Development of dry control technology for emissions of mercury in flue gas
Author(s) -
H.S. Huang,
Jiann M. Wu,
C.D. Livengood
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/82486
Subject(s) - mercury (programming language) , flue gas , chlorine , chemistry , coal combustion products , elemental mercury , coal , sorption , environmental chemistry , sulfur , combustion , activated carbon , chloride , adsorption , waste management , organic chemistry , computer science , engineering , programming language
In flue gases from coal-combustion systems, mercury in either the elemental state or its chloride form (HgCl{sub 2}) can be predominant among all the possible mercury species present; this predominance largely depends on the chlorine-to-mercury ratio in the coal feeds. Conventional flue-gas cleanup technologies are moderately effective in controlling HgCl{sub 2} but are very poor at controlling elemental mercury. Experiments were conducted on the removal of elemental mercury vapor by means of a number of different types of sorbents, using a fixed-bed adsorption system. Of the four commercial activated carbons evaluated, the sulfur-treated carbon sample gives the best removal performance, with good mercury-sorption capacities. Promising removal results also have been obtained with low-cost minerals after chemical treatments. These inorganic sorbents could potentially be developed into a cost-effective alternative to activated carbons for mercury removal
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