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Cobenefit of SO3 reduction on mercury capture with activated carbon in coal flue gas
Authors:Ye Zhuang  Christopher Martin  John Pavlish  Francois Botha
Affiliation:a Energy & Environmental Research Center, University of North Dakota, 15 North 23rd Street, Stop 9018, Grand Forks, ND 58202-9019, USA
b Illinois Clean Coal Institute, 5776 Coal Drive, Suite 200Carterville, IL 62918-3328, USA
Abstract:Parametric experiments were carried out to study the interactions of mercury, SO3, and injected activated carbon (AC) in a coal flue gas stream. The levels of SO3 vapor in flue gas were altered by individually varying flue gas temperature, moisture, or sodium fume injection in the flue gas. Meanwhile, mercury emissions with AC injection (ACI) upstream of an electrostatic precipitator (ESP) were evaluated under varied SO3 concentrations. SO3 measurements using a condensation method indicated that low temperature, high moisture content, and sodium fume injection in flue gas shifted SO3 partitioning from the vapor to particulate phase, subsequently improving mercury capture with ACI. 0.08 g/m3 of DARCO® Hg-LH injection only provided approximately 20% mercury reduction across the ESP in a bituminous coal flue gas containing 28 ppm SO3, but mercury capture was increased to 80% when the SO3 vapor concentration was lowered less than 2 ppm. Experimental data clearly demonstrate that elevated SO3 vapor is the key factor that impedes mercury adsorption on AC, mainly because SO3 directly competes against mercury for the same binding sites and overwhelmingly consumes all binding sites.
Keywords:Mercury  SO3  Activated carbon  Coal flue gas
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