Mercury exists naturally in any of three valence states: Hg0, Hg22+, and Hg2+. All chemical forms of mercury are known as human health hazards. A major source of mercury is from the emission gases of combustion operations. Combustible materials like coal, garbage, hospital wastes and others usually contain a trace amount of mercury. Due to the low boiling temperature of elemental mercury and its compounds such as mercury chlorides and mercury sulfides, mercury ends up in the emission gases. Mercury can also be present in the wastewater from the mining, dental, and other operations. Regulations from governments include the removal of mercury from emission gases and water to protect all living creatures and the environment.
Mercury removal from the emission gases or water is both difficult and expensive. The mercury concentration can be very low, expressed in ppb units, and to remove this trace amount of mercury requires the treatment of a large amount of the contaminated gas or water. Mercury removal from emission gases and water can be achieved with sorbents of carbonaceous, mineral, and polymeric based materials such as activated carbon, charcoal, charred carbon, bromine treated carbon, bicarbonate treated carbon, modified Hardwickia binata bark, zeolite, montmorrilonite, bentonite, ash minerals, polymers and their derivatives loaded with mercury affinity functional groups such as sulfides, carboxyls, amines, phosphates, halides, oxidants, and others. Emission gases of combustion operations are made to pass an adsorber chamber or column containing a sorbent where contaminants are adsorbed prior to releasing the gas to the atmosphere. In some cases, coarse fly ash is first filtered out from the emission gases before the gas passes the adsorbing chamber. In other cases, the fly ash is adsorbed together with the other contaminants. After the sorbents are saturated with the contaminants or used up, one should avoid the disposal of the sorbent since it is loaded with mercury. Its disposal will result in the pollution of the environment again. It is desired to recycle the sorbents by removing mercury from the sorbents and reuse the sorbents due to the high cost of the sorbent. It is also desired to remove the mercury from the sorbents, condense and collect it so that the mercury can be isolated from the environment under controlled conditions or can be reused. This invention addresses these issues and presents a very cost effective and novel means of treating and recovering sorbent.
The following are deemed to be the most relevant reference on the subject matter:
In all cases, even without the need for fluidizing the layer of sorbent in the furnace nor the use of hot inert gas or air to heat the sorbent, there is always the addition of a purging gas to direct the gasified contaminants out of the heating chamber and towards the place of further treatment. All experimental data presented in the disclosures of the above references are based on the use of inert gas like nitrogen but the patent claims of some of these disclosures have air as the purging gas used. As a result, the commercial viability of the experimental results can be questioned. The issue of combustion and resulting loss of carbon-based sorbents when exposed to hot air is a well known concern in the art yet these disclosures circumvented finding a solution to the problem by simply using Nitrogen during experimentation. In real applications, the loss of use of combusted sorbents could outweigh the benefits of the proposed method of sorbent treatment.
In a laboratory experiment, Mesey et al (U.S. Pat. No. 4,322,394) used a purge gas rate of 0.5 ft cube/min. for 10 minutes for a 2½″ diameter and 4″ deep cylindrical adsorber column. Commercial adsorbers can range from 3-12′ dia and 3-20′ deep. Therefore, the cost to heat the gas in any experiment must be multiplied several thousand times over to get an idea of the real cost requirements in commercial applications. The operating cost and fixed cost include cost of steady source of inert gas supply, energy to heat the gas, instrumentation, and valving and piping to supply the gas, provision and maintenance of a larger furnace, condenser, and scrubber to accommodate the treatment of the added gas volume.
Mercury desorption from a sorbent can be achieved at temperatures at least at the boiling point of mercury which is 356° C. As prior art show, the heating can be accomplished through a number of means—hot gas, dielectric, ohmic, radiation, microwave, etc. No matter what the heat source is, prior art has not dealt away with the addition of gases to the system either as means to deliver heat to the sorbent, or to fluidize/stir a bed of sorbent, or simply to purge the volatilized components out of the furnace.
We found that a major obstacle in the sorbent recycling and mercury separation, condensation, and collection operations is in the area of avoiding large volumes of gases in the system. The addition of gas, regardless of whether it is inert nitrogen or ambient air, dilutes the volatilized contaminants, rendering it more costly to process downstream. More significantly, the added gas has to be heated separately prior to use lest it condenses the already volatilized contaminants while still in the furnace, thus defeating the purpose of the operation. Microwave cannot be used to heat the gas along with the sorbent because gas is not dielectric. Additionally, since the hot, evaporated mercury has to be cooled down, condensed, and collected, it is necessary to keep the gasified components from being unnecessarily diluted. The cool down is usually accomplished with a heat exchanger. Too much gas in the system will require more heat exchange and this will make the mercury condensation difficult and energy inefficient. In addition, if air or other oxidant is allowed in the system, it could cause the oxidation or combustion of carbonaceous and polymeric sorbents. This is to be avoided since this will cause the loss of the sorbent material. Heating under inert gases such as nitrogen can avoid the oxidation, but the gas cost is high. Using a non-carbon based sorbent may eliminate the concern over oxidation caused by the presence of air but such sorbents are generally more costly and less effective.
