B01J20/027

LANTHANIDE FLUORIDE TWO-DIMENSIONAL POROUS NANOSHEETS, AND PREPARATION METHOD AND APPLICATIONS THEREOF
20190322541 · 2019-10-24 ·

The present application provides a method for preparing lanthanide fluoride two-dimensional porous nanosheets and belongs to the field of novel materials. In the present application, mixing a water-soluble lanthanide metal salt and an aqueous solution of sodium acetate in a nitrogen atmosphere to obtain a mixed solution, and adding an aqueous solution of fluorine-containing salt to the mixed solution obtained for precipitation reaction to produce lanthanide fluoride two-dimensional porous nanosheets. In the preparation process provided by the present application, no additional surfactant or template agent needs to be added, the pollution of the surfactant to the surface of the prepared material is avoided and the tedious after-treatment steps to template agent are reduced. Accordingly, the large-scale production can be realized, and the lanthanide fluoride two-dimensional porous nanosheets constructed by nanoparticles are prepared in large scale by one step. Moreover, no other organic solvents are required, and the pollution to the environment during the preparation process is avoided.

Sorbents for the oxidation and removal of mercury

A promoted carbon and/or non-carbon base sorbent are described that are highly effective for the removal of mercury from flue gas streams. The promoted sorbent comprises a carbon and/or non-carbon base sorbent that has reacted with and contains forms of halogen and halides. Optional components may be added to increase and/or preserve reactivity and mercury capacity. These may be added directly with the base sorbent, or in-flight within a gas stream (air, flue gas, etc.), to enhance base sorbent performance and/or mercury capture. Mercury removal efficiencies obtained exceed conventional methods. The promoted sorbent can be regenerated and reused. Base sorbent treatment and preparation methods are also described. New methods for in-flight preparation, introduction, and control of the active base sorbent into the mercury contaminated gas stream are described.

Reversible and irreversible chemisorption in nonporous, crystalline hybrid structures

A sorbent in the form of a layered, non-porous perovskite is provided, wherein the sorbent can include parallel, alternating layers of an organic layer, including an ordered array of organic moieties capable of reacting with a gaseous halogen, and an inorganic layer, including a metal-halide sheet. Furthermore, each organic layer can be sandwiched between inorganic layers. Methods for capturing one or more halogens from a gas stream are also provided, wherein the methods can include contacting a gas stream with a sorbent in the form of a layered, non-porous perovskite, wherein the sorbent can include parallel, alternating layers of an organic layer, including an ordered array of organic moieties capable of reacting with a gaseous halogen, and an inorganic layer, including a metal-halide sheet. One or more halogens in the gas stream can react with either alkyne groups or alkene groups found in the organic layer of the sorbent.

SORBENTS FOR THE OXIDATION AND REMOVAL OF MERCURY
20180280870 · 2018-10-04 ·

A promoted activated carbon sorbent is described that is highly effective for the removal of mercury from flue gas streams. The sorbent comprises a new modified carbon form containing reactive forms of halogen and halides. Optional components may be added to increase reactivity and mercury capacity. These may be added directly with the sorbent, or to the flue gas to enhance sorbent performance and/or mercury capture. Mercury removal efficiencies obtained exceed conventional methods. The sorbent can be regenerated and reused. Sorbent treatment and preparation methods are also described. New methods for in-flight preparation, introduction, and control of the active sorbent into the mercury contaminated gas stream are described.

SORBENTS FOR THE OXIDATION AND REMOVAL OF MERCURY
20180257030 · 2018-09-13 ·

A promoted activated carbon sorbent is described that is highly effective for the removal of mercury from flue gas streams. The sorbent comprises a new modified carbon form containing reactive forms of halogen and halides. Optional components may be added to increase reactivity and mercury capacity. These may be added directly with the sorbent, or to the flue gas to enhance sorbent performance and/or mercury capture. Mercury removal efficiencies obtained exceed conventional methods. The sorbent can be regenerated and reused. Sorbent treatment and preparation methods are also described. New methods for in-flight preparation, introduction, and control of the active sorbent into the mercury contaminated gas stream are described.

SORBENTS FOR THE OXIDATION AND REMOVAL OF MERCURY
20180257031 · 2018-09-13 ·

A promoted carbon and/or non-carbon base sorbent are described that are highly effective for the removal of mercury from flue gas streams. The promoted sorbent comprises a carbon and/or non-carbon base sorbent that has reacted with and contains forms of halogen and halides. Optional components may be added to increase and/or preserve reactivity and mercury capacity. These may be added directly with the base sorbent, or in-flight within a gas stream (air, flue gas, etc.), to enhance base sorbent performance and/or mercury capture. Mercury removal efficiencies obtained exceed conventional methods. The promoted sorbent can be regenerated and reused. Base sorbent treatment and preparation methods are also described. New methods for in-flight preparation, introduction, and control of the active base sorbent into the mercury contaminated gas stream are described.

SORBENTS FOR THE OXIDATION AND REMOVAL OF MERCURY
20180229182 · 2018-08-16 ·

A promoted activated carbon sorbent is described that is highly effective for the removal of mercury from flue gas streams. The sorbent comprises a new modified carbon form containing reactive forms of halogen and halides. Optional components may be added to increase reactivity and mercury capacity. These may be added directly with the sorbent, or to the flue gas to enhance sorbent performance and/or mercury capture. Mercury removal efficiencies obtained exceed conventional methods. The sorbent can be regenerated and reused. Sorbent treatment and preparation methods are also described. New methods for in-flight preparation, introduction, and control of the active sorbent into the mercury contaminated gas stream are described.

BIOREFINERY METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR ISOLATED ENVIRONMENTS

A Biorefinery System (BIOSYS) that effectively treats all human activity-derived waste (black water, grey water, and food waste streams) using biological systems and that produces as process by-products: recovered potable water, liberated free oxygen, edible protein cake (with and without lipids), soil amendments, and machinery lube oils. Additionally, the system captures and chemically binds carbon dioxide into microbial cells and associated by-products, thus producing recovered usable returned cabin air.

SORBENTS FOR THE OXIDATION AND REMOVAL OF MERCURY
20180133646 · 2018-05-17 ·

Various embodiments disclosed relate to sorbents for the oxidation and removal of mercury. The present invention includes removing mercury from a mercury-containing gas using a halide-promoted and optionally ammonium-protected sorbent that can include carbon sorbent, non-carbon sorbent, or a combination thereof.

METHOD WITH TYPICAL GREEN AND LOW-CARBON CHARACTERISTICS FOR PREPARING RECYCLED POLYESTER BY CLOSED-LOOP RECYCLING OF WASTE POLYESTER

A method with typical green and low-carbon characteristics for preparing recycled polyester by closed-loop recycling of waste polyester is disclosed. The method includes subjecting the waste polyester to depolymerization by using a specific depolymerization catalyst; removing a polyol solvent from a depolymerization product, and removing a by-product by purification to obtain a depolymerization monomer; mixing the depolymerization monomer with a binary acid, a polyol, a polymerization catalyst, and a chain extender to carry out an esterification reaction; and then adding a stabilizer and a catalyst for condensation polymerization to obtain the recycled polyester. The method of the present invention has low depolymerization temperature, high efficiency, low use amount of the polyol solvent, and extremely low content of a by-product. Meanwhile, the depolymerization catalyst can be directly used for the co-esterification of the recycled polyester without separation, and adverse effects on properties of the prepared recycled polyester cannot be caused.