Abstract

The mechanisms of SO 2 adsorption and regeneration over activated carbon-supported copper oxide sorbent/catalysts were analyzed. Studies were carried out in a fixed-bed reactor equipped with a non-dispersive infrared gas analyzer to detect the reaction products and by using X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) and temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) experiments to characterize the nature of the sulfate species and surface oxygen complexes. The results indicate that SO 2 was catalytically oxidized to SO 3 over a copper phase in the presence of gaseous oxygen, and then reacted with a copper site to form a sulfate linked to copper without desorption into the gas phase. The activated carbon support did not participate in this sulfation reaction. After the adsorption of SO 2, the exhausted sorbent/catalysts could be regenerated by direct heat treatment in inert gas at temperatures between 260 and 480 °C, while the neighboring surface oxygen complexes on the carbon surface were acting as the reducing agents to reduce CuSO 4 to Cu. During the subsequent adsorption process, the copper is rapidly oxidized by oxygen in the flue gas.

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