In addition to teaching the advantages of the use of microwave as a very cost efficient heat source for sorbent recovery, the present invention teaches the use of a vacuum downstream of the furnace in conjunction with the high pressure of the gasified contaminants to purge the gas out of the furnace to the condenser for further treatment. The present invention also teaches that uniform microwave exposure can be accomplished by mechanized or magnetic stirring and the use of continuous furnaces like rotary hearth, rotary kiln, traveling bed, and shaft furnaces. This method is effective in removing the gasified contaminants from the furnace even without fluidizing the bed and without using purging gases. Continuous sorbent treatment furnaces are especially desirable for use in power plants that also continuously generate contaminated exhaust gases from continuously operating combustion processes. A constant supply of sorbent must be made available for use. The continuous processes disclosed in this present invention addresses that need. The machinery presented is made simpler and more cost efficient by the elimination of purging and heating gases in the design. Satisfying the electrical requirements of a vacuum in a commercial application will be less costly than the operating and fixed costs associated with the provisions for purging gas including a steady supply of the purging gas, heating said gas, valving, piping, a larger furnace, condenser, scrubber and others.
In accordance with the present invention a sorbent recovery system comprises feeding a spent sorbent containing materials absorbed from emission gases in power plants in an atmosphere isolated container or furnace chamber and heating said sorbent by microwave, radio frequency, infrared irradiation and/or induction heating. The sorbent is heated to a temperature at least at the boiling point of mercury, a major contaminant in the sorbent. No air or any other gas is added to control combustion of the sorbent and increase efficiency. The resulting vapor is released through an exhaust port in the container or chamber that leads to a condenser where mercury is condensed and separated. Other residual vapors are led to a scrubber for further cleansing and may be returned to the power plant for combustion and/or mercury adsorption. The hot treated sorbent is cooled down prior to contacting with air for later reuse in the power plant. Several continuous operating furnaces embodying the present invention are presented.
This invention teaches a method to remove mercury from sorbents loaded with mercury by a microwave, radio frequency, infrared irradiation and/or induction heating method with minimum or no gas involved. The microwave, radio frequency, infra red, and induction heating technology offer different heating mechanisms from conventional heating. The microwave, radio frequency, and infra red waves are electromagnetic waves. Their absorption of the waves by materials results in heating of the material. Induction heating uses electrical resistivity of materials to generate heating. These methods do not need any gas media to transfer the heat and therefore, will not encounter the problems associated with the conventional heating.
When the sorbent is heated by the wave irradiation or the induction in an atmosphere isolated container or furnace chamber to an elevated temperature to evaporate mercury, the reaction between the sorbent and oxygen will be suppressed due to the short of oxygen supply. The mercury vapor exits through a pipe or an exhaust port connected to a mercury condenser where the mercury is condensed and collected.
A vacuum is introduced downstream of the furnace to pump the evaporated mercury and other gases out of the furnace, and direct it to the condenser.
Although it is preferred to treat the sorbents dry, water may be added to the sorbent prior to the treatment to avoid the dust. The amount of water added to the sorbent should be less than the sorbent weight and preferably be less than 20% of the moisture content.
The mercury evaporation by microwave, radio frequency and/or infrared irradiation can be carried out in batch or continuous operations. The devices to conduct the microwave, radio frequency and/or infrared heating may include continuous furnaces such as rotary hearth, rotary kiln, traveling grate/bed, conveyor belt, and paddle or screw driven material transportation unit and batch furnaces such as those similar to the common microwave ovens. Induction heating can be carried out with an induction heating furnace. All of these systems are air or gas tight, and microwave and radio frequency sealed up to 1,200° C. Particularly, the rotary hearth and rotary kiln furnaces have both dynamic air and wave seals on large diameter rotating contact surfaces. The air seal can ensure negative or positive chamber pressure needed at elevated operation temperatures. To prevent potential thermal distortion of the contact surfaces and thermal damage to air and wave sealants, the contact surfaces are water-cooled. All continuous furnaces may be installed with air-locked and wave sealed rotating valves for solid material charging and discharging. The walls and sorbent beds may preferably be made with microwave resistant materials so that the sorbent absorbs all or most of the microwave.
