The invention is directed to a method for chemiluminescent sulphur detection and to a furnace suited for chemiluminescent sulphur detection.
Methods for quantitative chemiluminescent sulphur detection are well known and for example described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,130,095, 5,501,981 and 5,916,523. The method described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,916,523 involves an oxidation of a gaseous starting mixture comprising of one or more sulphur compounds to obtain an oxidized gas mixture. The oxidized gas mixture is subsequently reduced to obtain a gaseous mixture of reduced sulphur compounds. The mixture of reduced sulphur compounds reacts with ozone to obtain a sulphur compound in excited state. By measuring the chemiluminescent emission of the sulphur compound in excited state a measure for the amount of sulphur compounds in the gaseous starting mixture is obtained. The oxidation and reduction is performed in a furnace. The furnace is typically a ceramic tube according to this publication. Commercially used furnaces typically comprise of a tube made of pure alumina.
A disadvantage of the method described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,916,523 is that the analytical performance of the method may be improved. Analytical performance includes stability, sensitivity and selectivity.
The object of the present invention is to provide a method for chemiluminescent sulphur detection which has an improved analytical performance over the known methods as for example described in the afore mentioned prior art publication. This object is achieved by the following method.
Method for chemiluminescent sulphur detection wherein the method comprises the following steps:
(a) oxidation of a gaseous starting mixture comprising one or more sulphur compounds to obtain an oxidized gas mixture,
(b) reduction of the oxidized gas mixture as obtained in step (a) to obtain a gaseous mixture of reduced sulphur compounds in the presence of a ceramic surface,
(c) reacting the mixture of reduced sulphur compounds obtained in step (b) with ozone to obtain a sulphur compound in excited state and measuring a chemiluminescent emission of the sulphur compound in excited state to obtain a measure for the amount of sulphur compounds in the gaseous starting mixture, wherein the ceramic surface in step (b) is a magnesium alumina silicate comprising surface.
Applicants found that by performing step (b) of this method in the presence of a magnesium alumina silicate comprising surface an improved analytical performance is obtained, while maintaining a comparable equimolarity. It is believed that at the magnesium alumina silicate surface the reduction reactions take place.
The invention is also directed to a furnace suited for oxidation of a gaseous starting mixture comprising of one or more sulphur compounds to obtain an oxidized gas mixture and reduction of the oxidized gas mixture to obtain a gaseous mixture of reduced sulphur compounds comprising of an inlet conduit for the gaseous starting mixture, an inlet for supply of an oxygen comprising gas, an outlet conduit for the mixture of reduced sulphur compounds, an inlet for hydrogen and heating means, wherein the outlet conduit is comprised of a surface comprising magnesium alumina silicate.
The use of such a furnace in a method for chemiluminescent sulphur detection is advantageous because a higher stability will be achieved. The invention will be described in more detail below.
The gaseous starting mixture will comprise of one or more sulphur compounds. These sulphur compounds include sulphur oxides and compounds wherein sulphur is chemically bound in organic and inorganic compounds.
The gaseous starting mixture may be obtained from a liquid or gaseous sample. A liquid sample will have to be evaporated before being able to be subjected to step (a). The starting mixture is suitably obtained in a separation device. Preferably such a separation device is a gas chromatograph. The starting mixture may then in time have a variable composition. This allows to determine the origin of the sulphur in a sample as fed to the separation device. A starting mixture as obtained in a gas chromatograph will typically comprise a carrier gas.
Preferably the gaseous starting mixture comprises added hydrogen when contacting with oxygen or an oxygen comprising gas in step (a). This is advantageous because the hydrogen when contacted with oxygen at the elevated temperatures will self-ignite and provide locally a high temperature. This is preferred because this results in that less external heating is necessary. The amount of hydrogen is sub-stoichiometric relative to the amount of oxygen provided to step (a) such to have enough oxygen left to react with the sulphur compounds. Hydrogen may be added as such. Preferably hydrogen is added in admixture with a make-up gas, such as for example nitrogen, argon and preferably helium. More preferably this mixture of make-up gas and hydrogen is added to the gaseous starting mixture before performing step (a). Even more preferably the amount of make-up gas-hydrogen mixture added to the gaseous starting mixture in a mixing zone having a constant pressure. The pressure is held constant by varying the flow of make-up gas and optional hydrogen gas as supplied to said mixing zone. The over-pressure may be between 5 and 50 kPa. Having a mixing zone with a constant pressure is advantageous because the flows to step (a) will then be more constant and less dependent on any upstream process or device. In case the upstream device is a gas chromatograph fluidly connected to such a mixing zone a more defined flow in said gas chromatograph results. This is advantageous for better interpretation of the analytical results obtained in such a system.
