“A diamond is a
chunk of coal that is made good
under pressure.” -- Henry Kissinger (American Political scientist.
b.1923)
Coal’s sulfur content is a major problem.
Until economical desulfurization of coal is achieved, its decline will
continue.
Here is an interesting article on coal desulfurization …
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Sulfur Transformation during Hydrothermal Dewatering of Low
Rank Coal
Junhong Wu, Jianzhong
Liu*, Shao Yuan, Xu Zhang, Yan Liu, Zhihua Wang, and Junhu Zhou
State Key Lab of Clean Energy Utilization, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou
310027, China
Energy Fuels, 2015, 29 (10), pp 6586–6592
E-mail: jzliu@zju.edu.cn
Abstract
The presence of sulfur in coals has raised serious environmental issues, which
are obstacles to large-scale utilization of coals. Hydrothermal dewatering
(HTD) is a promising upgrading method for low-rank coals (LRCs) to
significantly remove oxygen-containing groups and irreversibly decrease the
inherent moisture content. To uncouple the complex behavior of sulfur evolution
during HTD processing of lignite and to elucidate the main mechanism, this
research experimentally studied the characteristics of sulfur transformation in
a Chinese lignite from Xiaolongtan coal mine during HTD upgrading. Results
reveal that the HTD upgrading of raw coal within the temperature range from 200
to 300 °C can obtain a desirably upgraded coal with higher calorific value and lower
inherent moisture. Compared with raw coal, organic sulfur content decreased
significantly, whereas sulfate sulfur content gradually increased after HTD.
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy results showed that HTD promoted aliphatic
sulfur decomposition and the release of sulfur-containing gases. The released
gases, such as H2S, reacted with the organic matrix of coals to form thiophenic
sulfur. As a result, thermally stable thiophenic sulfur increased with
increasing HTD temperature. The increase of sulfate sulfur content after HTD
was attributed to the release of SO2. The calculation of the mass balance on
the sulfur revealed that the vast majority of sulfur remained in upgraded
coals, and only a minimal amount was released into gaseous and liquid products.
The sulfur-containing gases remarkably increased with increasing HTD
temperature, whereas the sulfur in the wastewater decreased.
Source: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.5b01258
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This article turned up in Google Scholar using the following search string: coal sulfur review
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