TL;DR: A review of the efforts made to improve the quality of biogas by scrubbing CO 2 and the results obtained can be found in this article, where a unified approach for scrubbing, compressing and subsequent storage of Biogas for wider applications is presented.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the performance of ammonia (NH 3 ) and monoethanolamine (MEA) solvents for scrubbing carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) greenhouse gas emissions.
TL;DR: In this article, preliminary results on the novel study of ammonia scrubbing for the removal of carbon dioxide from flue gas were provided, which indicated the potential of CO2 reduction by NH3 scrubbing is very promising.
Abstract: This paper provides preliminary results on the novel study of ammonia scrubbing for the removal of carbon dioxide from flue gas. Experimental results indicated the potential of CO2 reduction by NH3 scrubbing is very promising. The overall CO2 removal efficiencies could be above 95% under proper operation conditions. The absorption capacity of NH3 was around 0.9 kg of CO2/kg of NH3 reagent being used. This should be higher than that by a MEA solution. The reaction products were analyzed and determined by X-ray diffraction analysis, SEM picture, and pH measurements. All the measurements indicated that an ammonium bicarbonate solution and its crystalline solids are the major products of reaction.
TL;DR: The present study attempts to generate chlorine dioxide (ClO(2)) gas continuously by chlorate-chloride process and to utilize it further to clean up SO(2) and NO(x) gases simultaneously from the flue gas in the lab-scale bubbling reactor.
TL;DR: In this article, a bench-scale study was conducted on the simultaneous removal of SO2, NOX, and mercury (both Hg0 and Hg2+) from a simulated coal flue gas using a wet calcium carbonate scrubber.
Abstract: A bench-scale study was conducted on the simultaneous removal of SO2, NOX, and mercury (both Hg0 and Hg2+) from a simulated coal flue gas using a wet calcium carbonate scrubber. The multipollutant capacity of the scrubber was enhanced with the addition of the oxidizing salt, sodium chlorite. The results showed a maximum scrubbing of 100% for SO2 and Hg species and near complete NO oxidation with about 60% scrubbing of the resulting NOX species. The chlorite additive was less effective as an oxidant in the absence of SO2 and NO in the flue gas. Oxidation of NO and mercury were only about 50% and 80%, respectively, in the case of no SO2 in the simulated flue gas. The mercury oxidation was similarly affected by the absence of NO in the flue gas.