Abstract

AbstractHydrogen sulfide (H2S) removal from biogas is essential to allow biogas storage in the natural gas grid. Several established methods exist, most of them making use of non‐reusable substrates such as iron sponge or active carbon. Coated metallic foams provide a reusable sustainable alternative. Several iron oxides and hydroxides were tested to validate the H2S adsorption properties before and after thermal regeneration, i.e., sulfur removal. Amorphous iron hydroxide proved to efficiently clean biogas after maximum four sulfur removal cycles and showed an almost ten times larger capacity for sulfur adsorption than crystalline hematite Fe2O3. Very low H2S contents could be realized until breakthrough.

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