Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10151962 | Applied Thermal Engineering | 2018 | 49 Pages |
Abstract
Interactions, known as the ignition promotion and burnout inhibition, exist during the combustion of blended coals in the air. The oxy-fuel conditions influence these interactions due to the change of the gas physical properties and the gasification reaction. However, little research has focused on the oxy-fuel combustion interactions of blended coals. To investigate the combustion interactions of blended coals in an O2/CO2 atmosphere, experimental and numerical studies of the mixed combustion of less- and more-volatile coals are performed in a drop tube furnace. The results show that the more-volatile coal combustion brings the promotive effect on the devolatilization of the less-volatile coal and the inhibitive effect on the char combustion of the less-volatile coal. Compared with that in the air, the promotive effect is weaker, but the inhibitive effect is stronger in the 21%O2/79%CO2 environment due to the different physical properties of the gases. In the O2/CO2, increasing the oxygen concentration increases the promotive effect but weakens the inhibitive effect owing to the change of the physical properties of gases and the reactivity improvement of the less-volatile coal char. In addition, the promotive and inhibitive effects achieve a level similar to that in the air when the oxygen concentration is increased to approximately 30-35%. Furthermore, the char-CO2 gasification reaction in the O2/CO2 has little impact on the promotive effect but weakens the inhibitive effect. Increasing the reactor wall temperature weakens both the promotive effect and the inhibitive effect.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
Lun Ma, Anlong Guo, Qingyan Fang, Tingxu Wang, Cheng Zhang, Gang Chen,