POLLUTION CONTROL USING OZONE
20190126198 · 2019-05-02
Assignee
Inventors
- Matthew Stanley Johnsson (Lund, SE)
- Andreww Charles Butcher (Brøshøj, DK)
- Carl Meusinger (København N, DK)
- Kristoffer Skovlund Kipinen (København S, DK)
Cpc classification
F24F8/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
A61L9/015
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B01D53/76
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61L2209/212
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B01D2257/306
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D53/74
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D53/1431
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D53/76
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61L9/015
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
This invention relates to a method for cleaning air comprising one or more pollutants, the method comprising contacting the air with thermal decompositions products of ozone.
Claims
1. A method for cleaning exhaust gas comprising one or more pollutants, the method comprising contacting the gas with thermal decompositions products of ozone.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein thermal decomposition products of ozone are obtained by contacting heated ozone with a collision surface.
3. A method according to claim 1, wherein thermal decomposition products of ozone are obtained by contacting ozone with a heated collision surface.
4. A method according to claim 1, wherein ozone is heated to a temperature of at least 40 C.
5. A method according to claim 1, wherein the thermal decomposition products of ozone are obtained by passing ozone over a heated collision surface at a temperature of at least 40 C.
6. A method according to claim 2, wherein the exhaust gas and the ozone are mixed before contact with or passing over the collision surface.
7. A method according to any of claim 2, wherein ozone is provided through said collision surface.
8. A method according to claim 1, wherein exhaust gas is heated before passing over the collision surface.
9. A method according to claim 2, wherein the collision surface is an inert surface.
10. A method according to claim 2, wherein the collision surface is a heat conducting surface.
11. A method according to claim 2, wherein the collision surface is stainless steel, Teflon (i.e. polytetrafluoroethylene, PTFE), glass, Kynar (polyvinylidene fluoride resin, PVDF), CPVC, Lexan (polycarbonate resin), Hypalon (chlorosulfonated polyethylene (CSPE) synthetic rubber (CSM)), PCTFE (polychlorotrifluoroethylene), PVC (polyvinylchloride), EPDM, Viton (synthetic rubber and fluoropolymer elastomer), or another inert material.
12. A gas cleaning device, comprising: an inlet for exhaust gas comprising one or more pollutants; an inlet for ozone; optionally one or more heating elements; a zone comprising a collision surface for decomposing ozone to reactive oxygen species; a zone for reacting the reactive oxygen species with the one or more pollutants; and a second treatment stage downstream of the collision surface to decompose any excess of ozone or a scrubber.
13. A gas cleaning device according to claim 12, further comprising a scrubber.
14. A gas cleaning device according to claim 12, further comprising one or more additional zones comprising a collision surface for decomposing ozone to reactive oxygen species.
15. A gas cleaning device, comprising: an inlet for exhaust gas comprising one or more pollutants; an inlet for ozone; a zone comprising a collision surface for decomposing ozone to reactive oxygen species; and a zone for reacting the reactive oxygen species.
16. A gas cleaning device according to claim 15, further comprising one or more heating elements.
17. A gas cleaning device according to claim 15, further comprising a second treatment stage downstream of the collision surface to decompose any excess of ozone or a scrubber
18. A gas cleaning device according to claim 15, wherein the collision surface is an inert surface.
19. A gas cleaning device according to claim 15, wherein the collision surface is a heat conducting surface.
20. A gas cleaning device according to claim 15, wherein ozone is heated to a temperature of at least 40 C.
Description
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0016] The inventors of the present invention have found that reactive oxygen species formed by thermal decomposition of ozone are efficient at cleaning air streams containing odorous compounds and other pollutants such as exhaust gas. Such an exhaust gas cleaning system operates in a cheap and fast manner. No specific catalyst needs to be used such as eg MnOx/Al-SBA-16, titanium dioxide, mixtures of manganese oxide with eg aluminum oxide, ferri oxide, copper oxide, Pt with aluminum oxide and silicium oxide or the like.
[0017] The extent of applicability of the present invention is apparent from the detailed description below, but it should be understood that the specific examples as well as detailed description are included merely to illustrate the preferred embodiments, and that modification and alterations within the scope of protection will be obvious to persons skilled in the art on the basis of the detailed description.
