4.7 Article

Deep study on effects of activated carbon's oxygen functional groups for elemental mercury adsorption using temperature programmed desorption method

Journal

FUEL
Volume 200, Issue -, Pages 100-106

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2017.03.031

Keywords

Activated carbon; Mercury; Oxygen functional groups; Temperature programmed desorption

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51476066, U1261204]
  2. National Program of International Science and Technology Cooperation [2015DFA60410]

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Oxygen functional groups play an important role in elemental mercury adsorption by activated carbon (AC). However, the adsorption mechanism of oxygen functional groups is unclear. This study investigated the effects of oxygen functional groups on elemental mercury adsorption using temperature programmed desorption method. Nitric acid treatment, non-thermal plasma treatment, and heat treatment in nitrogen or carbon dioxide were used to modify AC's oxygen functional groups and pore structures. Base-acid titration experiments were conducted to calculate the amount of oxygen functional groups of samples. Mercury removal efficiency tests and temperature programmed desorption experiments of AC were carried out in a bench-scale quartz reactor. The results suggested that the mercury removal performance of AC was determined by the comprehensive effects of surface area, carbonyl group and ester group, and each of them had different influences on mercury adsorption at different temperatures. Physisorption which related with surface area only occurred in the temperature range from 30 degrees C to 130 degrees C, and it was inhibited by increasing temperature; while carbonyl group and ester group could capture mercury in the temperature range from 30 degrees C to 210 degrees C. However, increasing temperature could inhibit the mercury adsorption by carbonyl group in the temperature range of 130-210 degrees C, and the ester group dominated mercury adsorption at 210 degrees C. In addition, carbonyl group and ester group had different priority levels for mercury adsorption, active sites related with ester group had the highest priority of capturing mercury, and active sites in correlation with carbonyl group was the second, while active sites corresponding with physisorption was the last one. (C) 2017 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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