4.6 Article

Kinetic mechanism on elemental mercury adsorption by brominated petroleum coke in simulated flue gas

Journal

RSC ADVANCES
Volume 12, Issue 26, Pages 16386-16395

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2ra02318k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [CUSF-DH-D-2017097]
  2. Shanghai New Teacher Training Program [ZZNL20012]
  3. Shanghai Vocational College of Agriculture and Forestry [A2-0265-22-40, KY2-0000-20-04]

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In this study, a waste byproduct of petroleum coke was modified with bromine to capture elemental mercury in simulated flue gas. The results showed that the brominated petroleum coke was effective for capturing elemental mercury, with the optimal temperature being around 150 degrees C. Kinetic models revealed that chemisorption was the controlling step, with intra-particle diffusion and external mass transfer occurring simultaneously. Moreover, the presence of higher concentrations of O-2 or NO increased the initial mercury adsorption rate and equilibrium adsorption quantity, while higher concentrations of SO2 or HCl had a negative impact on the adsorption performance.
A waste byproduct of petroleum coke was obtained as a precursor modified with bromine for elemental mercury capture from simulated flue gas on a bench scale fixed-bed reactor. The reaction temperature, the initial inlet elemental mercury concentration and the individual flue gas components of O-2, NO, SO2 and HCl were determined to explore their influence on elemental mercury capture by the brominated petroleum coke. Results indicate that high initial inlet mercury concentration can enhance initial mercury accumulation and the optimal temperature for elemental mercury capture by brominated petroleum coke is about 150 degrees C. Kinetic models reveal that the pseudo-second order and Elovich models are best fitted to the mercury adsorption process, indicating that chemisorption is the control step with the intra-particle diffusion and external mass transfer taking place simultaneously. The kinetic parameters demonstrate that the initial mercury adsorption rate (h or a) and the equilibrium adsorption quantity (Q(e)) increase remarkably, when higher concentrations of O-2 or NO exist in N-2 atmosphere. On the contrary, Q(e) decreases with the presence of high SO2 or HCl, which indicates a two-sided effect on the performance of mercury adsorption owing to their concentrations.

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