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Enhanced Adsorptive Desulfurization Using Mongolian Anthracite-Based Activated Carbon
Author(s) -
Divyam Jha,
Mohd Belal Haider,
Rakesh Kumar,
Narandalai Byamba-Ochir,
Wang Geun Shim,
M.S. Balathanigaimani,
Hee Moon
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.9b03432
Subject(s) - flue gas desulfurization , anthracite , activated carbon , adsorption , chemical engineering , carbon fibers , waste management , environmental science , chemistry , materials science , coal , composite material , engineering , organic chemistry , composite number
This study reports usage of Mongolian anthracite-based porous activated carbons (PMACs), namely, PMAC 1/3 and PMAC 1/4 for model diesel fuel desulfurization, having 500 ppmw of dibenzothiophene (DBT) in n -heptane. Further, the effects of contact time, adsorbent dosage, and temperature on the adsorption capacity were studied systematically. The experimental adsorption isotherm results were well represented by the Sips isotherm for PMAC 1/3 and the dual site Langmuir isotherm for PMAC 1/4. The maximum DBT adsorption by PMAC 1/3 and PMAC 1/4 were 99.7 and 95.7%, respectively. The kinetics for the adsorption of DBT on PMACs follows the pseudo second order behavior. The Weber-Morris plot shows the multilinearity over the entire time range, suggesting that both the surface and pore diffusions control the adsorption. The values of boundary layer thickness for PMAC 1/4 and PMAC 1/3 were found to be 3.183 and 1.643, respectively. Thus, PMAC 1/4 possesses more surface diffusion control than PMAC 1/3. The changes in Gibbs free energy (Δ G °), entropy (Δ S °), and enthalpy (Δ H °) are negative, which confirms that the studied process is spontaneous and exothermic and possesses less randomness at the interface. Based on the Sips isotherm, single-stage batch-adsorber design was prepared for the adsorption of DBT onto PMAC 1/3.

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