[0018] The present invention relates to a method for cleaning a polluted airstream such as exhaust gas using thermal breakdown products of ozone. The exhaust gas to be cleaned and ozone is passed over a collision surface at a temperature sufficient to cause formation of said breakdown products and oxidation of polluting compounds in the gasstream by said breakdown products. The inventors have found that the rate of ozone decomposition at a collision surface is temperature dependent and that the rate abruptly increases above 47 C. Cheap and efficient methods or apparatuses for generating ozone may be employed. Details are specified here only to provide examples to aid a thorough understanding of the present invention. It will be apparent to a person skilled in the art, however, that the present invention may be practiced in other ways than demonstrated in the provided exemplary embodiments.
[0019] As mentioned above, the present inventors have observed that polluted gas can be cleaned in an environment containing heated ozone. The exact mechanism is presently not known; it may be that the heated ozone by contact with a collision surface (in this context also denoted reaction surface) forms reactive oxygen species that are responsible for the cleaning of the polluted gas. It may also be that the reaction to reactive oxygen species take place in the gas phase or another mechanism may be operating, or any a combination thereof. Thus, in the present context, the terms on a collion surface, at a collision surface, over a collision surface illustrate that the mechanism is not known, but the reactive oxygen species are formed in the vicinity of or after contact with a collision surface. In the priority application the term reaction surface was used, and the skilled person will understand that the terms reaction surface and collision surface can be used interchangeably to denote a surface that does not partake in the breakdown of ozone other than providing a surface for heated ozone to collide with. This means that whereas ozone shortly contacts the collision surface, the breakdown of ozone does not depend on chemisorption of ozone onto the collision surface, and no temporary intermediate is formed between ozone and the collision surface. Accordingly, the terms are reaction surface and collision surface used interchangeably. An essential observation is that no oxidation catalyst is involved in the cleaning process, i.e. neither in the surrounding gas nor in or on the reaction or collision surface. In general, oxidation catalysts include vanadium pentoxide, vanadium phosphate, platinum, mixed silver oxides, cobalt salts, manganese salts, molybdenium oxides, bismuth oxides, ferri oxides, mixed oxides eg of bismuth-molybdenium oxides or ferri-molybdenium oxides and the like. No catalysts are provided in the present invention, including in relation to the collision surface. The breakdown of ozone in the invention is thought to be due to heated ozone colliding with the collision surface, without interacting with the surface in any other way.
[0020] As mentioned above, the basis of the invention is to provide a method for cleaning gas containing one or more pollutants, the method being to expose the gas to thermal decomposition products of ozone. Ozone is brought into contact with a warm collision surface and the reaction preferably takes place at a temperature at 40 C. or more. The thermal breakdown is preferably taking place within a temperature range between 40-200 C., such as e.g. 40-150 C.; 40-130 C.; 40-120 C.; 45-110 C.; 45-105 C. or 45-100 C. The required temperature may be provided i) by the polluted gas, ii) by heating of the polluted gas before contact with ozone, iii) by heating of ozone before contact with the collision surface, iv) by heating the collision surface. Moreover, there may be more than one collision surface such as eg 2, 3, 4 or more to ensure sufficient reaction time with the collision surface(s). It is imagined that the collision surface(s) may be made of any material not consumed by the polluted gas or by ozone or ozone decomposition products. Specific examples are given herein. A requirement is that when ozone is heated, eg by bringing it in contact with a heated collision surface, and the ozone degradation products may be formed as a surface reaction of by a reaction in the vicinity of the collision surface. Then thermal decomposition products of ozone are formed that can interact with the polluted gas. Thermal decomposition products of ozone that are used to clean the polluted gas are also denoted reactive oxygen species.
[0021] In some cases, the cleaning process according to the present invention may be combined with other methods such as e.g. a scrubber. Thus, once the polluted gas has been subject to the method of the invention it may be led through a scrubber to remove residual pollutants.
Possible Applications
[0022] One application of the present invention is to clean the exhaust gas of a biogas plant, but a person skilled in the art will know that the method may equally be used in other installations, such as without limitation, the exhaust gasses of forges or chemical plants, the air outlets of livestock production facilities or air inlets in buildings. The novel and inventive technology of the present invention is also amenable to installation in a small unit to clean air in a room or an office, a train, an airplane or any other confined space where the access to clean fresh air free of pollutants and odors is limited. This small unit may or may not be portable.
