Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
211400 Fuel Processing Technology 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The characteristics of the removal of gaseous elemental mercury using activated carbon injection in a particulate collector with fabric filters were experimentally estimated. The experiments showed that, at given conditions in this research, the removals of elemental mercury converged to a certain level as activated carbon continued to be injected irrelatively to the C/Hg ratio or the types of activated carbon. When the C/Hg ratio was fixed at 7000, the elemental mercury removal by the activated carbon collected on the filter surface was 9.5% of the total elemental mercury removal at 1.1m/min in filtration velocity, and 2.2% at 3.3m/min. These values are much lower than those numerically predicted. It means that the gaseous elemental mercury in a particulate collector was reduced mainly by the activated carbon distributed inside the chamber rather than those collected on the filter surface.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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