Micro 171 PDF
Micro 171 PDF
Micro 171 PDF
Tflame
T
Conventional flame
and no air preheat
GAS Tproc T
AIR
Tair
T
GAS
Tflameless
Flameless combustion AIR Tproc
T
and air preheat
Tair
x
Figure 3 High velocity gas burner: flame and flameless firing
The picture of Figure 3 is only one of the flameless firing patterns typical of furnaces
that can be implemented with various arrangements of the air and fuel injection nozzles.
Flameless combustion can be applied to other processes as well (e.g. steam generators,
thermal treatment of refuse, gas turbine combustors etc..): the same basic principles
and stability conditions (CF173) hold true, that is reactants temperature above self-
ignition and dilution with a large ballast to keep down final reaction temperature.
4. What about lean fuels, oil and coal flames?
Flameless combustion is by no means limited to rich gaseous fuels such as natural gas,
but can be applied as well to lean gaseous mixtures (such as fuel gases recovered from
industrial processes) or to liquid and solid fuels. Figure 4 shows, once again by way of
comparison, conventional and flameless firing of heavy oil with preheated, vitiated air.
In the case of Figure 4, right hand side, the inertisation and preheating of reactants,
typical of flameless combustion, are carried out to a large degree, upstream of the
burner because combustion air is vitiated (with inert gases) and preheated. Quite
evidently, reaction steps follow chemistry paths different from the conventional,
burner-stabilised flame and there is no wonder that pollutant formation and heat flux
distribution are quite different. This may be exploited in practice for clean firing
technologies and for improved process performance.
Glossary terms
Adiabatic flame temperature Refers to the theoretical flame temperature assuming
no heat losses. It is computed by equating the lower heating value of the fuel to the
enthalpy of combustion products corresponding to a unit mass of fuel and to a known
excess air (but assuming no recirculation).
Bluff-body A solid body, usually axially symmetric, and often with a flat downstream
face, placed in a flow of comburent to create a wake or reverse flow zone for flame
stabilisation.
Comburent - The agent, which supports the combustion of a fuel or combustible, usually
air or oxygen. Although this term is not found in English dictionaries, it has been
adopted (probably adapted from the French comburant) by the IFRF and is used
throughout this handbook. There is no convenient English equivalent
Combustion roar - Generic name given to broad band noise generated by a turbulent
flame
Flue gases Products of combustion at the outlet of the combustion chamber and/or at
the exhaust chimney
Flame front The thin region separating fresh reactants from almost burnt, hot
products: heat and reactive species diffuse back into cold reactants because of the
sharp gradient. This makes up a propagation mechanism competing with the flow field to
set up a steady flame, within suitable conditions
High velocity burner - Burners designed to produce a high velocity (>20m/s) jet of
combustion products, which then stir the furnace atmosphere or enhance convection
Inertisation Adding to the reactants (fuel and air) a large amount of inert gas ballast,
that does not take part into the combustion reaction but does take up its share of
enthalpy and momentum
OH radical The most abundant species of unstable excited molecules, called radicals,
intermediate in combustion chain reactions, before stable combustion products are
obtained
Nitrogen oxides - Gaseous atmospheric pollutant Mixture of oxides of Nitrogen
comprising NO and NO2
NOx - Gaseous atmospheric pollutant - Mixture of oxides of Nitrogen comprising NO
and NO2
Recuperator A heat exchanger used to preheat combustion air thereby recovering
sensible heat from the flue gases; auto-recuperator refers to the circumstance that the
burner is recovering heat from its own flue gases
Regenerator A system for preheating the combustion air by means of a heat reclaiming
bed (honeycomb or pebbled bed etc) alternatively reheated by flue gases and then
cooled by the air during the subsequent cycle
Self-ignition temperature - Lowest temperature at which a fuel-air mixture ignites
spontaneously without an external spark or flame, whereby combustion chain reactions
are self-sustained. The range of ignition temperatures for hydrocarbon fuels is 350
650C.
Swirl - A tangential velocity component can be imparted to air issuing from the burner
nozzle, thereby generating a tangential momentum beside the axial momentum. The
resultant swirling motion affects the near field and the flame stability.
Thermal NO - One of three commonly accepted methods by which nitrogen oxides are
formed in flames. Thermal NO is formed when oxygen and nitrogen mix at high
temperatures. Thermal NO formation is described by the Zeldovich mechanism
Well-stirred reactor - An idealised combustion chamber where chemical reactions and
heat transfer proceed to such a rate that composition and temperature can be assumed
constant throughout the volume
Keywords
Flame; flameless; flame front stabilisation; high temperature air; preheated air; mild
combustion; flox, flameless oxidation; dilute combustion; low NOx; thermal NOx;
Zeldovich; inertisation;
Sources
[1] J.A. Wnning, J.G. Wnning: Ten Years of Flameless Oxidation; Technical
Applications and Potentials 4th HTACG Symposium, Rome 26-28 November 2001
[2] T. Plessing, N. Peters, J.G. Wnning: Laseroptic investigation of highly preheated
combustion with strong exhaust gas recirculation - Proc. Comb. Inst., 27,3197-
3204,1998
[3] A. Milani, A. Saponaro: Diluted Combustion Technologies IFRF Combustion Journal
Article 2001-01, February 2001
[4] J. Sudo, T. Hasegawa: Advanced HRS technology and its industrial applications 4th
HTACG Symposium, Rome 26-28 November 2001
Acknowledgements
None
File Placing
[Burners]; [Burner Types]; [Flameless]
[Emissions]; [Nitrogen Oxides]; [Reduction]
[Emissions]; [Nitrogen Oxides]; [Suppression]
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