[0023] In one embodiment of the present invention, the method is used to clean polluted or odorous air such as exhaust gas resulting from biogas production. The device may be installed in a chimney, an exhaust outlet, or in a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning (HVAC) system. Means adapted to ensure airtight fit of the system to existing air stream carriers, ducts, stacks, or chimneys will be known to a person skilled in the art.
[0024] The term exhaust gas refers to a stream of gas that is produced by manufacturing, livestock production, combustion of biofuel or other fuels, chemical plants, forges, and so on, and is not limited to gases resulting from combustion. Thus, gaseous emissions that may comprise noxious or odious compounds and/or other pollutants is considered exhaust gas within the scope of this invention, as is atmospheric air which is polluted due to manufacturing, combustion, forging, or livestock production or other production. Emissions that are discharged from site of production or site of release by ventilation are also considered exhaust gas. Thus, terms such as exhaust gas, polluted air, air stream as using within this application all refer to gas having pollutants to be cleaned, wherein the gas may be a mixture of gasses such as atmospheric air.
DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0025] The invention is explained in detail below with reference embodiments referring to the Figures In
[0026] In
[0027] In
[0033] In
[0034] In
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[0098]
[0099] By ozone generator is meant a stand-alone or built-in device that is capable of generating ozone which can then be used in the present invention. Typically ozone generators are able to generate ozone from atmospheric oxygen and do not require separate oxygen input. Several methods are available for the generation of ozone, for example by corona discharge; by ultraviolet light; by electrolytic ozone generation wherein H.sub.2O is split into H.sub.2, O.sub.2 and O.sub.3; or by cold plasma. It is preferred to use a method wherein oxygen from atmospheric gas or from the exhaust gas to be treated is used. Ozone generators are commercially available.
[0100] As seen from the above, heating of ozone to a suitable temperature may be effected by i) employment of heated exhaust gas, ii) heating elements provided upstream of the collision surface (either to heat exhaust gas or a mixture of exhaust gas and ozone), iii) heating elements incorporated in the collision surface, or by use of a heat exchanger.
[0101] In order to enable the breakdown of ozone, the temperature of ozone (or the collision surface) should exceed 40 C. In those cases, where external heating is provided, the external heating should provide a temperature of from about 40 C. to about 200 C. or from about 45 C. to about 150 C. As demonstrated herein, a suitable temperature may be determined by investigating the ozone removal efficiency dependent on the gas temperature, the gas temperature dependent on the temperature of the oven (or the heating elements), and the ozone removal efficiency dependent on surface area of the collision surface employed. Based on the guidance given in the examples herein, a person skilled in the art will know how to determine relevant parameters.
[0102] When used, the heat exchanger may also be placed downstream of the collision surface in order to recover heat from the exhaust. The heat can be used for heating the incoming gasflow or the heat energy can be reused for any other means. Methods for recovering heat energy will be known to a person skilled in the art.
[0103] Heating of gas or ozone is achieved in the examples in this application by passing the gas through pipes placed in an oven. Heating of gas can be achieved by other means as well, including by passing gas over heating elements such as heating coils, or by passing gas through a heat exchanger. Importantly, the exhaust gas to be treated may not need further heating but is already hot enough from e.g. combustion or other upstream processing.
[0104] The collision surface used may be in any suitable form. It may be in the form of a narrow tube through which the exhaust gas and ozone pass, or it may be in the form of a grid with openings sufficiently small for interaction between the ozone and the collision surface to take place and at the same time sufficiently large to avoid a build-up of undesired pressure. The collision surface may also be in the form of many plates placed in a stack, where the plates have openings, but the plate beneath one plate has openings where the upper plate does not have any opening. Thus, the flow through such an arrangement ensures that ozone is brought into contact with a collision surface. As mentioned above, the collision surface may be heated by a heating element, or the heating of the ozone may be provided by other means. Importantly, as mentioned before, the collision surface does not contain any oxidation catalysts such as those mentioned herein. Especially, the collision surface has not been coated with such an oxidation catalyst.
