Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication
    Tailoring the properties of calcium modified fibrous mesoporous silica KCC-1 for optimized sulfur dioxide removal
    ( 2022-01-01)
    Muhammad Adli Hanif
    ;
    ; ; ;
    Tuan Abdullah T.A.
    ;
    Jalil A.A.
    Dry regenerative flue gas desulfurization (FGD) is a promising method to tackle industrial issues regarding SO2 emission into the atmosphere due to its sorbent being highly accessible, the lack of water dependency and reduction in waste management. This study examined the feasibility of using fibrous mesoporous silica KCC-1 which has been reported to possess better properties than several other predecessor mesoporous silica as alternative sorbents for dry FGD. Calcium metal was introduced to overcome the lack of active sites available on KCC-1 while simultaneously providing sufficient basicity to counter the increase in acidity brought by SO2 adsorption. Three sorbent modification parameters were analyzed: metal loading (5–15 wt %), calcination temperature (823–973 K) and calcination time (5.5–7 h), and the prepared samples were characterized using BET surface area and pore analyzer, FESEM-EDX, XRD and H2-TPR. The breakthrough experiment was conducted using a lab scale fixed bed reactor system with 1500 ppm SO2/N2 at 200 mL/min. SO2 removal was optimized by sorbent prepared with calcium loading of 5 wt %, calcination temperature of 923 K and calcination time of 6.5 h with adsorption capacity of 3241.94 mg SO2/g KCC-1. The optimized sorbent demonstrated highest surface area, good pore development, high dispersion of calcium metal, appropriate impregnation of calcium oxide which caused only minor distortion to the silica framework of KCC-1. Subjecting the optimized sample to five consecutive regeneration cycles by heating at 773 K while simultaneously flowing N2 gas for an hour shows good regeneration performance with a total final reduction of only 25% from the initial adsorption capacity obtained from a fresh sample.
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  • Publication
    Sulfur dioxide removal by calcium-modified fibrous KCC-1 mesoporous silica: kinetics, thermodynamics, isotherm and mass transfer mechanism
    ( 2022-04-01)
    Muhammad Adli Hanif
    ;
    ; ; ;
    Tuan Abdullah T.A.
    ;
    Jalil A.A.
    The removal of sulfur dioxide from industrial flue gas through dry flue gas desulfurization method commonly involves the use of adsorption process with porous sorbent. The efficiency of this process is highly dependent on the adsorption capacity and the adsorption rate of SO2 onto the sorbent materials. The use of KCC-1 mesoporous silica modified with calcium metal additives (Ca/KCC-1) in SO2 adsorption is examined in a fixed bed reactor system. The adsorption capacity of Ca/KCC-1 is found to be critically governed by the reaction temperature and inlet SO2 concentration where low values of both parameters are favorable to achieve the highest adsorption capacity of 3241.94 mg SO2/g sorbent. SO2 molecules are adsorbed on the surface of Ca/KCC-1 by both physisorption and chemisorption processes as assumed by the Avrami kinetic model. Thermodynamic study shows that the process is exothermic and spontaneous in nature, and changes from an ordered stage on the surface of KCC-1 towards an increasingly random stage. The process is well explained by Freundlich isotherm model indicating a slightly heterogeneous process and moderate adsorption capacity. The adsorption stage is limited by film diffusion at the initial stage and by intraparticle diffusion during the transfer of SO2 into the network of pores before adsorption takes place on the active sites.
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