Pyrrolidinium Imides: Promising Ionic Liquids for Direct Capture of Elemental Mercury from Flue Gas
2008
Ji, Lei | Thiel, Stephen W | Pinto, Neville G
A new approach to vapor phase elemental mercury capture has been explored; this approach exploits an ionic liquid coating layer to oxidize elemental mercury for subsequent immobilization by chelating ligands. The room temperature ionic liquid 1-butyl-1-methyl pyrrolidinium bis(trifluoromethane sulfonyl)imide (P₁₄) was selected for study based on its oxidation potential window, thermal stability, and low vapor pressure. Tests were also completed in which KMnO₄ was added to P₁₄ to form a new ionic liquid, P₁₄-KMnO₄, with a higher oxidation potential. In room-temperature bulk liquid phase capture experiments, 59% of the elemental mercury in the inlet gas was captured using P₁₄ alone; mercury capture using P₁₄-KMnO₄ was quantitative. P₁₄ and P₁₄-KMnO₄ coatings were successfully applied to mesoporous silica substrates and to silica substrates functionalized with mercury chelating ligands. The coating layers were found to be thermally stable up to 300°C. Fixed-bed tests of nonfunctionalized silica coated with P₁₄ showed an elemental mercury uptake of 2.7 mg/g adsorbent at 160°C; at the same temperature, functionalized silica coated with P₁₄-KMnO₄ showed an elemental mercury capacity of at least 7.2 mg/g adsorbent, several times higher than that of activated carbon. The empty bed gas residence time in these tests was 0.04 s. A chelating adsorbent incorporating P₁₄ in the coating layer, may be capable of simultaneous removal of elemental and oxidized mercury from coal combustion flue gases.
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