[0105] By collision surface is meant any surface on which/at which a chemical reaction can take place. In a preferred embodiment the collision surface is inert (ie in the meaning that it does not contain any oxidation catalysts and thus does not form a temporary intermediate with the ozone) and can withstand reactive species in exhaust gas as well as ozone. However, as mentioned herein before, when ozone is contacted with or ozone is in the vicinity of the surface reactive oxygen species are formed. Thus, it may be stainless steel, Teflon (i.e. polytetrafluoroethylene, PTFE), glass, Kynar (polyvinylidene fluoride resin, PVDF), CPVC, Lexan (polycarbonate resin), Hypalon (chlorosulfonated polyethylene (CSPE) synthetic rubber (CSM)), PCTFE (polychlorotrifluoroethylene), PVC (polyvinylchloride), EPDM, Viton (synthetic rubber and fluoropolymer elastomer), or another inert material and may be crafted typically as a permeable membrane, beads, a honeycomb structure, or a grid, ensuring optimal decomposition of ozone. The pressure drop across the surface is preferably small, such as e.g. 100 Pa.
[0106] The term gas refers to atmospheric air or other mixtures of gasses, typically exhaust gasses; indoor air to be recycled, or outdoor air to be cleaned before it is released indoors, which may contain pollutants such as H.sub.2S, CH.sub.3SH, tetrahydrofuran, toluene or other odorous and or pollutant compounds or combinations thereof.
[0107] In all embodiments, a scrubber may be placed downstream of the collision surface to remove soluble oxidation products, e.g. H.sub.2SO.sub.4 and SO.sub.2, cf.
[0108] Excess ozone not consumed in the reaction will be dealt with with knowledge of those skilled in the art. This includes repeated treatment stages using the described invention, if for example a single pass over a collision surface is not sufficient in yielding the desired removal. Multiple instances of the described invention can be based on any of the suggested designs (
[0109] These specific embodiments in the foregoing in no manner exhaust the applicability of the present invention, and it will be evident to a person skilled in the art that various modifications and changes may be made to the invention without departing from the broader scope of the invention. The present application will be described in further detail by the following non-limiting examples.
[0110] The examples below relate to the breakdown of H.sub.2S, but the invention is expected to be able to break down any pollutant susceptible to degradation by ozone decomposition products. Thus, the invention can be used to clean exhaust air or gasses, recycled indoor air, or outdoor air before its release indoor.
EXAMPLES
Materials:
[0111] ACF-1000 Ozone generator (0.sub.3 Technology AB)
Oven (284 52 C, Elektro Helios)
[0112] Mercury thermometer (temperature range: 20-240 C. (built-in in oven) or 20-200 C. (in air outlet)
Variable area flow meters (model FLDA3326G (0-1 L/min), FLDA3215ST (0-10 L/min) Omega)
UV-100 ozone monitors (ECO SENSORS)
Stainless steel tube 3R60 SS 2353-22, Sandvik
Teflon tube PFA-T4-047-100, Swagelok
H.sub.2S (Yara Praxair, 100 ppm (in N.sub.2)
Critical flow orifice: 88---NPT-CAL-100 (Lenox Laser)
Sulfur monitor 450i (Thermo Scientific)
Technical air
Example 1: The Production of Reactive Oxygen Species Using a Heated Surface
[0113] This example demonstrates the production of reactive oxygen species in an gas stream by passing ozone-enriched gas over a heated surface.
[0114] The experimental system (
[0115] The flow rate in this example was 3 L/m in the oven tubes.
[0116] The air stream exiting the ozone generator was mixed with the air bypassing the ozone generator to obtain a controlled ozone concentration in this example of 6.590.79 ppm or 17.451.43 ppm, which was measured with an ozone monitor. The mixed air was then lead into either a stainless steel tube or a Teflon tube located inside the oven. Tube dimensions and O.sub.3 concentrations are shown in table 1.
[0117] As the tubes are located inside the oven the air stream is heated, and the inner surface of the tubing functions as a collision surface leading to decomposition of ozone. The retention time in the stainless steel tube in the oven is approximately 0.4 seconds and the retention time in the Teflon tube in the oven is approximately 0.61 seconds. The outlet of the tubing in the oven is equipped with a thermometer to measure the exiting air temperature. The airstream is lead into a cooling pipe of 2.8 m to permit measurement of ozone in an ozone monitor functioning in the range 10-40 C., cf.
