Abstract
The Bureau of Mines prepared three sintered materials capable of removing H2S from producer gas at 1000° to 1500°F. They are mixtures of ferric oxide and fly ash, ferric oxide and pumice stone, and red mud (a ferric oxide-containing residue from processing bauxite). All three absorbents were virtually completely regenerable with air. A sintered Fe2O3; (25%)-fly ash [75%) mixture was tested through nine H2S absorption-air regeneration cycles without loss of absorplion capacity or attrition of the pellets. The absorbent with the greatest capacity was a red mud, absorbing 16.0% by weight of sulfur at 1000° F, 24.0% at 1250° F, and 45.1 % at 1 500° F. © 1970 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Shultz, F. G., & Berber, J. S. (1970). Hydrogen sulfide removal from hot producer gas with sintered absorbents. Journal of the Air Pollution Control Association, 20(2), 93–96. https://doi.org/10.1080/00022470.1970.10469380
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