The production of activated carbon from a bituminous coal
β Scribed by Bilal A. Akash; William S. O'Brien
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 500 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0363-907X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Devolatilization of an Illinois-basin coal was carried out under a nitrogen atmosphere in the temperature range 600 to 900Β°C. A vertical heated-wall fixed-bed furnace reactor was used. Char produced was activated in the presence and absence of steam using the same furnace setup. The surface area of the activated carbon produced was found to be equal to 54.4 m'g-' when steam was absent and 226.2 m2g-' when steam was present using the same process and conditions of activation. Breakthrough curves for the adsorption of toluene in water activated carbons prepared from that coal were obtained. They were compared with a commercially available activated carbon. On one hand, poor adsorptive properties were obtained for coal-carbons produced by the process of activation under oxygen-nitrogen gas atmospheres. On the other hand, it was found that good adsorption characteristics were obtained by using a steam-oxygen-nitrogen gas mixture. Following the preparation of activated carbon, it was necessary to treat the carbon produced in boiling distilled water. Boiling carbon in water for a short period of time (about 30 min), effectively improves the adsorption performance.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Activated carbon was prepared by physical activation in CO, from a low-ash subbituminous coal. The preparation process consisted of carbonization of the coal in N, followed by activation of the resulting chars in CO,. The activation temperature ranged from 700 to 950Β°C. Experimental results revealed
Activated carbons prepared from two bituminous coals were used to adsorb phenol in aqueous solutions. The major diΓΎ erence between the coal precursors is the oxygen content. The carbon preparation consisted of carbonization of the coals followed by activation in to various CO 2 extents of burn-oΓΎ .
## Abstract The production of activated carbon from agricultural byβproducts is a research field of increasing interest as it deals with the problem of the disposal of agroβresidues, at the same time producing an addedβvalue product that can be used in a number of environmental applications. The pa