[0118] By adjusting the oven temperature from 20 C. to 180 C., a defined exiting air temperature between 20-90 C. can be achieved. In this setup the air temperature was found to be linearly dependent of oven temperature (see
[0119] Reduced ozone content as a measure of ozone decomposition was found to depend on the temperature of the air exiting the oven, such that in the temperature range 20-47 C., 15-35 percent of ozone was removed, whereas in the temperature range 47-85 C. 35-993 percent of ozone was removed. Increasing exit air temperature results in reduced measured ozone content, i.e. greater ozone decomposition (see
Example 2: The Production of Decomposed Ozone is Dependent on the Area of the Heated Surface
[0120] This example demonstrates that the decomposition of ozone in an gas stream by passing ozone-enriched air over a heated surface is increased with larger surface area, not larger air reaction volume.
[0121] Using a modified version of the apparatus of Example 1, the tubing in the oven was stainless steel. Sets of stainless steel tubing (or stainless steel with additional Teflon tubing for mounting in oven) were interchanged to allow for comparison between constant volume and constant surface area of the tube (see table 1). As the tubes are located inside the oven the air stream is heated, and the inner surface of the tubing functions as a collision surface on which ozone is decomposed.
[0122] Ozone removal was found to depend on surface area and not on volume of the stainless steel tube, such that at an air temperature of 85 C., 100 percent of ozone was decomposed in a tube with a surface area of 306 cm.sup.2, compared to approximately 60 percent removal with a surface area of 103 cm.sup.2, both tubes having a volume of approximately 20 cm.sup.3 and retention times of 0.37 to 0.4 seconds (see
[0123] When surface area was kept at 80 cm.sup.2 there was no difference in ozone removal between a tube volume of 6.65 cm.sup.3 and a tube volume of 14.4 cm.sup.3. Retention time varied between 0.15 sec and 0.32 sec (see
[0124] Thus, the activation of ozone depends on the temperature and the surface area, and it is possible to obtain complete decomposition of ozone in this system.
Example 3: The Use of Decomposed Ozone to Degrade Hydrogen Sulfide (H.SUB.2.S)
[0125] This example demonstrates the production of decomposed ozone in an gas stream by passing ozone-enriched air over a heated surface and its use to degrade hydrogen sulfide (H.sub.2S) present in the air stream.
[0126] This example uses a modified version of the technical system described in Example 1, in that H.sub.2S can be injected through a critical flow orifice into the air stream bypassing the ozone generator before the air streams are mixed. From the mixed air stream sample air can be diverted to a sulfur monitor, as can cooled sample air from the post-oven cooling pipe (see
[0127] In this setup the stainless steel tube in the oven has a volume of 20 cm.sup.3 and a surface area of 332.2 cm.sup.2.
[0128] In this example the air flow into the system was approximately 4 L/min and concentration of H.sub.2S in the pre-oven airstream was 3.91 ppm. This experiment was carried out using two concentrations of ozone (6.590.79 ppm or 17.451.43 ppm). The temperature of the oven was 1897 C. and the exiting air temperature was 804 C.
[0129] The low concentration of ozone caused a 90 percent reduction of H.sub.2S (from 3.91 ppm to 0.33 ppm), whereas the high concentration of ozone caused a complete removal of H.sub.2S (see
[0130] Thus, reactive oxygen species are efficient in oxidizing H.sub.2S in an airstream. The inventors find that the invention will also be able to oxidize a vast number of other pollutants, such as CH.sub.3SH, DMS, CS.sub.2, tetrahydrofuran, toluene, formaldehyde, NH.sub.3.
[0131] In the examples above the oxidation product of H.sub.2S is SO.sub.2, likely due to the fact that dry technical air was used. In many applications sufficient amounts of H.sub.2O will be present in the treated air, so that SO.sub.3 and H.sub.2O forms H.sub.2SO.sub.4 instead of SO.sub.3 decomposing and forming SO.sub.2.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Same volume Same surface area Tube diameter 0.25 cm 1 cm 0.25 cm 1 cm Tube length 390 (390) 24.4 (45.4) 43.3 (79.3) 12.6 (48.6) (cm) Surface (cm.sup.2) 306 76.7 (103) 34.0 (79.2) 39.6 (84.8) Volume (cm.sup.3) 19.1 19.2 (21.8) 2.13 (6.65) 9.9 (14.4) Retention 0.37 0.35 (0.40) 0.047 (0.15) 0.22 (0.32) time (s) [O.sub.3].sub.0 before 65.8 3.0 65.4 4.9 61.7 6.4 55.4 3.6 oven (ppm)