Fuels and Combustion-Part2 PDF
Fuels and Combustion-Part2 PDF
Fuels and Combustion-Part2 PDF
Coal Firing
Since the old days of feeding coal into a furnace by hand,
several major advances have been made to improve the
combustion efficiency.
Types of coal firing:
1. mechanical Stoker firing
2. Pulverized firing (1920s:represented a major increase in
combustion rates over mechanical stokers)
3. Cyclone Firing (1940s)
4. Fluidized bed firing (1950s)
Hand Firing
(a) Natural draft
(b) Forced draft
25-75
25-40
Stoker Firing
(a) Chain grate
i) Natural draft
ii) Forced draft
(b) Spreader Stoker
25-40
15-25
15-25
3.
4.
< 10 mm
2.
Overfeed stokers
Underfeed stokers
Spreader Stoker
Most widely used for stem capacities of 9.5 to 50 kg/s.
It can burn a wide variety of coals from high-rank bituminous
to Lignite.
Coal Crushers
If the coal is too large, it must go through crushers for being
broken into required size (about 3cm), which are part of the
coal-handling system.
To prepare coal for pulverization, the following crushers are
preferred:
Ring Crusher
Hammer-mill
BradFord Breaker
Roll crusher
Bradford Breaker
Pulverizers
Pulverizing process is composed of the following stages:
Feeding system
Which automatically controls the fuel-feed rate according to
the boiler demand and the air rates required for drying and
transporting fuel to the burner.
Drying
Removal of moisture from coal
Pulverizer or Grinding Mill
Grinding is accomplished by impaction, attrition, crushing, or
combination of these.
Classifier
Separates oversized coal and returns it to the grinders to
maintain the proper fineness for the particular application.
It has greater simplicity, greater safety, lower space requirement, and lower
operating cost.
It continuously processes coal from the storage receiving bunker through a feeder,
pulverizer, and primary air fan to the furnace burners.
Large steam generators are provided with more than one pulverizer system, each
feeding a number of burners, so that a wide control range is possible by varying the
load on each.
Cyclone Furnace(1940s)
It is widely used to burn poorer grades of coal that contain a high ash content (6-25
%), and a high volatile matter (>15%) to obtain the necessary high rates of
combustion.
Tangential injection of primary and secondary air to impart a centrifugal motion to
the coal.
Tertiary air admitted at the center
The whirling motion of air and coal results in large heat rate volumetric densities
(4.7-8.3 MW/m3) and high combustion temperatures ( > 1650 deg C)
Cyclone Furnace
Advantages:
The removal of much of the ash, about 60 %, as molten slag is collected on cyclone
walls by centrifugal action and drained off the bottom.
Only 40 % ash leaves with the flue gases, compared with 80 % for pulverized coal
firing.
Only crushed coal is used and no pulverization equipment is needed and hence
boiler size is reduced.
Limitations:
Formation of relatively more Nox in the combustion process.
High forced draft fan pressure and therefore higher power requirements.
Fluidized-bed combustion
It has been under development since 1950s.
In a fluidized bed the turbulent state increases heat and mass
transfer and reduces time of reaction, plant size and power
requirement.
Fluidized bed combustion results in high combustion
efficiency and low combustion temperatures.
It occurs at lower temperatures, resulting in lower production
of Nox as well as the avoidance of slagging problems.
It differs from the cyclone furnace in that sulfur is removed
during the combustion process.
Advantages of FB combustion
1
CaCO3 + SO2 + O2 CaSO4 + CO2
2
The rate of this reaction is max. at bed temp between 815 to 870 deg C though a
practical range of operation of fluidized beds of 750 deg C to 950 deg C is
common.
Other advantages are:
Complete and efficient combustion
Low emissions
Favorable Ash property
Low operating costs and Maintenance
Fluidization
A fluidized bed is a bed of solid particles which are set into motion by blowing a
gas stream upward through the bed at a sufficient velocity to suspend the particles.
