Combustion Lecture
Combustion Lecture
Source of energy
•We know that, in most of the world today,
wood is not the main source of fuel.
•We generally use natural gas or oil in our
homes.
•We mainly use oil and coal to heat the
water to produce the steam to drive the
turbines for our huge power generation
systems.
Combustible Material
Kindling Temperature
Combustion Reactions:
C + O2 → CO2
C + O2 → CO
H2 + O2 → H2O
S + O2 → SO2
S + O2 → SO3
Types of Fuel:
• Gaseous Fuel
Methane, ethane, propane, etc.
• Liquid Fuel
Gasoline, kerosene, bunker fuel,
fuel oil, etc.
• Solid Fuel
Coal, wood, etc.
air/oxygen
air % by mole
% by mass % by mole
Furnace
Fuel (coal) Flue gas
Contains ash +
moisture
% by mass
Refuse (solid)
Ash + unburnt coal
A local utility burns coal having the following composition on a dry
basis ( Note that the coal analysis below is a convenient one for our
calculations, but is not necessarily the only type of analysis that is
reported for coal. Some analyses contain much less information about
each element)
Component Percent
C 83.05
H 4.45
O 3.36
N 1.08
S 0.70
ash 7.36
The average Orsat analysis of the gas from the stack during a 24-hour test
was Moisture in the fuel 3.9% and the air on the
Component Percent average contained 0.0408lb water/pound
CO2 + SO2 15.4 dry air. The refuse showed 14% unburned
CO 0 coal with the remainder being ash. What is
O2 4 the % excess air used?
N2 80.6
Assignment Solid Fuel