Separation of Pyritic Sulfur from Ultrafine Coal by Pyrolysis & Wet High Magnetic Separation
Abstract
Coal plays a major role in the economic development of many countries, especially in metallurgical industries and conventional power generation plants. The removal of sulfur from coal has recently become even more critically important. Existence of sulfur compounds in coal limits its industrial applications due to environmental as well as technical problems. Thus, high sulfur coal is usually upgraded by desulfurization through physical, chemical, and biotechnological processes. In this study, lowering of pyritic sulfur took place after thermal treatment at 500–700°C (pyrolysis) using a wet high-intensity magnetic separation process. The samples were subjected to size reduction to −25 µm and characterized with X-ray diffraction (XRD), proximate and ultimate analysis, and differential thermal analysis (DTA). Then, the experiments were performed based on central composite rotatable design (CCRD) and response surface methodology (RSM) after thermal treatment of coal containing 3.30% total sulfur. Statistical analysis was performed to examine the significance of the effect of different operating parameters. A maximum sulfur rejection of 90.10% with the lowest sulfur content of 0.59 was obtained at 8.38% solid concentration, 4.59 g/min feed rate, and 7810 gauss magnetic field intensity. The confirmation tests at the optimum conditions produced 0.54–0.56% total sulfur with 90.25–92.33% sulfur rejection.
Recommended Citation
K. E. Yassin et al., "Separation of Pyritic Sulfur from Ultrafine Coal by Pyrolysis & Wet High Magnetic Separation," International Journal of Coal Preparation and Utilization, vol. 43, no. 10, pp. 1759 - 1771, Taylor and Francis Group; Taylor and Francis, Jan 2023.
The definitive version is available at https://doi.org/10.1080/19392699.2022.2130902
Department(s)
Mining Engineering
Keywords and Phrases
Coal; magnetic separation; pyritic sulfur; pyrolysis
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
1939-2702; 1939-2699
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2024 Taylor and Francis Group; Taylor and Francis, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
01 Jan 2023