Sulfur compounds critically deteriorate the performance of catalysts and fuel cells in H2 production and natural
gas applications. This study aims to elucidate the adsorption characteristics of low-concentration tetrahy-
drothiophene (THT) and tert-butyl mercaptan (TBM) in CH4 (4.5 ppmv) on Cu-impregnated activated carbon
(Cu/AC) by analyzing the state of the Cu and sulfur species during dynamic tests of the 1st desulfurization,
regeneration and 2nd desulfurization. Physical adsorption was dominant in THT removal, enabling facile
regeneration by the N2 thermal treatment at 100 ◦C. TBM removal was primarily carried out by the chemical
adsorption utilizing CuO, Cu2O, and oxygen on the AC. During desulfurization, CuO acts as a catalyst, an
adsorption site, and an oxygen donor. CuO was actively consumed during the initial stage, leading to the
complete removal of the TBM. During desulfurization, oxidation to form organic sulfur and copper sulfonate was
the primary reaction in the presence of sufficient amounts of CuO and oxygen on the AC. As the oxygen content
of AC was consumed with subsequent desulfurization, reactive adsorption on Cu2O to form thiolate became one
of the major reactions. Owing to the strong chemisorption of sulfur compounds, the recovery of the removal
efficiency was limited by N2 thermal regeneration. However, oxidative regeneration at 250 ◦C using dilute O2
flow effectively removed chemisorbed organic sulfur and thiolate. Because oxygen consumption was accompa-
nied by both desulfurization and regeneration reactions, this method successfully restored the desulfurization
performance by recovering CuO and oxygen on the AC surface and maintaining well-dispersed Cu.