• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • No language data
  • Tagged with
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Preparation and characterisation of graphitisable carbon from coal solution

Kgobane, B.T. (Bethuel Lesole) 18 June 2007 (has links)
The energy demands by the industrial world are continuing to rise, while the rate of new oil discoveries is falling. Within the next 30 years, available petroleum supplies are likely to fail to meet the demand, and oil will no longer be able to serve as the world’s major energy source. Coal, being relatively abundant worldwide and potentially adaptable for use in existing plants that have been engineered for petroleum use, can serve as an inexpensive substitute for, or successor to, the more expensive oil fuels in use today. Graphitisable carbon is one of the high-value products from petroleum as its value lies partly in the nuclear industry. Making graphitisable isotropic carbon from well-purified coal is therefore a primary motivation for this study. However, its purity is far too low. Substantial purification is obtained by dissolving the organic part of coal in dimethylformamide with the addition of a little alkali. Results indicated that more than 90% of the organic part of a 10% ash flotation product dissolved in N, N dimethylformamide on addition of 10% NaOH. The bulk of the impurities are removed by centrifugation and the dissolved organic material is recovered by water precipitation. Subsequently, the ash level is lowered from 10% in the coal to < 1.60% in the coal extracts at a washing efficiency of 33 %. The addition of Na2S (the molar ratio of NaOH to Na2S was 1:1) lowered the ash level further to 0.70%. The coal extract solution obtained showed an absorbance of 1.00 with an organic content of 8%. However, addition of sodium sulphide to the extraction medium at 25 ± 1oC lowered the organic content to 5.6%. At high temperature of 90 ± 2oC, the organic content was further lowered to 2.6% with subsequent loss in colour. The coal extract obtained by water precipitation showed low C/H atomic ratio on the addition of S-2. Nucleophiles such as cyanide, thiosulphate made no substantial change to the hydrogen content nor the degree of extraction. On coking by step heating under nitrogen to 480oC at a rate of 10oC min-1 for 1h, then to 900oC with a soaking period of 2h, the coal extracts melt, then reorganise into a liquid crystal phase around 500oC, which then solidifies into a semi-coke on further heat treatment. The heat-treatment of the coal extracts produced 75% carbon yield. When polished specimens of the cokes were observed by reflectance microscopy, flow textures with domain sizes of a few to many microns were observed. Isotropic, poorly graphitising cokes showed little or no structure. Anisotropic cokes were produced when these domains of liquid crystal grew and coalesced. The cokes were found to be highly graphitisable. However, in the heat treated coal extracts prepared at high temperature, the liquid crystal domains were graphitisable but appeared not to have coalesced. Nevertheless, the random orientation of the domains allowed isotropic blocks to be formed with extremely low crystallinity. The precursors that form these liquid crystals are generally materials known to have a high aromatic carbon content. The precursors that form these liquid crystals are generally materials with a high purity and aromatic carbon content, and low in heteroatoms. Optical microscopy of the polished samples prepared at 90  2oC revealed surfaces with much less ordered coke, having smaller crystalline domains than the heat–treated coal extracts derived at room temperature. Essentially, isotropic graphites were obtained. Addition of S-2 produced an extensive flowing texture, and a highly crystalline domain cokes. The carbon yield lowered. The graphitisability of the carbon improved. The X-ray diffraction data on the graphitised carbon showed that the degree of graphitisation decreased in the following order: high S-2 coal extracts derived at room temperature (GSF-25RT) > high S-2 coal extracts derived at high temperature (GSF-25HT) and no S-2 coal extracts derived at room temperature (GSF-0RT) > no S-2 coal extracts derived at high temperature (GSF-0HT), corresponding to 79 > 75% and 67 > 25% respectively. The interlayer spacing (d002 -value) of the graphites follows the order GSF-25RT (3.37Å) < GSF- 25HT (3.38 Å) and GSF-0RT (3.38 Å) < GSF-0HT (3.42 Å). Subsequently, the Raman spectroscopy, consistent with the X-ray diffraction data, showed the ratio of the d-peak (degenerate) to g-peak (graphitic) in the order: GSF-0HT < GSF-0RT and GSF-25HT < GSF-25RT, corresponding to 1.26 <1.75 < and 6.7 < 7.0 respectively. Because the quality of the coke depends on the nature and quality of the starting material, addition of the carbon additives in the starting material prior heat-treatment affected the flow texture of the coke. The carbon black, which has a spherical shape, forms aggregates that disperse much more easily than the flat chains of aggregates of acetylene black. The difficulty in dispersing the carbon additives was, however, overcome by using a high-shear mixer. Analysis of the coal extracts revealed that the hydrogen content in the coal extracts decreased linearly on addition of the carbon additives, favoring dehydrogenative polymerisation. The addition of carbon additives in the coal extract solution produced an isotropic carbon on heat treatment. Optical microscopy of the resin-mounted cokes revealed decreasing size of the crystalline domain with increasing dosage of the carbon additives. The optimum amount of carbon additives required was found no to exceed 0.44%. Beyond this threshold, the anisotropy of the cokes could not be observed through the resolution of the optical microscope. In addition, the amounts of volatiles released were found to decrease with increasing dosage of the carbon additives. At low dosage of the carbon additives, the heat-treated coal extracts produced graphitisable isotropic carbon with low level of crystallinity. However, at high dosage of the carbon additives, the cokes did not graphitise. The temperature of graphitisation decreased from 2976 to 2952oC with increasing dosage of the carbon additives. The decreasing order of graphitisation was 69 > 61 > 62%, corresponding to 0.44 > 0.88 > 1.60 acetylene black. With the addition of carbon black, the decreasing order of graphitisation was 57.7 > 56.5 > 51.5%, corresponding to 0.44 > 0.88 > 1.60 wt % respectively. The interlayer spacing d002, increased in the same order, suggesting a shift towards a turbostratic and formation of a poorly graphitised, and turbostratic carbon. Raman spectroscopy revealed that the intensity ratio R of the g to the d peak decreased with increasing dosage of the carbon additive. Cokes produced from the coal extracts prepared at 25oC but without S-2 showed also a remarkable degree of flow texture. Its crystalline domain units were relatively small. The resin-mounted coke samples observed under an optical microscope (objective x 25) showed reduced flow texture with the addition of carbon black. The graphitisability of the resultant cokes also decreased on addition of carbon black. The optimum dosage observed for reducing the flow texture without reducing the crystallinity was found to be < 0.22%. Improved degree of graphitisation of the carbon was studied on addition of iron (lll) compounds. Iron (lll) compounds showed a promising improvement in the graphitisability of the carbon when added in small amounts. The intracellular hard carbon is converted to soft carbon, thereby improving the degree of graphitisation. The overall effect was a more isotropic graphitic carbon but the degree of graphitisation obtained was far too low: on addition of 1% and 3% (by wt) of iron (lll), the compounds were 21% and 27% respectively. Oxygen intrusion into the precursor’s coal material prior to heat treatment is thought to have inhibited the degree of graphitisation. Increasing the amounts of the iron (lll) compound and prohibiting the intrusion of oxygen during mixing could improve the graphitisability of carbon. However, the optimum amount to be used remains an important subject to be explored in future. / Thesis (PhD (Chemistry))--University of Pretoria, 2007. / Chemistry / unrestricted

Page generated in 0.3035 seconds