Examples of continuous furnace apparatus for metal production using microwave energy have been disclosed by the inventors Xiaodi Huang and Jiann-Yang Hwang (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/906,761). The disclosure is incorporated herein by reference. It can be appreciated that the present invention is importantly applicable to the adsorbate of the exhaust gas of said referenced metal production operation as well as for other combustion operations in other plants.
While furnaces can be constructed to withstand high positive or negative pressures, minimal air entry may be allowed in the system possibly through a control valve. This is desirable especially for a continuous operation. The valve may be programmed to let air in to maintain the minimum allowed negative pressure. If the free cavity surrounding the sorbent inside the furnace is kept to a minimum, any possible combustion of the sorbent is kept in check. With programmable control valves along the exhaust line, atmospheric pressure conditions may be maintained inside the furnace at certain or all times as desired. Small amounts of CO2, H20, or O2, as may be derived from air introduced through air valve 107, can regenerate or rejuvenate the carbon surface and adsorbing properties of the sorbent.
The hot mercury-stripped sorbent needs to be cooled down preferably to below 200 C, before contacting air to avoid oxidation or combustion of the sorbent. This will be accomplished in a cooler with heat exchange connecting to the material discharging port.
A scrubber may be utilized to control the gas emissions after the condenser. The scrubber may have oxidants such as potassium permanganate in the water solution to extract mercury and other contaminants from the gas emissions. As an alternative, the emission gas may be returned to the power plant or other combustors/incinerators for combustion and/or mercury adsorption.
The following example is presented to provide basic understanding of the present invention. It is intended to be illustrative and no limitations to the present invention should be inferred from this example:
In each test, 30 grams of a mercury loaded sorbent containing activated carbon from a power plant (WE Energy's Presque Isle power station, Marquette, Mich.) was placed in a 1-kilowatt microwave oven. The oven is airtight except that an opening is provided at the top to collect the emission gas. The microwave time was set at 1 minute, 3 minutes, and 5 minutes. In each test, the sorbent was heated rapidly during the microwave irradiation. After the microwave is turned off, the carbon sorbent is cooled down and no combustion of the carbon was observed. The gas coming out from the top was condensed in a water cooled condenser. The mercury content in the sorbent before the microwave irradiation is 14,800 ppb. After 1, 3, and 5 minutes of microwave irradiation, the mercury content in the sorbent was reduced to 162, 306, and 173 ppb respectively, as shown in the Table 1 below. This clearly demonstrates that mercury can be effectively removed from the sorbents rapidly with microwave heating and the gasified contaminants driven out without the addition of purge gases. Condensed mercury can be observed in the condenser.
For a sorbent recovery system, the following components may be included:
Referring to
Referring to
Rotating clockwise at a speed predetermined based on the desired length of microwave exposure or desired temperature, the sorbent bed passes through the microwave furnace where it is heated by microwave 210. The released or gasified contaminants are gently sucked out towards the exhaust opening 220 which leads to a condenser similar to that shown in
The cooling and pre-discharge section may have a guide wall 245 with a bottom edge barely touching the bed floor. This wall gradually directs the treated sorbent 35 towards the side opening 235 and into an airlock discharger 30 and cooler 50 for further cooling before exposure to the atmosphere. The side opening 235 is air-tightly connected to the airlock discharger by appropriate microwave seals.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Therefore, it has been shown that the present invention presents a solution to the economic impracticality of the use of purging and heating gases to desorb a sorbent of its contaminating components. Several continuous microwave furnace embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described. Some may be modified by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit, teachings, and scope of the present invention. The example shown in the disclosure is for illustration purposes to show that the concept works and not intended for limiting the scope of the present invention. The application is not only for powdered activated carbon sorbents but for all other physical states of said sorbent and to all sorbents at large. The application is not only for removal of mercury but also for removal of any substance absorbed in a sorbent that can be volatilized by heat. Microwave as stated in the body of the specifications can include electromagnetic induction sources and these sources include all the frequencies, power, and other intrinsic variables known in the art. Continuous furnaces can be arranged to run as batch furnaces. The shaft furnaces may be paddle-driven or screw driven and may be oriented at horizontally or vertically or anywhere in between. Accordingly, the claims and their equivalents set the scope of the present invention.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/194,027 filed Sep. 23, 2008, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61194027 | Sep 2008 | US |