Abstract

To control the emission of SO2 from flue gas into the atmosphere while considering the capture and collection of greenhouse gas CO2, the adsorption behavior of a binary mixture of SO2 and other gases in flue gas (O2/N2/H2O/CO[Formula: see text] in (10, 10) carbon nanotube (CNT) was simulated using grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) simulation. The adsorption and separation performance of SO2 in CNTs with a diameter range of 0.81–1.63 nm for the five-component mixture gas was also analyzed. The findings suggest that the adsorption and separation of SO2 are primarily influenced by CO2 (reduction of adsorption capacity by about 50%, separation coefficient of SO2/CO2 is lowest) with this effect being more pronounced under high pressure. Meanwhile, it was observed that CNTs with larger pipe diameters exhibit higher SO2 adsorption capacity, but relatively lower SO2/CO2 selectivity and lower stability. On the other hand, CNTs with smaller diameters have relatively lower adsorption capacity for SO2, but exhibit good selectivity and stability (under different pressure) for SO2/CO2. Based on the statistical analysis of SO2 adsorption capacity and SO2/CO2 selectivity, it was determined that (6, 6) CNT with a diameter of 0.81[Formula: see text]nm can exhibit excellent SO2 adsorption and separation performance at atmospheric pressure, while appropriate large diameter CNTs should be selected for flue gas treatment under high pressure.

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