Abstract
A suite of high-As, high-C fly ashes from a university-based stoker-fired coal boiler were analyzed by a number of techniques, including high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR-TEM), time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM). The sooty carbon is in the form of nano balls with the major fullerenes at C~60~^+^, C~70~^+^, and C~80~^+^, with species at C~2~ increments from C~56~^+^ to C~78~^+^. Arsenic and Hg, among other metals, are found in association with the fullerenes, but, with our techniques, it is not possible to determine if the metals are encapsulated by the fullerenes or attached to the side of the structure. TOF-SIMS studies suggest an association of As with the Al-Si glass; an association of Pb with oxides, sulfates, and carbon; Hg with carbon; Se in elemental form with carbon; and Cr in a variety of forms, including nano carbons, Fe sulfates and oxides, glass, and Cr-oxyhydroxides.
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