Activated Carbon: Difference between revisions

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(Added some more links under the "External Links" section)
(Added some more links under the "External Links" section)
 
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*Thus to close the [[Product Ecology]] we need to plot this out
*Thus to close the [[Product Ecology]] we need to plot this out
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Activated_carbon#Reactivation_and_regeneration Relevant Section of the Wikipedia Page]
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Activated_carbon#Reactivation_and_regeneration Relevant Section of the Wikipedia Page]
==Methods==
*Thermal
*Liquid Chemical Washing
**[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rF69e159Ork A company that does this with water and ozone]


==Disposal via Use in Other Applications==
==Disposal via Use in Other Applications==
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=Internal Links=
=Internal Links=
*[[Activated Charcoal]]
*[[Activated Charcoal]]
*[[Activated Carbon Production Workflow]]


=External Links=
=External Links=
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*[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652617329554 A Paper on Using it for Desorbtion Refrigeration]
*[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652617329554 A Paper on Using it for Desorbtion Refrigeration]
*[https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ceat.200402000 A Paper on Fluidized vs Fixed Bed Activated Carbon VOC Scrubbers]
*[https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ceat.200402000 A Paper on Fluidized vs Fixed Bed Activated Carbon VOC Scrubbers]
*[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/004313549290132N A Paper on use of Fluidized Activated Carbon in a WWT Bioreactor]
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNKeps6pIao The Youtube Channel "Cody's Lab" producing some small scale (in a fire kiln) ]


[[Category: Pollution Control]] ?
[[Category: Materials]] [[Category: Pollution Control]] ?

Latest revision as of 17:29, 15 July 2020

Basics

  • Any form of high purity elemental carbon processed to have high porosity
  • Used as a more efficient/dense chemical filter/reactor compared to standard carbon sources such as charcoal
  • Can be produced by high temperatures, medium temperatures and steam, or chemicals
  • Made with Calcium Chloride - [1]
  • Source material is usually charred wood (charcoal) or some form of coal (coke or raw coal)
  • We will be dealing with charcoal so most work is documented on Activated Charcoal

OSE Work

Re-Use/Recycling

  • The main issue is how it can absorb and be saturated pre use
    • Esentially meaning it is "regular" carbon/charcoal on arrival, and thus inefficient (bad in casual use, may mess up equipment, or cause more pollution in serious use)
  • Also eventually it will need to be swapped out and/or regenerated
  • Thus to close the Product Ecology we need to plot this out
  • Relevant Section of the Wikipedia Page

Methods

Disposal via Use in Other Applications

Reactivation

  • This is the preffered option, as it saves transport of new material in, although some methods may be heat/electricity intensive (commercial vs home needs etc need to be evaluated)
  • It can be device integrated, a seperate onsite device, or at a seperate dedicated facility

Device Integrated

  • The preffered option for medium scale (not home use, but not massive industry, thus most of ose?)
  • Thermal Reactivation Seems to be the Best Option?
  • Can be done with waste heat, or electric heat (induction even if a metal container is used)
  • Need to research temps needed, and gasses in/out
  • The optimal setup for this would be similar to PSA in that it would need to have at least 2 devices, for uninterupted use
  • Similar to a RTO as heat recovery may be reusable thus improving efficiency

Onsite Device

  • A Scaled down version of a dedicated facility's equipment
  • Most likely would be industrial furnaces/dryers etc

Seperate Dedicated Facility

    • Most likely would be large industrial furnaces/dryers etc

Internal Links

External Links