Publication detail

The Influence of SO2 and HCl Concentrations on the Consumption of Sodium Bicarbonate during Flue Gas Treatment

ZACH, B. ŠYC, M. SVOBODA, K. POHOŘELÝ, M. ŠOMPLÁK, R. BRYNDA, J. MOŠKO, J. PUNČOCHÁŘ, M.

English title

The Influence of SO2 and HCl Concentrations on the Consumption of Sodium Bicarbonate during Flue Gas Treatment

Type

journal article in Web of Science

Language

en

Original abstract

The paper focuses on the competitive influence of SO2 and HCl during their removal from flue gas by sodium bicarbonate. The experimental investigation was conducted at a unique combination of conditions: the experiments were conducted on a large scale, with real flue gas, and the removal of SO2 and HCl was studied simultaneously. The aim was to ensure that experimental conditions are reasonably realistic and therefore transferable to practice. The results from experiments at various temperatures within the range from 170 to 255 degrees C did not indicate a significant influence of temperature. The sorbent conversion varied significantly with the lowest achieved conversion of 26% and the highest conversion of 85%. There was a clear trend showing that higher concentrations of HCl make it more difficult to achieve the selected target concentration of SO2 in clean flue gas, suggesting the preferred reaction of formed sodium carbonate with HCl. The influence of HCl on the removal of SO2 was quantified and is presented in the form of regression models. The found regressors were the initial concentrations of HCl and SO2 in raw flue gas and the target concentration of SO2 in the clean flue gas. The regression models are in good agreement with the experimental data and can be used for the prediction of the behavior of a flue gas treatment system or its optimization.

English abstract

The paper focuses on the competitive influence of SO2 and HCl during their removal from flue gas by sodium bicarbonate. The experimental investigation was conducted at a unique combination of conditions: the experiments were conducted on a large scale, with real flue gas, and the removal of SO2 and HCl was studied simultaneously. The aim was to ensure that experimental conditions are reasonably realistic and therefore transferable to practice. The results from experiments at various temperatures within the range from 170 to 255 degrees C did not indicate a significant influence of temperature. The sorbent conversion varied significantly with the lowest achieved conversion of 26% and the highest conversion of 85%. There was a clear trend showing that higher concentrations of HCl make it more difficult to achieve the selected target concentration of SO2 in clean flue gas, suggesting the preferred reaction of formed sodium carbonate with HCl. The influence of HCl on the removal of SO2 was quantified and is presented in the form of regression models. The found regressors were the initial concentrations of HCl and SO2 in raw flue gas and the target concentration of SO2 in the clean flue gas. The regression models are in good agreement with the experimental data and can be used for the prediction of the behavior of a flue gas treatment system or its optimization.

Keywords in English

Data from individual experiments, regression data, pictures of experimental unit and sorbent feeder, and scatter plots of pollutant conversions

Released

04.03.2021

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC

Location

WASHINGTON

ISSN

1520-5029

Volume

35

Number

6

Pages from–to

5064–5073

Pages count

10

BIBTEX


@article{BUT171454,
  author="Boleslav {Zach} and Michal {Šyc} and Karel {Svoboda} and Michael {Pohořelý} and Radovan {Šomplák} and Jiří {Brynda} and Jaroslav {Moško} and Miroslav {Punčochář},
  title="The Influence of SO2 and HCl Concentrations on the Consumption of Sodium Bicarbonate during Flue Gas Treatment",
  year="2021",
  volume="35",
  number="6",
  month="March",
  pages="5064--5073",
  publisher="AMER CHEMICAL SOC",
  address="WASHINGTON",
  issn="1520-5029"
}