Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
205545 Fuel 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Both critical ignition temperature and ignition delay time of coal dusts clearly decrease with increasing oxygen mole fraction.•Critical ignition temperature in 21% O2 + 79% CO2 is slightly higher than that in air.•A modified F-K analysis is proposed to evaluate the self-ignition risk of coal dust in the oxygen-enriched O2/CO2 ambient.•Both the reactivity and sensitivity of oxidation decrease as the maturity of coal sample increases.

For the oxy-coal combustion, the accumulation of coal dust in the system has a fire risk of self-ignition. Therefore, understanding the ignition dynamics of coal dust deposits in oxygen-enriched environment is essential for the prevention of fire and dust explosion. In this work, both hot-oven and hot-plate tests were conducted to study the self-ignition behaviour of coal dusts in O2/CO2 ambient with O2 mole fraction from 21% to 50%. Three coal dusts: Indonesian Sebuku coal, Pittsburgh No. 8 coal and South African coal were tested with different sizes. Experimental results revealed that the self-ignition risk increased significantly with the increasing O2 mole fraction: reducing both the critical ignition temperature (10 °C in hot-oven test and 40 °C in hot-plate test) and the ignition delay time. Comparatively, the inhibiting effect of CO2 was found to be small for self-ignition. In addition, a modified Frank-Kamenetzkii analysis was proposed to explain all measured critical ignition temperatures, and the genetic algorithm was used to determine kinetic parameters of the one-step global reaction. The analysis showed that as the coal maturity/rank increased, both the self-ignition risk and the sensitivity to oxidation decreased, along with the decreasing apparent activation energy and pre-exponential factor. Such trend did not change with the ambient oxygen condition for all three coal dusts. These results improve our understanding of the self-ignition behaviour and the fire risk of coal dust in the oxy-fuel combustion system.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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