Mechanism of synergistic removal of NO and SO2 by sodium bicarbonate
Abstract
Sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) is considered to be an effective alkaline adsorbent for SO2 removal and surprisingly, the concentration of NO is significantly reduced along with the generation of NO2 during its desulfurization. Unfortunately, the mechanism of NO interaction with NaHCO3, SO2 and O2 is ambiguous. In this work, the effects of absorption gas and absorber composition on SO2/NO absorption performance were explored, the absorption products were characterized using XPS and SEM, and the Gibbs free energy of the inferred reaction path was calculated based on density functional theory (DFT). The results showed that SO2 and O2 synergistically promoted the absorption and removal of NO by NaHCO3, which could completely remove SO2 and absorb 90% of NO at 160 °C. Sodium metabisulfite (Na2S2O5) and sodium dithionate (Na2S2O6) were identified as the active substances responsible for efficient NO absorption, and the oxidation of Na2S2O5 to Na2S2O6 is the controlling step of the NO removal reaction. Specifically, Na2S2O5 is an intermediate produced by the reaction of NaHCO3 with SO2, and subsequently reacts with O2 to produce Na2S2O6, which releases reactive oxygen species to oxidize NO to NO2. In addition, when the S/N ratio is greater than 1 and the O2 content is greater than 5%, both SO2 and NO can maintain removal efficiency higher than 90%, indicating that the absorption reaction of SO2 and NO by NaHCO3 is highly adaptable to the flue gas composition.