Hazardous air pollutants formation from reactions of raw meal organics in cement kilns.

Thermally induced chlorination, condensation, and formation reactions of raw meal organic surrogates were investigated on different types of surfaces. The System for Thermal Diagnostic Studies provided a powerful tool to study these reactions under defined reaction conditions, which were related to typical conditions in the preheater zone of cement kiln. Experiments were conducted with benzene and benzene/myristic acid (C6H6/C13H27COOH) mixtures in a quartz reactor containing different chlorinating catalysts/reagents over a temperature range of 300-500 degrees C. Reaction products were trapped in-line and analyzed by GC-MS. A mixture of chlorides of calcium, potassium, aluminium and iron was highly effective for chlorination/condensation reactions of benzene and benzene/myristic acid mix at temperatures above 300 degrees C. The same behavior was observed only when calcium chloride and potassium chloride were used as chlorinating catalyst/reagent. This result showed that transition metal chlorides like FeCl3 are not necessary for chlorination/condensation of organics under post-combustion conditions. Methylene chloride was the major chlorinated product followed by chloroform and various other C1, C2 and C6 chlorinated products. Yields of chlorinated aliphatics were highest at 400 degrees C for both benzene and benzene/myristic acid mix. C6 products were mainly mono- to hexa-chlorinated benzenes with trace amounts of chlorinated phenols. The major chlorinated products observed in this study (i.e., methylene chloride, chloroform, chloroethanes and monochlorobenzene) were also present as major chlorinated hydrocarbons in the cement kiln field emission data.