Sulfur Transformation and Metals Recovery During Co-Gasification of Municipal Solid Waste and Gypsum

Author:

Mavukwana Athi-enkosi12,Burra Kiran R. G.3,Sempuga Celestin4,Castaldi Marco5,Gupta Ashwani K.3

Affiliation:

1. The Combustion Laboratory, University of Maryland Department of Mechanical Engineering, , College Park, MD 20742 ;

2. College of Science, Engineering and Technology, University of South Africa (UNISA) Department of Chemical Engineering, , Christiaan de Wet & Pioneer Avenue, Florida Campus, Johannesburg 1710, South Africa

3. The Combustion Laboratory, University of Maryland Department of Mechanical Engineering, , College Park, MD 20742

4. College of Science, Engineering and Technology, University of South Africa (UNISA) Department of Chemical Engineering, , Christiaan de Wet & Pioneer Avenue, Florida Campus, Johannesburg 1710 , South Africa

5. The City College of New York, City University of New York Department of Chemical Engineering, , New York, NY 10031

Abstract

AbstractThe fate of sulfur and conversion of metals during the co-gasification of municipal solid waste (MSW) and gypsum is examined here using aspen plus combined with Thermo-Calc for the process model development. The effect of air ratio, temperature, and MSW-to-gypsum feed mass ratio on the syngas evolution, sulfur transformation, and mineral speciation behavior is investigated. The results showed prevention of gypsum sulfur transformation to sulfur dioxide at temperatures below 1050 °C, air ratio < 0.4, and MSW-to-CaSO4 feed mass ratio < 33 wt%. Approximately 90 wt% of feed was transformed into gas products comprising 22% CO and 19% H2. At approximately 900 °C, major minerals formed were CaS (alabandite), melilite, anorthite, rankinite, nepheline, and wollastonite. Melilite, a calcium silicate of aluminum and magnesium, dominated over all other silicates. At temperatures >1000 °C, these minerals transformed into a more stable calcium orthosilicate (CaSiO4) and molten oxysulfide. At temperatures higher than 1200 °C, all metals in MSW were transformed into molten oxides. The results show that syngas and minerals can be recovered during the co-gasification of MSW and gypsum to directly reveal the synergetic benefits of co-processing MSW and gypsum low-value waste materials.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Fuel Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

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