The bed appears like a boiling liquid.
The fluidization occurs when the drag force on the particles in the bed due to the
upward flowing gas just equals the weight of the bed.
Fluidization
P = Ps = H(1-)s g
m b
vol. of bed vol. of solids
=1- ( s
)
vol. of bed
s m b
Since the voids may be regarded as empty spaces, ms=mb,
=
= 1-(b/s)
H0
1
=
10
H
Fluidization
C D A f v s
2
= V s g
Regimes of Fluidization
1. Packed bed (Stoker)
2. Bubbling Fluidized Bed
3. Turbulent Bed
4. Fast Fluidized bed (Circulating Fluidized)
5. Pneumatic Transport (Pulverized)
Regimes of Fluidization
Regimes of Fluidization
Regimes of Fluidization
Packed bed
v
p
(1 )
v
1 f
= 150
+ 1.75 3
3
2
H
(d p )
d p
3
Where is the viscosity and s is the density of the gas, dp is the diameter of the
particles and is the sphericity of particles
When the superficial velocity of gas flow through a fixed bed reaches the minimum
fluidization velocity, vs, the fixed bed transforms into an incipiently fluidized bed
and the bed starts behaving as a liquid.
The pressure drop across the bed is equal to the weight of the bed, the fluid drag is
given as
FD = P A = A H(1-) (s f )g
Also P /H = (1-) (s f )g
The minimum superficial velocity, vmf, may be given in terms of Reynolds
number:
Re mf =
g d p vmf
= [C12 + C 2 Ar ]0.5 C1
Ar = Archimedes number =
C1 = 27.2 and C 2 = 0.0408
f ( s f ) gd p 3
f2
Turbulent Bed
As the velocity of gas through a bubbling fluidized bed is increased, the bed
expands, and a point is eventually reached when the bubbles constantly collapse
and reform resulting in a violently active bed.
The bed surface is highly diffused and particles are thrown into the free board
above.
The pressure drop fluctuates rapidly.
The amplitude of pressure fluctuation reaches a peak and reduces to a steady state
value.
High slip velocity (Ug-Us) between gas and solid, formation and
disintegration of particle agglomerates, and a very good gas-solid mixing
are the characteristic features of this regime.
The main difference between bubbling beds and CFB lies in the gas
velocity used. While bubbling beds normally operate at gas velocities of
around 1-3 m/s, CFB typically runs at 5-10 m/s
In a CFB boiler furnace the gas velocity is sufficiently high to blow all the solids
out of the furnace.
The majority of the solids leaving the furnace is captured by a gassolid separator,
and is recirculated back to the base of the furnace.
A CFB boiler is shown schematically in Figure
The primary combustion air (usually substoichiometric in amount) is injected
through the floor or grate of the furnace
The secondary air is injected from the sides at a certain height above the furnace
floor.
Fuel is fed into the lower section of the furnace, where it burns to generate heat.
A fraction of the combustion heat is absorbed by water- or steam-cooled surfaces
located in the furnace, and the rest is absorbed in the convective section located
further downstream, known as the back-pass.
CFBC
Circulating FBC
Coal Gasification
The gasification of coal for use as a powerplant fuel is being
considered as the supply of natural gas diminishes.
Coal gasification existed since 1800s !
Intially gas was manufactured from coal and distributed as
town gas for smelting of iron and for burning etc.
The coke was placed in large beds and burned for a period
with less than the stoichiometric quantity of air to give
producer gas
Air
producer
gas
steam
water
gas
Coal gasification
CO + H 2O CO2 + H 2
High BTU gas:
The final step in producing a pipeline quality gas is called catalytic methanation.
The products of the above reaction are reacted over a nickel catalyst at a
temperature of 1100 deg C and pressure of 6.8 bar
CO + 3H 2 CH 4 + H 2O
The product gas is of a higher quality with heating value of 37.7 MJ/m3 and is a
direct substitute for natural gas.