The process conditions in steps (a)-(c) may be performed according to generally known chemiluminescent sulphur detection methods as for example described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,916,523 and in Shearer, R. L. Anal. Chem. 1992, 64, 2192-2196, “Development of Flameless SCD: Application to Gas Chromatography”; and Priscilla L. Burrow & John W. Birks, Anal. Chem. 1997, 69, 1299-1306, “Flow Tube Kinetics Investigation of the Mechanism of Detection in the SCD”. A skilled person will know how to optimise and tune the method for chemiluminescent sulphur detection.
In step (a) a gaseous starting mixture comprising one or more sulphur compounds is subjected to oxidation to obtain an oxidized gas mixture. The oxidation in step (a) is suitably performed by contacting the gaseous starting mixture with oxygen or an oxygen comprising gas. The amount of oxygen and the conditions in step (a) should be sufficient to oxidize the entire amount of combustible compounds in the starting mixture into oxides. It is believed that the sulphur and sulphur compounds are converted to a sulphur oxide. The temperature in step (a) may be between 300 and 2200° C., preferably between 400 and 1200° C. The residence time is suitably sufficient to convert preferably all of the sulphur compounds to sulphur oxides. In step (a) any hydrocarbon components in the compounds will be converted to carbon oxides and water.
In step (b) the oxidized gas mixture as obtained in step (a) is subjected to reduction to obtain a gaseous mixture of reduced sulphur compounds. The reduction is suitably performed by contacting the oxidized gas mixture with hydrogen or a hydrogen comprising gas. The amount of hydrogen and the conditions in step (b) should be sufficient to reduce the oxidized sulphur compounds to reduced sulphur compounds capable of ozone induced chemiluminescent. Such compounds include without limitation hydrogen sulphide, sulphur, sulphur monoxide, polysulphides, HxSy compounds and any other sulphur compounds capable of ozone induced chemiluminescent as also described in more detail in Priscilla L. Burrow & John W. Birks, Anal. Chem. 1997, 69, 1299-1306, “Flow Tube Kinetics Investigation of the Mechanism of Detection in the SCD”. The temperature in step (b) may be between 300 and 2200° C. and preferably between 400 and 1000° C. Preferably the temperature in step (a) is higher than in step (b). The residence time is suitably sufficient to convert preferably all of the sulphur oxides to the earlier referred to reduced sulphur compounds.
Step (b) is performed in a furnace comprising a ceramic conduit having a ceramic surface comprising of magnesium alumina silicate. It is found that when step (b) is performed in the presence of such a conduit a more stable method is obtained. The conduit may be made of entirely magnesium alumina silicate or may be comprised of magnesium alumina silicate or combination of magnesium alumina silicate and other materials. Preferably the conduit is made entirely of magnesium-alumina-silicate. Preferably the reduction in step (b) is performed in the presence of cordierite as the magnesium-alumina-silicate. When reference is made to these materials or to conduits or tubes made of these materials in this application it is to be understood that this also includes materials in which magnesium-alumina-silicate, preferably cordierite, is present next to other materials, for example ceramic materials, in contents of above 50 wt %, preferably above 70 wt % and more preferably above 90 wt %.
Step (a) is also suitably performed in a furnace and more suitably steps (a) and (b) are performed in the same furnace. Such a combined furnace is suitably a single elongated furnace wherein at one end of the furnace the oxidation of step (a) takes place in an oxidation zone and at the opposite end of the furnace the reduction of step (b) takes place in a reduction zone. Suitably at the end of the furnace at which the reduction takes place an outlet tube for the gaseous mixture of reduced compounds is present. The outlet conduit is suitably comprised of a surface comprising magnesium-alumina-silicate, preferably cordierite.
Suitably such a furnace is a furnace according to the invention comprising an inlet conduit for the gaseous starting mixture, an inlet for supply of an oxygen comprising gas, an outlet conduit for the mixture of reduced sulphur compounds, an inlet for hydrogen and heating means. Suitably the inlet conduit for the gaseous mixture is co-axially protruding one end of a larger conduit and the outlet conduit for the mixture of reduced sulphur compounds is protruding the opposite end of the larger conduit such that the facing ends of the inlet conduit and the outlet conduit are spaced away from each other defining an intermediate zone separating an oxidation zone from a reduction zone. The heating means are positioned at the exterior of the larger conduit. An ignitor may be present at the oxidation zone or in the intermediate zone. Because the compounds supplied to the furnace auto-ignite at the normal operating temperatures such an ignitor is suitably not present.
