| Literature DB >> 33937541 |
Andreas Widodo1, Yestria Yaswari1, Rina Mariyana2, Aditya Farhan Arif2, Tirto Prakoso3,4, Tri Partono Adhi3, Tatang Hernas Soerawidjaja3,4,5, Ronny Purwadi3,5, Antonius Indarto3,4.
Abstract
This work studied the oxidative degradation performance of manganese gluconate as a liquid redox sulfur recovery (LRSR) agent. The degradation of gluconate in an aerated sulfide containing 0.1 M manganese/0.8 M gluconate/pH 13 solution was 11% in 47 h and 20% in 100 h of reaction time. With the total price of chelates being more or less comparable, these were superior to the degradation resistance of EDTA chelate in a solution of 0.1 M iron/0.2 M EDTA/pH 8 which degraded by about 30% in 47 h, and NTA in Fe-NTA (0.1 M metal/0.2 M chelate/pH 6.5), which was degraded by 40% in 100 h of reaction time. At pH of 13, 0.1 M Metal, and 0.8 M gluconate, manganese degraded gluconate more severely than iron and copper. At a lower chelate to metal molar ratio (RCM) of 2 and as well as at a lower pH of 10, the manganese gluconate degradation, expressed as relative concentration to its initial concentration, was faster than at RCM of 8 and pH of 13. All of these observations can be explained among others by the well-known Fenton reaction hydroxyl radicals mechanism as the main cause of the degradation process.Entities:
Keywords: Degradation; EDTA; LRSR; Manganese gluconate; NTA; Natural gas; Sulfur recovery
Year: 2021 PMID: 33937541 PMCID: PMC8079466 DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e06743
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heliyon ISSN: 2405-8440
Figure 1The stability of NTA ligands in an aerated NTA solution without sulfides at pH of 6.5: (a) without iron and (b) with iron (0.1 M).
Figure 2The stability of EDTA ligands in an aerated EDTA solution without sulfides at pH of 8: (a) without iron and (b) with iron (0.1 M).
Figure 3The stability of gluconate ligands in an aerated Manganese gluconate solution without sulfides at pH of 13.
Figure 4Relative Concentration (C/Co) profile of gluconate and EDTA chelates in aerated sulfide containing 0.1 M metal in metal chelate solutions as a function of time. Note: The initial ratio of chelate to metal on molar basis (RCM) and pH were 8 and 13 for manganese gluconate and for iron EDTA were 2 and 8, respectively.
Figure 5Relative Concentration (C/Co) profile of gluconate and NTA chelates in aerated sulfide containing 0.1 M metal in metal chelate solutions as a function of time. Note: The initial ratio of chelate to metal on molar basis (RCM) and pH were 8 and 13 for manganese gluconate and for iron NTA were 2 and 6.5, respectively.
Figure 6Extent of degradation (1-C/Co) profile of gluconate chelate in an aerated sulfide containing 0.1 M metal manganese, copper and iron gluconate solutions at pH of 13 and initial ratio of chelate to metal (RCM) of 8 as a function of time.
Figure 7Effect of pH on the extent of degradation (1-C/Co) of gluconate in an aerated sulfide containing 0.1 M of Mn in manganese gluconate solutions as a function of time at initial chelate to metal ratio (RCM) of 8.
Figure 8Effect of different chelate to metal molar ratios on relative concentrations (C/Co) of gluconate in an aerated sulfide containing 0.1 M of Mn in manganese gluconate solutions as a function of reaction time at pH 13. Note: RCM = chelate to metal ratio (in molar).
Figure 9Concentrations of gluconate in an aerated sulfide containing 0.1 M of Mn in manganese gluconate solutions as a function of reaction time at pH 13 for RCM of 8 (circle) and RCM of 2 (triangle).