scholarly journals Synthesis of silicon carbide fromcoal fly ash and activated carbon powder

2009 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 251-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sulardjaka Sulardjaka. ◽  
Jamasri. Jamasri ◽  
M.W. Wildan ◽  
Kusnanto Kusnanto
2014 ◽  
Vol 1056 ◽  
pp. 134-137
Author(s):  
Wei Fang Dong ◽  
Li Hua Zang ◽  
Xin Pang

The absorbents including MnO2, fly ash, NaY zeolite and activated carbon powder were used to study the adsorption capacity of phenol. The effect of contact time and dosage of absorbents on the removal efficiency were investigated. The experimental results suggested that activated carbon powder is most effective absorbent, following as fly ash, MnO2 and NaY zeolite which the removal efficiency could reached 98.41%,77.65%, 60.19% and 24.13% at 90min respectively. The data indicated that the activated carbon powder was favorable for adsorption while NaY zeolite was unfit for absorbent of phenol from aqueous solution due to lower removal.


2009 ◽  
Vol 79-82 ◽  
pp. 243-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Visa ◽  
Luminita Isac ◽  
Anca Duta

Advanced wastewater treatment requires highly efficient substrates, able to insure in a single step process the water discharge requirements. The paper the results obtained in the simultaneous removal of heavy metals and dyes, using a composite powder of fly ash and activated carbon. The results show that adding a small amount of activated carbon in a powder mixture with modified fly ash is highly effective in removing cadmium from wastewaters also containing dyes (methylen blue or methyl orange). Chemisorption is the likely mechanism governing this process.


2009 ◽  
Vol 2009 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Y. Cheong ◽  
Z. Lockman

Cubic-SiC nanowires were synthesized using activated carbon powder and Si substrate in vacuum at 1200–1350°C for 1–4 hours. The nanowires were grown according to the following proposed mechanisms: (1) diffusion of C/CO into Si substrate, (2) weakening of Si bond and atomic kick-out, (3) formation of Si-C in vapor phase, (4) formation of saturated SiC layer, (5) formation of pyramid-like SiC nanostructure, and (6) formation of SiC nanowires.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonius Agus Bambang Haryanto ◽  
Ari Handono Ramelan ◽  
MTh Sri Budiastuti ◽  
Pranoto

Author(s):  
Behrouz Jafari ◽  
Edris Rezaei ◽  
Mohammad Javad Dianat ◽  
Mohsen Abbasi ◽  
Seyed Abdollatif Hashemifard ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel Ayodele ◽  
Victoria Ezeagwula ◽  
Precious Igbokwubiri

Abstract Bamboo trees are one of the fastest growing trees in tropical rainforests around the world, they have various uses ranging from construction to fly ash generation used in oil and gas cementing, to development of activated carbon which is one of the latest uses of bamboo trees. This paper focuses on development of activated carbon from bamboo trees for carbon capture and sequestration. The need for improved air quality becomes imperative as the SDG Goal 12 and SDG Goal13 implies. One of the major greenhouse gases is CO2 which accounts for over 80% of greenhouse gases in the environment. Eliminating the greenhouse gases without adding another pollutant to the environment is highly sought after in the 21st century. Bamboo trees are mostly seen as agricultural waste with the advent of scaffolding and other support systems being in the construction industry. Instead of burning bamboo trees or using them for cooking in the local communities which in turn generates CO2 and fly ash, an alternative was considered in this research work, which is the usage of bamboo trees to generate activated, moderately porous and high surface area carbon for extracting CO2 from various CO2 discharge sources atmosphere and for water purification. This paper focuses on the quality testing of activated carbon that can effectively absorb CO2. The porosity, pore volume, bulk volume, and BET surface area were measured. The porosity of the activated carbon is 27%, BET surface area as 1260m²/g. Fixed carbon was 11.7%, Volatility 73%, ash content 1.7%.


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