2019 AIChE Annual Meeting
(224c) The Effect of Physiochemical Properties of Copper Oxide Sorbents on the Chemisorptive Removal of Sulfur
Authors
The effect of microscopic size (crystallite size) and intraparticle void space on the removal capacity was explored by testing beds of CuO sorbents that are produced through a range of synthesis techniques, treatment conditions and starting precursors. Variations in preparation parameters yielded materials of different morphologies (spherical particles, flowerlike particles, nanofibers, and nanobelts) and a wide range of crystallite sizes (5-74 nm). Removal capacities of particles, belts and flowerlike plates showed an increasing trend, from 0.5 wt.% to 12.0 wt.%, with the decrease in crystallite size from 26 to 5 nm. A possible explanation, supported by DFT calculations, suggests that decreasing crystallite sizes exposes more reactive surface facets in CuO and increases O-vacancies. Open facets facilitate H-S bond cleavage which is necessary to produce S atoms that react with CuO moieties. It also enhances the diffusion of sulfur atoms to fresh substrate layers allowing for a deeper propagation of the reaction.
Nevertheless, this trend of increasing capacity with crystallite size decrease didnât apply to nanofibrous materials despite their enhanced macro-porosity. For example, nanofibers (14 nm) crystallite size achieved a removal capacity of 2.2 wt.% compared to 7.3 wt.% achieved by flower-like particles (13 nm). XPS measurements confirmed the presence of trace amounts of carbon residues even after thermal treatment at elevated temperature (823 K). To confirm the role of carbon in dampening sulfur removal performance, different amounts of a polymeric surfactant (PVP) were added to the nanoparticlesâ co-precipitation recipe. The PVP-particles performed consistently worse than their pure counterparts (2.7 wt.% versus 5.8 wt.% at 18 nm) confirming the negative effects of carbon contamination.
Moreover, the effect of doping of CuO nanoparticles with different metals (Zn, Ni, La, Co, Mn, Bi, Mg, and Al) was studied at different metal to copper ratios in sol-gel salt precursors (1%, 10%, 33%, 50%). At 1% metal to copper ratio, sorbents achieved comparable capacities (5.2-7.2 wt.%) and exhibited similar crystallite sizes (6.9-8.2 nm). At higher mixing ratio of 10%, the difference between dopants becomes more pronounced with CuO-La achieving the highest capacity of 26.7 wt.% at 3.3 nm and 11.7 wt.% at 8 nm followed by CuO-Zn (4.8 wt.% at 5.3 nm). The rest of dopants achieved negligible capacities ranging from 0.5 wt.% (CuO-Mg) to 2.7 wt.% (CuO-Co) within the same crystallite size range. At 33%, CuO-La sorbent achieved 33.5 wt.% which is 80% of stoichiometric saturation capacity followed by CuO-Zn at 15.7 wt.%.
Introducing a foreign atom to CuO lattice can influence the reactivity of CuO towards sulfur by disrupting the lattice structure which manifests as an increase in oxygen vacancies and enhancement in diffusivity of oxygen and sulfur atoms. It can also alter the electronic structure by changing the density of states at the fermi level which affects oxygen reactivity (and cations reactivity). A preliminary interpretation of these results suggests that Lanthanum causes the largest disruption to the CuO lattice (1.5 radii ratio of La+3+/Cu+2) compared to the other metals with cation radii ratio ranging from 0.6 for Mn+2 to1.0 for Zn+2. Advanced characterization (X-ray absorption spectrometry at Cu K, S K and La L edges) will be performed to further understand the difference in structural parameters between doped sorbents at different ratios and the difference in the formed CuySx species in the product phases. This knowledge of structure-function relationship can serve as a guide for rational design of sorbents instead of the common trial-and-error approach.