Patent classifications
B01D53/73
SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR RESOURCE RECYCLING OF SULFUR DIOXIDE
A system for resource recycling of sulfur dioxide includes a charcoal reduction furnace, a high temperature dust remover, a cooling separator A, a liquid sulfur tank, a cooling separator, a tail gas absorption tower, a gas stripping tower, a hypo reactor, a centrifuge, a mother liquor tank and a thickener. And a method for resource recycling of sulfur dioxide includes the following steps: (1) preparing elemental sulfur, (2) removing dust from a process gas containing gaseous sulfur, (3) separating elemental sulfur, (4) reabsorbing residual SO.sub.2 gas, (5) purifying sulfur powder, (6) preparing a slurry of cured hypo, (7) performing liquid-solid separation, and (8) preparing an absorption slurry. According to the method, SO.sub.2 gas is reduced into liquid sulfur and sulfur powder, and sodium thiosulfate is coproduced.
PROCESS FOR PRODUCING SODIUM PHOSPHATE FROM SODIUM CARBONATE AND SODIUM BICARBONATE
An emissions clean-up process is provided to remove detrimental exhaust gases from a fossil fuel power plant and to produce and/or reclaim various useful commercial byproducts. The process includes mixing a blended liquid solution with a solubilizer in a mixing tank to create a chemical reaction therein to produce an ionic solid and an alkaline liquid solution. By mixing various blended solutions with desired solubilizers, alkaline liquids are produced which may be chemically combined to create other byproducts or sold commercially. Likewise, the alkaline liquids may be passed through a wet scrubber to create a byproduct that when chemically mixed with an acid creates desired byproducts. Other byproducts such as a sodium bicarbonate liquid solution exits the wet scrubber and is sold or used in the subject process to produce various other byproducts.
PROCESS FOR PRODUCING SODIUM PHOSPHATE FROM SODIUM CARBONATE AND SODIUM BICARBONATE
An emissions clean-up process is provided to remove detrimental exhaust gases from a fossil fuel power plant and to produce and/or reclaim various useful commercial byproducts. The process includes mixing a blended liquid solution with a solubilizer in a mixing tank to create a chemical reaction therein to produce an ionic solid and an alkaline liquid solution. By mixing various blended solutions with desired solubilizers, alkaline liquids are produced which may be chemically combined to create other byproducts or sold commercially. Likewise, the alkaline liquids may be passed through a wet scrubber to create a byproduct that when chemically mixed with an acid creates desired byproducts. Other byproducts such as a sodium bicarbonate liquid solution exits the wet scrubber and is sold or used in the subject process to produce various other byproducts.
Pushable Multi-Fiber Connector
Multi-fiber, fiber optic cable assemblies may be configured so that the terminal ends of the cables have pre-assembled back-post assemblies that include pre-assembled ferrules, such as MPO ferrules that meet the requisite tolerances needed for fiber optic transmissions. To protect the pre-assembled components from damage prior to and during installation, pre-assembled components may be enclosed within a protective housing. The housing with pre-assembled components may be of a size smaller than fully assembled connectors so as to be sized to fit through a conduit. The remaining connector housing components for the multi-fiber connectors may be provided separately and may be configured to be attached to the back-post assembly after installation of the cable.
Pushable Multi-Fiber Connector
Multi-fiber, fiber optic cable assemblies may be configured so that the terminal ends of the cables have pre-assembled back-post assemblies that include pre-assembled ferrules, such as MPO ferrules that meet the requisite tolerances needed for fiber optic transmissions. To protect the pre-assembled components from damage prior to and during installation, pre-assembled components may be enclosed within a protective housing. The housing with pre-assembled components may be of a size smaller than fully assembled connectors so as to be sized to fit through a conduit. The remaining connector housing components for the multi-fiber connectors may be provided separately and may be configured to be attached to the back-post assembly after installation of the cable.
CO2 SEPARATION AND RECOVERY METHOD AND CO2 SEPARATION AND RECOVERY DEVICE IN CEMENT PRODUCTION EXHAUST GAS
A CO.sub.2 separation/recover method in cement production exhaust gas has a step of harmful component removal that removes an acidic component and a harmful component from exhaust gas discharged from a cement production facility; and a step of CO.sub.2 separation and recover that separates and recovers CO.sub.2 by bringing the exhaust gas from which the acidic component and the harmful component are removed into contact with a CO.sub.2 absorption material, so that the acidic component and the harmful component are removed before separating and recovering CO.sub.2, resulting in deterioration of the absorbing ability of the CO.sub.2 absorption material being suppressed; and the cement production exhaust gas can be appropriately disposed.
DIRECT CAPTURE OF CARBON DIOXIDE
The present disclosure provides systems and methods for direct air capture of carbon dioxide or other gases through a calcium sorbent in a manner that allows for wide scale, relatively low cost implementation. In particular, a calcium sorbent may be provided as a substantially thin coating on one or more substrates and utilized for direct air capture of carbon dioxide through chemisorption. The carbonated sorbent may be disposed of for sequestration of the carbon dioxide or regenerated with capture of carbon dioxide released from the carbonated sorbent during the regeneration process.
CO2 CAPTURE AND UTILIZATION SYSTEM AND METHOD
A carbon dioxide (CO.sub.2) capture and utilization system captures CO.sub.2 from flue gas and utilizes the same to enhance algae or cyanobacteria growth. The system generally comprises a CO.sub.2 capture unit and a utilization unit that is in fluid communication with the CO.sub.2 capture unit. The CO.sub.2 capture unit includes a membrane CO.sub.2 absorber that captures CO.sub.2 from incoming flue gas to produce a CO.sub.2-rich solvent. The utilization unit processes the CO.sub.2-rich solvent to produce a product stream that includes CO.sub.2 and NH.sub.3 in a predetermined CO.sub.2:NH.sub.3 ratio. The product stream is delivered to a cultivation subsystem of the utilization of the unit including one or more species of algae or cyanobacteria. A method for capturing and utilizing CO.sub.2 is also provided herein.
ALKALI-BASED REMOVAL OF CHEMICAL MOIETIES FROM GAS STREAMS WITH CHEMICAL CO-GENERATION
The present disclosure provides systems and methods useful in capture of one more moieties (e.g., carbon dioxide) from a gas stream (i.e., direct air capture). In various embodiments, the systems and methods can utilize at least a scrubbing unit, a regeneration unit, and an electrolysis unit whereby an alkali solution can be used to strip the moiety (e.g., carbon dioxide) from the gas stream, the removed moiety can be regenerated and optionally purified for capture or other use, and a formed salt can be subjected to electrolysis to recycle the alkali solution back to the scrubber for re-use with simultaneous production of one or more further chemicals.
Plant and method for the production of hydrogen with the use and storage of CO2 using fuels
A plant and a method for the production of hydrogen and bicarbonate. The plant includes a gasifier, a reformer, a direct contact exchanger and an apparatus for the production of bicarbonate. The plant is suitable for receiving fuel, oxygen, water, carbonate, brine at the inlet and for producing hydrogen, bicarbonate and calcium chloride at the outlet. The plant uses a self-cleaning direct contact heat exchanger to cool the syngas downstream of the reformer and to produce the superheated steam that feeds the gasifier: this heat exchanger allows the production of hydrogen at low costs and in modular plants.