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On the adsorption/oxidation of hydrogen sulfide on activated carbons at ambient temperatures

Abstract

Activated carbons of various origins (bituminous coal, wood, coconut shells, and peat) were studied as adsorbents of hydrogen sulfide. Before the experiments the surface of the adsorbents was characterized by using the sorption of nitrogen, Boehm and potentiometric titrations, thermal analysis, and FTIR. The adsorbents were chosen to differ in their surface areas, pore volumes, and surface acidities. To broaden the spectrum of surface acidity, carbons were oxidized by using nitric acid and ammonium persulfate. After hydrogen sulfide adsorption the species present on the surface were analyzed using thermal analysis, ion chromatography, and elemental analysis. The H{sub 2}S breakthrough capacity tests showed that the performances of different carbons differ significantly. For a good performance of carbons as hydrogen sulfide adsorbents a proper combination of surface chemistry of carbon and porosity is needed. It was demonstrated that a more acidic environment promotes the formation of sulfur oxides and sulfuric acid despite yielding small H{sub 2}S removal capacities. On the other hand, a basic environment favors the formation of elemental sulfur (sulfur radicals) and yields high capacities. The presence of a sufficient amount of water preadsorbed on the carbon surface to facilitate dissociation also plays an important role in the process of  More>>
Authors:
Bandosz, T J [1] 
  1. CUNY City College, New York, NY (USA). Dept. of Chemistry
Publication Date:
Jul 01, 2002
Product Type:
Journal Article
Reference Number:
CLA-00:050030
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Journal of Colloid and Interface Science; Journal Volume: 246; Journal Issue: 1; Other Information: tbandosz@sci.ccny.cuny.edu; PBD: 2002
Subject:
01 COAL, LIGNITE, AND PEAT; ACTIVATED CARBON; COAL; ADSORBENTS; DESULFURIZATION; HYDROGEN SULFIDES; WOOD; PEAT; SORPTIVE PROPERTIES; ADSORPTION; POROSITY; PH VALUE; OXIDATION
OSTI ID:
20242537
Country of Origin:
United States
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: ISSN 0021-9797; JCISA5; TRN: 000500030
Submitting Site:
CLA
Size:
page(s) 1-20
Announcement Date:
May 06, 2002

Citation Formats

Bandosz, T J. On the adsorption/oxidation of hydrogen sulfide on activated carbons at ambient temperatures. United States: N. p., 2002. Web. doi:10.1006/jcis.2001.7952.
Bandosz, T J. On the adsorption/oxidation of hydrogen sulfide on activated carbons at ambient temperatures. United States. https://doi.org/10.1006/jcis.2001.7952
Bandosz, T J. 2002. "On the adsorption/oxidation of hydrogen sulfide on activated carbons at ambient temperatures." United States. https://doi.org/10.1006/jcis.2001.7952.
@misc{etde_20242537,
title = {On the adsorption/oxidation of hydrogen sulfide on activated carbons at ambient temperatures}
author = {Bandosz, T J}
abstractNote = {Activated carbons of various origins (bituminous coal, wood, coconut shells, and peat) were studied as adsorbents of hydrogen sulfide. Before the experiments the surface of the adsorbents was characterized by using the sorption of nitrogen, Boehm and potentiometric titrations, thermal analysis, and FTIR. The adsorbents were chosen to differ in their surface areas, pore volumes, and surface acidities. To broaden the spectrum of surface acidity, carbons were oxidized by using nitric acid and ammonium persulfate. After hydrogen sulfide adsorption the species present on the surface were analyzed using thermal analysis, ion chromatography, and elemental analysis. The H{sub 2}S breakthrough capacity tests showed that the performances of different carbons differ significantly. For a good performance of carbons as hydrogen sulfide adsorbents a proper combination of surface chemistry of carbon and porosity is needed. It was demonstrated that a more acidic environment promotes the formation of sulfur oxides and sulfuric acid despite yielding small H{sub 2}S removal capacities. On the other hand, a basic environment favors the formation of elemental sulfur (sulfur radicals) and yields high capacities. The presence of a sufficient amount of water preadsorbed on the carbon surface to facilitate dissociation also plays an important role in the process of H{sub 2}S adsorption/oxidation. The results showed that there is a critical value in carbon surface acidity, which when exceeded results in a negligible hydrogen sulfide breakthrough capacity. When the acidity is expressed as pH, its value should be higher than 5 to ensure the effective removal of hydrogen sulfide from the gas phase. Study of carbon regeneration using water washing and heat treatment showed that the adsorbents can be regenerated to about 40% of their initial capacity.}
doi = {10.1006/jcis.2001.7952}
journal = []
issue = {1}
volume = {246}
journal type = {AC}
place = {United States}
year = {2002}
month = {Jul}
}