Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6528828 | Journal of CO2 Utilization | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
In this research, the feasibility of CO2 mineral carbonation by the use of by-product red gypsum (RG obtained from Huntsman Tioxide, Terengganu, Malaysia) to form iron carbonate (FeCO3) was evaluated. Toward this aim, the wide-range conditions of key procedure variables such as reaction temperature, reaction time, and CO2 pressure on the rate of mineral carbonation were studied. In addition, preliminary analyses on red gypsum were carried out to determine its physical and chemical characteristics. The feasibility of direct carbonation of RG to form FeCO3 was assessed at different CO2 pressures of 1 to 70â¯bar and different reaction temperatures of 25 to 200â¯Â°C to discover the effects of the key functions on overall direct carbonation. In general, increasing CO2 pressure to 10â¯bar was found to increase the overall FeCO3 purity and carbonation efficiency to 97% and 98%, respectively. Moreover, the reaction temperature affected the conversion rate at two different functions. First, FeCO3 purity and its carbonation efficiency increased to the maximum values when the reaction temperature increased to 150â¯Â°C, and then they were slightly decreased to 91% and 92%, respectively, with increase of temperature to 200â¯Â°C. The results also showed that the maximum product purity is achieved at optimum reaction time of 150â¯min.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Catalysis
Authors
Omeid Rahmani,