
 Home Common Compounds Exam Guide FAQ Features Glossary Construction Kits Companion Notes Just Ask Antoine! Simulations Slide Index Toolbox Tutorial Index
FAQ
Introduction Measurement Matter Atoms & ions Compounds Chemical change The mole Gases Energy & change The quantum theory Electrons in atoms The periodic table Chemical bonds Solids Liquids Solutions Acids & bases Redox reactions Reaction rates Organic chemistry Everyday chemistry Inorganic chemistry
Laboratory History of chemistry Miscellaneous
|  |
How is SO2 waste recycled to make wallboard?
- Steam locomotives in the 1950s burned coal containing sulphur which released sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere. Scrubbers could have removed SO2 from flue gases by reaction with calcium carbonate, CaCO3. What is this reaction?
-
SO2 is usually removed by spraying
the hot exhaust gases with a slurry of limestone, dolomite, or (less frequently) lime. The process is called
'wet scrubbing', and it involves many separate dissolution, oxidation, and neutralization processes.
For wet scrubbing with CaCO3 slurry, the most important reactions can be summarized by
SO2(g) + H2O(l)
SO2·H2O(aq)
SO2·H2O(aq) + CaCO3(s) CaSO3(s) + H2O(l) + CO2(g)
CaSO3(s) + 2 H2O(l) + 1/2 O2(g) CaSO4·2 H2O
The final reaction produces gypsum, which has economic value.
In fact, some power plants earn additional income by selling the gypsum to industry for use in plaster, wallboard, and Portland cement.
It's interesting to note that although wet scrubbing
has been used since the 1920's and 1930's in Great Britain's coal-fired power plants, scrubbing didn't
catch on in the United States until the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970 and 1977, for economic reasons.
Author: Fred Senese senese@antoine.frostburg.edu |