Szczegóły publikacji

Opis bibliograficzny

Active methods of mercury removal from flue gases / Marta MARCZAK, Stanisław BUDZYŃ, Jakub SZCZUROWSKI, Krzysztof KOGUT, Piotr BURMISTRZ // Environmental Science and Pollution Research ; ISSN 0944-1344. — 2019 — vol. 26 iss. 9 spec. iss. Environmental aspects in the sustainable energy development, s. 8383–8392. — Bibliogr. s. 8391–8392, Abstr. — Publikacja dostępna online od: 2018-03-23. — M. Marczak - dod. afiliacja: AGH Centre of Energy

Autorzy (5)

Słowa kluczowe

solid fuelsflue gases purificationmercury removalsubbituminous coalsorbentsligniteanthropogenic emission

Dane bibliometryczne

ID BaDAP121958
Data dodania do BaDAP2019-06-25
Tekst źródłowyURL
DOI10.1007/s11356-018-1772-1
Rok publikacji2019
Typ publikacjiartykuł w czasopiśmie
Otwarty dostęptak
Creative Commons
Czasopismo/seriaEnvironmental Science and Pollution Research

Abstract

Due to its adverse impact on health, as well as its global distribution, long atmospheric lifetime and propensity for deposition in the aquatic environment and in living tissue, the US Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) has classified mercury and its compounds as a severe air quality threat. Such widespread presence of mercury in the environment originates from both natural and anthropogenic sources. Global anthropogenic emission of mercury is evaluated at 2000 Mg year(-1). According to the National Centre for Emissions Management (Pol. KOBiZE) report for 2014, Polish annual mercury emissions amount to approximately 10 Mg. Over 90% of mercury emissions in Poland originate from combustion of coal. The purpose of this paper was to understand mercury behaviour during sub-bituminous coal and lignite combustion for flue gas purification in terms of reduction of emissions by active methods. The average mercury content in Polish sub-bituminous coal and lignite was 103.7 and 443.5 mu g kg(-1). The concentration of mercury in flue gases emitted into the atmosphere was 5.3 mu g m(-3) for sub-bituminous coal and 17.5 mu g m(-3) for lignite. The study analysed six low-cost sorbents with the average achieved efficiency of mercury removal from 30.6 to 92.9% for sub-bituminous coal and 22.8 to 80.3% for lignite combustion. Also, the effect of coke dust grain size was examined for mercury sorptive properties. The fine fraction of coke dust (CD) adsorbed within 243-277 mu g Hg kg(-1), while the largest fraction at only 95 mu g Hg kg(-1). The CD fraction < 0.063 mm removed almost 92% of mercury during coal combustion, so the concentration of mercury in flue gas decreased from 5.3 to 0.4 mu g Hg m(-3). The same fraction of CD had removed 93% of mercury from lignite flue gas by reducing the concentration of mercury in the flow from 17.6 to 1.2 mu g Hg m(-3). The publication also presents the impact of photochemical oxidation of mercury on the effectiveness of Hg vapour removal during combustion of lignite. After physical oxidation of Hg in the flue gas, its effectiveness has increased twofold.

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Active methods of mercury removal from flue gases / Marta MARCZAK, Stanisław BUDZYŃ, Jakub SZCZUROWSKI, Piotr BURMISTRZ, Krzysztof KOGUT // W: SEED 2017 : 2nd international conference on the Sustainable Energy and Environment Development : Kraków, Poland, 14–17 November, 2017 : book of abstracts. — Krakow : Institute for Sustainable Energy, 2017. — ISBN: 978-83-944254-4-9. — S. 158. — Bibliogr. s. 158
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#116760Data dodania: 28.9.2018
Investigation of subbituminous coal and lignite combustion processes in the aspect of Hg and As removal / M. MARCZAK, F. WIEROŃSKA, P. BURMISTRZ, K. KOGUT, A. STRUGAŁA, J. SZCZUROWSKI // W: 12th ECCRIA : European conference on Fuel and energy research and its applications : 5-7 September 2018, Cardiff, UK. — [Cardiff : s. n.], [2018]. — S. 126. — Dod. afiliacja autorów: AGH CE