2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuproc.2018.07.003
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Oxidative removal of dibenzothiophene and related sulfur compounds from fuel oils under pressurized oxygen at room temperature with hydrogen peroxide and a phosphorus-free catalyst: sodium decatungstate

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Cited by 17 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…[1,42] The following re-oxidation of the reduced DT to its starting state (catalysis cycling) and the formation of the oxygenated products can be achieved under the participation of O 2 . [44][45][46][47][48][49] The incorporating Mo, as supported by our present studies, plays key roles in improving the redox capacity and visible light harvesting efficiency of DT anion, especially in enhancing the photo-excited quantum efficiency (probability and lifetime). As a result, the visible-light-catalytic performance of Mo-DT can be improved significantly.…”
Section: Entrysupporting
confidence: 61%
“…[1,42] The following re-oxidation of the reduced DT to its starting state (catalysis cycling) and the formation of the oxygenated products can be achieved under the participation of O 2 . [44][45][46][47][48][49] The incorporating Mo, as supported by our present studies, plays key roles in improving the redox capacity and visible light harvesting efficiency of DT anion, especially in enhancing the photo-excited quantum efficiency (probability and lifetime). As a result, the visible-light-catalytic performance of Mo-DT can be improved significantly.…”
Section: Entrysupporting
confidence: 61%
“…Deep sulfur removal issues are becoming more serious in refineries due to increased sulfur content in crude oil and lowered regulatory sulfur limits in petroleum products [1]. Combustion of organic sulfur compounds produce harmful and hazardous sulfur oxides, from fuel oils [2]. Heavy hydrocarbons derived from fossil fuel such as bitumen, oil sand and heavy oil contain very high amounts of sulfur.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More importantly, aromatic sulfur-containing organic compounds (ASOCs), which constitute a large fraction of the S species in fuel oil, can be efficiently removed through ODS process under mild conditions, while in contrast, ASOCs are not easily eliminated through the HDS process due to steric hindrance. , Different types of catalysts, including supported metal oxide, metal–organic-framework-based materials, polyoxometalate, molecular sieve TS-1, , mesoporous titanosilicate, and so on, have been applied to ODS, and most reactions are performed at a temperature of 50 °C or higher to speed up the process. Some room temperature ODS catalysts have been reported; however, their activities remain unsatisfactory. …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%