Organic Compounds in Condensable Particulate Matter Emitted from Coal Combustion 


Vol. 29,  No. 4, pp. 279-287, Dec.  2023
10.7464/ksct.2023.29.4.279


PDF
  Abstract

Fine dust emitted from coal combustion is classified into filterable particulate matter (FPM) and condensable particulate matter (CPM). CPM is difficult to control with existing air pollution control devices, so research is being conducted to understand the characteristics of CPM. Components constituting condensable particulate matter (CPM) are divided into inorganic and organic components. There are many quantitative analysis results for the ionic components, which account for a significant proportion of the CPM inorganic components, but little is known about the organic components. Thus, there is a need for a quantitative analysis of CPM organic components. In this study, aromatic hydrocarbons (toluene, ethyl benzene, m,p-xylene, and o-xylene) and n-alkanes with 10 to 30 carbon atoms were quantitatively analyzed to understand the organic components of CPM emitted from a lab-scale coal combustor. Of the aromatic hydrocarbons, toluene accounted for 1.03% of the CPM organic components. On the other hand, the contents of ethyl benzene, m,p-xylene, and o-xylene showed low values of 0.11%, 0.18%, and 0.51% on average, respectively. Among the n-alkanes, triacontane (C30) showed a high content of 2.64% and decane (C10) showed a content of 2.05%. The next highest contents were shown with dodecane (C12), tetradecane (C14), and heptacosane (C27), all of which were higher than that of toluene. The n-alkane substances that had detectable concentrations showed higher contents than ethyl benzene, m,p-xylene, and o-xylene except for tetracosane (C24).

  Statistics
Cumulative Counts from November, 2022
Multiple requests among the same browser session are counted as one view. If you mouse over a chart, the values of data points will be shown.


  Cite this article

[IEEE Style]

J. Park and S. Lee, "Organic Compounds in Condensable Particulate Matter Emitted from Coal Combustion," Clean Technology, vol. 29, no. 4, pp. 279-287, 2023. DOI: 10.7464/ksct.2023.29.4.279.

[ACM Style]

Jin Park and Sang-Sup Lee. 2023. Organic Compounds in Condensable Particulate Matter Emitted from Coal Combustion. Clean Technology, 29, 4, (2023), 279-287. DOI: 10.7464/ksct.2023.29.4.279.