 or 2-DE-MS) and/or chromatographic techniques (LC-MS/MS). MS is an excellent tool that has gained popularity in proteomics because of its ability to gather a complex body of information such as cataloging protein expression, identifying protein modification sites, and defining protein interactions. 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