4.6 Article

Interference Effect of Experimental Parameters on the Mercury Removal Mechanism of Biomass Char under an Oxy-Fuel Atmosphere

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 6, Issue 50, Pages 35124-35133

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.1c06038

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51706104]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20180479]
  3. Peak of the Six Talents Program of Jiangsu Province [XNY-026]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M681611]
  5. Postgraduate Research & Practice Innovation Program of Jiangsu Province [SJCX21_0130]
  6. Open Fund for Large-scale Equipment of NUST

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This study investigated the adsorption of mercury by 1% NH4Cl-modified biomass char under oxy-fuel combustion conditions, and analyzed the effects of temperature, adsorption bed height, and initial mercury concentration on the adsorption process. The results demonstrated that higher temperature and initial mercury concentration led to better mercury adsorption performance, which was closely related to the progress of chemical adsorption and external mass transfer.
In this paper, the effect of temperature, adsorption bed height, and initial mercury concentration under oxy-fuel combustion on mercury adsorption by 1% NH4Cl-modified biomass char was studied. Modification enriched the pore structure of biomass char and increased the number of surface functional groups. Higher temperature would lead to the destruction of van der Waals and reduce the adsorption efficiency, while the change of adsorption bed height had no obvious effect. Adsorption thermodynamics shows that the mercury removal process is a spontaneous exothermic process. The increase of initial mercury concentration would increase the driving force of mercury diffusion to the surface and improve the adsorption capacity. Meanwhile, three kinetic models including the intraparticle diffusion model, pseudo-first-order model, and pseudo-second-order model were applied to explore the internal mechanism of mercury adsorption by biomass char. The results showed that the pseudo-first-order model and pseudo-second-order model could accurately describe the adsorption process, which meant that the progress of external mass transfer played an important role in the adsorption of mercury while chemical adsorption should not be ignored. The intraparticle diffusion model indicated that internal diffusion was not the only step to control the entire adsorption process and did not have an inhibition on mercury removal. Higher initial mercury concentration would promote the external mass transfer progress and chemical adsorption progress. In addition, higher temperature inhibited the external mass transfer, which was not conducive to the adsorption of mercury.

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