Nitrogen (NO ) and sulfur (SO ) oxides, the major gaseous pollutants emitted from fossil fuel combustion, have significant health and environmental concerns. Environmental regulations limit these pollutant emissions to tolerable levels. Currently, these pollutants are treated by flue gas desulfurization (SO removal) and selective catalytic reduction (NO removal) processes. However, these technologies require large footprints, use expensive catalysts, and operate under high working temperatures. A new catalyst is reported herein, based on sulfur-enriched oil emulsified with water, where the active catalytic species are sulfur-based oxides. The catalyst has been developed using O as the oxidation reagent in a low-temperature wet scrubber rather than HO or O that are presently used. The catalytically oxidized pollutants are converted to produce ammonium fertilizers by NHOH addition. As a result of treatment with this novel catalyst, we observed reductions in emissions of SO and NO of >85% and 23%, respectively. The catalyst production and the wet scrubbing process are discussed in detail.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7859937 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c04485 | DOI Listing |
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