Carbon monoxide detection of chemisorbed oxygen in coal and other carbonaceous materials

Fuel
By: , and 

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Abstract

The oxidation of carbon monoxide by mildly oxidized and devolatilized coal samples was studied thermogravimetrically. The oxidation was attributed to oxygen chemisorbed on inorganic components of the coals. The reaction of CO with pyrite producing carbonyl sulphide, OCS, accompanied the oxidation. A mechanism for CO oxidation is proposed in which active oxygen chemisorbed on the inorganic components of the coal directly oxidized CO to CO2, and facilitates the chemisorption of CO on the coal as carbonate. A factor, α = (1114) [1 − (WnWc)], was derived where Wn is the sample weight loss not attributed to OCS formation, and Wc is the estimated weight of evolved CO2. This quantity is proportional to the fraction of CO2 produced by the direct oxidation of CO, and was used to compare the coal samples studied. Samples of an Illinois No. 5 coal yielded average α values of 0.7 and those of an Illinois No. 6 coal yielded values of 0.6, indicating that in these cases, the majority of CO2 produced came from the direct oxidation of CO. The results obtained for the coal samples are compared with a selection of carbonaceous samples for which the proposed mechanism does not apply.

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Carbon monoxide detection of chemisorbed oxygen in coal and other carbonaceous materials
Series title Fuel
DOI 10.1016/0016-2361(90)90265-R
Volume 69
Issue 1
Year Published 1990
Language English
Publisher Elsevier
Description 7 p.
First page 103
Last page 109
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