4.7 Article

Influence of wet flue gas desulfurization on the pollutants monitoring in FCC flue gas

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 39, Pages 55502-55510

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-14767-9

Keywords

FCC flue gas; Alkali-based WFGD; FTIR; Factor analysis; (NH4)(2)SO3

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22008071]
  2. Shanghai Sailing Program [19YF1410800]

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This study showed that wet flue gas desulfurization leads to a large amount of water vapor in the flue gas, indirectly causing the emissions of salt pollutants. The research also found that a significant amount of ammonium sulfite and ammonium sulfate existed in the condensate water of the flue gas, releasing NH3, SO2, and H2O during decomposition.
Fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) unit emits a large amount of flue gas, which is a major concern of environmental protection supervision. Wet flue gas desulfurization (WFGD) technologies have been widely used to control the emissions of SO2 in refineries. In this study, stack tests for pollutants emission of a typical FCC unit were conducted. The emission characteristics of the FCC unit indicated that WFGD would cause a large amount of water vapor in the flue gas, which indirectly leads to large quantities of salt pollutants entrained in the flue gas including ammonium sulfite ((NH4)(2)SO3) and ammonium sulfate ((NH4)(2)SO4). A strong correlation among the concentrations of SO2, NH3, and H2O was observed, and factor analysis shows that these concentrations are dominated by a common factor. It was also found that a mass quantity of NH4+ and SO32- existed in the condensate water of the flue gas. The TG-MS analysis shows that (NH4)(2)SO3 could be decomposed at 94.1 degrees C, and NH3, SO2, and H2O are released as reaction products in the form of gas. Therefore, a part of the NH3 and SO2 obtained by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) monitoring may be derived from the decomposition of (NH4)(2)SO3 in the flue gas due to the high temperature during the sampling process, which was also confirmed in a lab experiment. The hot and wet sampling process will lead to overestimation of NH3 and SO2 emissions rather than FTIR method itself when monitoring the high-humidity FCC flue gas. Thus, the concentration of H2O in the flue gas and the type of sampling process need to be taken into consideration during the monitoring process.

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