The inlet conduit for the gaseous starting mixture is suitably fluidly connected to an inlet for a make-up gas defining a mixing zone for the gaseous starting mixture and the make-up gas. Suitably the inlet for make-up gas is provided with a constant pressure valve suited to, in use, achieve a constant pressure in the mixing zone. This enables the constant pressure in the mixing zone as also described earlier. The make-up gas may comprise hydrogen next to a make-up gas, such as helium.
Suitably a first annular space is present between the interior of the larger conduit and the exterior of the inlet conduit and wherein the inlet for supply of an oxygen comprising gas is positioned at one end of the first annular space such that in use a stream of oxygen comprising gas flows from the inlet for supply of an oxygen comprising gas through the first annular space towards the intermediate zone. The inlet conduit for the gaseous mixture preferably has a relatively large pressure drop. Such a pressure drop in combination with the constant pressure in the optional upstream mixing zone results in a substantially constant and well-defined flow through said inlet conduit. This is advantageous for a good determination of the sulphur compounds. Further a second annular space is suitably present between the interior of the larger conduit and the exterior of the outlet conduit for the mixture of reduced sulphur compounds and wherein the inlet for hydrogen is positioned at one end of the second annular space such that in use a stream of hydrogen flows from the inlet for hydrogen through the second annular space towards the intermediate zone.
The larger conduit, inlet conduit and outlet conduit may have any cross-sectional shape. For practical reasons these conduits are suitably tubular. The inlet conduit and larger conduit may be made out of any high temperature resistant material, like for example selected metals or alloys, like steel and ceramic material, like silicas, aluminas, silica-aluminas, zirconias and the afore mentioned magnesium-alumina-silicate like for example cordierite. In a possible embodiment of the present invention the inlet conduit for the gaseous mixture may be made of steel and the larger conduit made of alumina and the outlet conduit made of magnesium-alumina-silicate. Suitably at least two heating means are present along the length of the larger conduit which heating means can independently from each other heat the exterior of the larger conduit such that the temperature in the oxidation zone can be different, preferably higher, from the temperature in the reduction zone.
In step (c) the mixture of reduced sulphur compounds obtained in step (b) is reacted with ozone to obtain a sulphur compound in excited state also referred to as meta-stable sulphur compounds. Reaction with ozone and measuring a chemiluminescent emission of the sulphur compound in excited state in step (c) may be performed according to well-known methods in well-known apparatuses as for example described in the aforementioned patent and articles.
The invention is also directed to the use of the furnace according to the invention for chemiluminescent sulphur detection and preferably the chemiluminescent sulphur detection is according to the invention.
The invention shall be illustrated by the following examples.
The following example illustrates results obtained by sulfur chemiluminescence using an outlet tube made from cordierite. The system is set up according
The effluent was provided to a furnace as in
To the above system a standard sample consisting of thiophene, diethylsulfide, dimethyldisulfide, 4-methylthiazole, benzothiophene and benzothiazole in o-xylene was provided. Sampling was repeated over an extended period of 70 hours. In
Example 1 was repeated and the stability, sensitivity and equimolarity were determined. The stability is defined as the change in sulfur response of the detector over time when an identical sample is repeatedly analyzed by the same sulfur chemiluminescent analyzer. This change is expressed in terms of the relative standard deviation over the found results (peak areas) for the repeated analyses. The smaller this RSD value is the better the stability of the detector.
Sensitivity is defined as the lowest amount of sulfur that can be detected per time interval as expressed in pg/s by the detector wherein the lower the value the more sensitive the detector.
Equimolarity is defined as the uniformity in response factors of the detector for different sulfur containing components. This uniformity is expressed as the relative standard deviation (RSD) over the different response factors (RF). The smaller this RSD value is the better the equimolarity.
HC Selectivity is defined as the ratio between the response of the detector towards sulfur and the response of the detector towards hydrocarbons. The higher this ratio is the better the HC selectivity of the detector.
The stability, sensitivity, equimolarity and HC selectivity are measured three times and the average results are presented in Table 1.
Comparative Experiment A
Example 2 was repeated except that an 99.7% alumina tube was used as outlet tube instead of the cordierite outlet tube. The average results for stability, sensitivity, equimolarity and HC selectivity are presented in Table 1.
The comparative results presented in Table 1 show that the method employing a cordierite outlet tube is better in terms of stability, sensitivity and HC selectivity when compared to the same method using an alumina outlet tube.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2017426 | Sep 2016 | NL | national |
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PCT/NL2017/050582 | 9/6/2017 | WO | 00 |
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WO2018/048300 | 3/15/2018 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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