Abstract

The feasibility of reusing waste material as an inexpensive catalyst to remove sulfur compounds from gaseous waste streams has been demonstrated. Wood and coal fly ash were demonstrated to catalytically oxidize H2S and methanethiol (CH3SH) at low temperatures (23-25 degrees C). Wood ash had a significantly higher surface area compared to coal ash (44.9 vs 7.7 m2/g), resulting in a higher initial H2S removal rate (0.16 vs 0.018 mg/g/min) under similar conditions. Elemental sulfur was determined to be the end product of H2S oxidation, since X-ray diffraction analysis indicated the presence of crystalline sulfur. Catalytic decay occurred apparently due to surface deposition of sulfur and a subsequent decline in surface area (44.9-1.4 m2/g) during the reaction of H2S with the ash. Methanethiol was stoichiometrically converted to dimethyl disulfide ((CH3)2S2) without significant catalytic decay. Catalytic decay was reduced and H2S conversion increased (10% at 1.8 days vs 94% at 4.2 days) when H2S loading was decreased to levels typical of many environmental applications (500 ppmv inlet and 1.43 mg/min vs 60 ppmv, 0.09 mg/ min). Catalyst regeneration using hot water (85 degrees C) washing was possible, but only increased fractional conversion from 0.2 to 0.6 and the initial reaction rate to 50% of the original H2S oxidation activity.

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