Browsing by Author "Zhao, Zhenghui"
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Item Open Access Performance study on Ca-based sorbents for sequential CO2 and SO2 capture in a bubbling fluidised bed(Elsevier, 2021-06-18) Zhao, Zhenghui; Patchigolla, Kumar; Wu, Yinghai; Oakey, John; Anthony, Edward J.; Chen, HongweiHigh temperature CO2 and SO2 sequential capture in a bubbling fluidised bed was investigated using a natural limestone and synthetic composite pellets. Calcination was conducted under oxy-combustion conditions, while carbonation and sulphation occurred in an air-combustion atmosphere. The goal of sequential capture of CO2/SO2 is to desulphurise the flue gas first, followed by cyclic carbonation and calcination. Here, fresh sorbent is first used in the cyclic calcination/carbonation process and then the spent sorbent is sent for sulphation. The pellet carrying capacity is 0.29 g CO2/g sorbents for the first cycle, while that of natural limestone is about 0.45 g CO2/g sorbents. The carrying capacity first fell and then finally plateaued around 0.10 and 0.12 g CO2/g sorbents for limestone and pellets respectively. The SO2 carrying capacity for limestone and pellets after 20 cycles of CO2 capture was 0.17 and 0.22 g SO2/g sorbents respectively. This indicates that the sorbent spent in CO2 capture can be effectively reused for SO2 removal. Abrasion was observed to be the main mode of attrition, but some agglomeration was also found with increasing number of cycles and this may be a concern in the use of Ca-based sorbent for CO2 or SO2 fluidised bed capture.Item Open Access Preparation and characterization of lime/coal ash sorbents for sequential CO2 and SO2 capture at high temperature(American Chemical Society , 2021-06-23) Zhao, Zhenghui; Wu, Yinghai; Patchigolla, Kumar; Anthony, Edward J.; Oakey, John; Chen, HongweiExtensive research has been done on Ca-based sorbents as a promising way to capture CO2 and SO2 from power plants. Considerable effort has also been directed toward maintaining sorbent activity by means of sorbent modification to deal with activity decay with repeated CO2 capture cycles. Based on the principle of “treating waste with waste” and inspired by the idea that a pozzolanic reaction can enhance the surface area, this paper presents a method of hydrothermal synthesis of lime and coal ash. A small amount of CaSO4 or NaOH was added during the hydration process and the mixture was stired for several hours at about 90oC. The synthesized samples were then characterised by scanning electron microscopy, nitrogen adsorption/desorption spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction. The activity of the synthesized sorbent for CO2 and SO2 capture were then tested in a thermogravimetric analyser. The treated samples demonstrate longer-lasting performance for CO2 cyclic capture, albeit with a slightly reduced capture ability compared to pure lime in the first few cycles due their lower CaO content (25~81% versus 98%). The sample with lime/ash mass ratio of 45:5 showed higher CO2 capture ability after three cycles and much greater stability in terms of their activity. The main product of the pozzolanic reaction is CaSiO3, which has a network structure, whose development is related to the ratio of CaO/coal ash, hydration duration and the amount of CaSO4 and NaOH additives. After high temperature calcination, a new phase, namely Ca3Al2O6 is believed to serve as a skeleton preventing sintering in repeated capture cycles. After experiencing multiple cycles, the synthesized sorbents also have a high SO2 capture capacity. A small amount of added NaOH decreases the cyclic CO2 carrying capacity of the synthesized sorbent but enhances SO2 carrying capacity dramatically. The explanation for this is that the sulphation reaction is controlled not only by gas diffusion but also by solid-state ion diffusion. Na+ ions generate more crystal lattice defects which can accelerate the ion diffusion rate in the product layer, and consequentially enhance overall SO2 carrying capacity.