Chemical Industry and Chemical Engineering Quarterly (Jan 2024)

Blast furnace slag for SO2 capture: Optimization and prediction using response surface methodology and artificial neural network

  • Kohitlhetse Itumeleng,
  • Evans Suter Kiplagat,
  • Banza Musamba,
  • Makomere Robert

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2298/CICEQ230717006K
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 4
pp. 349 – 357

Abstract

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The main reaction parameters examined were the amount of blast furnace slag, the hydration duration, ammonium acetate concentration, and temperature. The Response surface methodology was employed to quantify their impact on the sorbent's surface area. Using a central composite design, the surface area of the resulting sorbent corresponding to Brunauer- Emmett-Teller (BET) was investigated. The sorbents produced range in surface area from 49.89 to 155.33 m2/g. Additionally, the effectiveness and response prediction capacities of the Response Surface Methodology (RSM) and Artificial Neural Network (ANN) modeling methodologies were investigated. The models were assessed using various statistical metrics, including (MSE) mean squared error, (ARE) average relative errors, the (SSE) sum of squared errors, (HYBRID) Hybrid fractional error function, (SAE) Sum of the absolute errors, (R2)coefficient of determination, and Root means square. According to statistical evidence, the ANN approach surpassed the RSM-CCD model approach. The surface area of the sorbent was shown to be significantly influenced by interactions between variables in addition to all the individual variables examined. The sorbent was made from a material with substantial structural porosity based on SEM. The functional groups were identified using FTIR. The XRF determined the elemental composition of BFS-based sorbents.

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