Nature Communications (Apr 2024)

In-situ low-temperature sulfur CVD on metal sulfides with SO2 to realize self-sustained adsorption of mercury

  • Qinyuan Hong,
  • Haomiao Xu,
  • Xiaoming Sun,
  • Jiaxing Li,
  • Wenjun Huang,
  • Zan Qu,
  • Lizhi Zhang,
  • Naiqiang Yan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47725-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Capturing gaseous mercury (Hg0) from sulfur dioxide (SO2)-containing flue gases remains a common yet persistently challenge. Here we introduce a low-temperature sulfur chemical vapor deposition (S-CVD) technique that effectively converts SO2, with intermittently introduced H2S, into deposited sulfur (Sd 0) on metal sulfides (MS), facilitating self-sustained adsorption of Hg0. ZnS, as a representative MS model, undergoes a decrease in the coordination number of Zn–S from 3.9 to 3.5 after Sd 0 deposition, accompanied by the generation of unsaturated-coordinated polysulfide species (Sn 2–, named Sd *) with significantly enhanced Hg0 adsorption performance. Surprisingly, the adsorption product, HgS (ZnS@HgS), can serve as a fresh interface for the activation of Sd 0 to Sd * through the S-CVD method, thereby achieving a self-sustained Hg0 adsorption capacity exceeding 300 mg g−1 without saturation limitations. Theoretical calculations substantiate the self-sustained adsorption mechanism that S8 ring on both ZnS and ZnS@HgS can be activated to chemical bond S4 chain, exhibiting a stronger Hg0 adsorption energy than pristine ones. Importantly, this S-CVD strategy is applicable to the in-situ activation of synthetic or natural MS containing chalcophile metal elements for Hg0 removal and also holds potential applications for various purposes requiring MS adsorbents.