The Sulfur Problem: Cleaning up Industrial Feedstocks
Sulfur compounds contaminate many industrially important feedstocks and, on release to the atmosphere as sulfur oxides, can cause widespread damage to the ecosystem. The main objectives of The Sulfur Problem: Cleaning Up Industrial Feedstocks are to demonstrate the importance of eliminating sulfur contaminants from the environment and the measures necessary to effect this. Using a systematic and pedagogical approach, the reader is first presented with the problem. Current technology for solving it is then outlined together with appropriate theory on the synthesis, structure and sorption behaviour of the materials used. Relevant characterisation techniques are described with reference to typical sorbents, to demonstrate how the sorption behaviour of the materials correlates with their properties. The book is unique in blending together aspects of environmental chemistry, materials/solid state chemistry, surface chemistry, catalysis and separation processes to address the problem of sulfur contaminants in a wide range of feedstocks.
D. Stirling, The Sulfur Problem: Cleaning up Industrial Feedstocks, The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2000.
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Table of contents
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Front coverBy
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Front matterBy
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PrefaceBy
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ContentsBy
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AcknowledgementsBy
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Introduction: The sulfur problemp1-9By
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Catalytic hydrodesulfurisationp10-15By
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Adsorption and absorption of H2Sp16-30By
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Clean-up of sulfur dioxidep31-38By
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Synthesis and characterisation of solid sorbentsp39-66By
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Surface energies and interactions between particlesp67-77By
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Determination of the sulfur sorption capacity of solid sorbentsp78-88By
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Subject indexp89-94By
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Back coverpX003-X004By
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