A stream of pure air containing a known concentration of elemental mercury was passed through a fixed bed of MinPlus sorbent held at high temperature, and it was shown to capture up to 100% of the inlet mercury. The net adsorption of Hg was found to be temperature dependent, and is assumed to be the result of a combination of competing activation and deactivation rate processes. Under these benchscale test conditions we found a maximum adsorption at about 870ºC. Above 870ºC and the long residence times applied in fixed bed testing, deactivation of the sorbent can set in.
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