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Investigation on sodium fate for high alkali coal during circulating fluidized bed combustion Jieqiang Ji, Leming Cheng, Yanquan Liu, Yangjun Wei, and Li Nie Energy Fuels, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.8b03812 • Publication Date (Web): 09 Jan 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 9, 2019
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Energy & Fuels
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Investigation on sodium fate for high alkali coal during
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circulating fluidized bed combustion
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Jieqiang Ji1, Leming Cheng1*, Yanquan Liu1, Yangjun Wei1, Li Nie1,2
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1.State Key Laboratory of Clean Energy Utilization, Institute of Thermal Power
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Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310027, PR China
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2.Dongfang Boiler Group Co. Ltd., Zigong 643001, PR China
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Abstract
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For better understanding the release and transformation mechanisms of sodium
10
compounds during high alkali coal combustion in circulating fluidized bed (CFB)
11
boilers, a sodium migration model of coal combustion was proposed in this work. The
12
model included sub-models of sodium species release, chemical reactions, vapor
13
condensation, particles deposition and shedding. They were coupled in a 3D CFB
14
comprehensive combustion model to predict the sodium fate. Example simulation was
15
conducted on a 30 kW CFB test rig where experimental measurement has been done.
16
The distributions of sodium compounds in gas, ash and deposits were computed during
17
the high alkali Zhundong coal combustion. Results show that good agreements are
18
achieved between the simulations and the experiments on the hydrodynamics,
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temperature, gas species and sodium distributions.
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Keywords: Sodium fate; High alkali coal; Simulation; Circulating fluidized bed
21
1. Introduction
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High contents of alkali and alkaline earth metal (AAEM) elements in coal may 1
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induce a series of problems on heat transfer surfaces during coal combustion like
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fouling, deposition and slagging. A typical example is the utilization of Zhundong (ZD)
25
coal in Xinjiang, China.
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Concluded from previous researches, the ash problems are primarily caused by
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two reasons1: (1) low-temperature eutectics containing AAEM are formed at high-
28
temperature region and are easy to be adhered on the heating surface, which cause the
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slagging formation; (2) re-condensing of evaporated alkali metals at lower gas
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temperature in the convection heating surface will adsorb fly ash particles, which cause
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the fouling formation.
32
Ash deposition and alkali metals transformation during pulverized coal (PC)
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combustion have been studied by many research groups2-6. In Wang et al.’s2, Wang et
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al.’s3 and Wei et al.’s4 work, the slag and deposit samples were collected from various
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heating surfaces in full-scale pulverized coal furnaces. By analyzing these samples,
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sodium distributions at different positions were obtained. Zhou et al.5 presented the
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chemical compositions of deposits on different probes in a 300 kW furnace, and pointed
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out that contents of Na and K declined with the deposit growth direction. Neville6 gave
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the relationship between particle size and vaporization/condensation of sodium for
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pulverized coal combustion. Generally, temperature, particle size and ash composition
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are main factors affecting the sodium behavior and ash deposition2.
42
However, the transformation pathways of sodium in PC boilers may be different
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from those in circulating fluidized bed (CFB) boilers. This can be due to the reasons:
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(1) larger coal particle sizes in CFB boilers than those in PC boilers; (2) higher solid 2
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particles suspension density in CFB boilers than those in PC boilers; (3) particles falling
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down along the waterwall in CFB boilers; (4) lower furnace temperatures in CFB
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boilers than that in PC boilers. For the safe utilization of the high alkali coal in CFB
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boilers, the ash related problems and alkali metals transformation during CFB
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combustion should be investigated.
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Several researches studied the deposition issue of ZD coal during CFB
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gasification/combustion process by Song’s group7-10. Behavior of sodium species was
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regarded closely associated with ash problems. Song et al.8 pointed out that Na and Cl
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were highly volatile at high temperature and would condense on the heating surface to
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form an initial sticky layer. In his another work9, he reported that sodium contents in
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the bottom ash and fly ash were higher than that in the ash composition analysis, which
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meant that more sodium retained in the ash particles due to the condensation or
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chemical reactions. Qi et al.7 did experimental research with ZD coal and found that
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Na-rich particles from fly ash may deposit on the probe. Those results gave some
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information on the sodium distributions in ash and deposits. However, the
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transformation mechanisms of sodium species between gas phase and solid phase in
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CFB boilers are still not clear.
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Investigating the fate of sodium can reveal its migration rule and understand the
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effect of sodium behavior on deposition. Researches about the AAEM elements
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behavior during pyrolysis process of a Victorian brown coal were carried out by Li et
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al.’s group11-15. They studied the fates and roles of AAEM13, as well as the effects of
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heating rate, elevated pressure14, CO2 gasification15 on the volatilization of AAEM. 3
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Hodges et al. investigated the sodium fate during the combustion of three UK
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bituminous coals in a laboratory-scale fluidized bed, and gave the content distributions
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of sodium in volatile components, retained in bed sand, associated with fly ash, or in
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the form of deposits16. Manzoori et al. reported the sodium fate of low rank coals in
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fluidized bed combustion and found the formation of a molten ash layer on the char
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surface17. However, the sodium fate of ZD coal in a CFB combustion system is absent
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in literature. Hence, it’s necessary to deeply study the sodium distributions (in gas, ash,
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deposits) and migration mechanisms for ZD coal in CFB boilers.
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Theory and numerical simulation may process the mechanism analysis to study
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the ash-related issues. Researchers mainly focused on the development of single
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deposition model at early stage. For slagging modelling, the sticking probability
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methods were based on the ash softening temperature, ash melting degree or ash
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viscosity18. For fouling modelling, the sticking probability methods were determined
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by forces balance (elastic rebound force, Van der Waals adhesion force and gravity)19,
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or the energy balance (interfacial energy and kinetic energy)20. Recently, the deposition
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simulation was improved by combining single deposition model with other sub-models.
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Leppanen et al.21 proposed a deposit growth model including the thermophoresis,
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diffusion and condensation process. Yang et al.22 considered the inertial impaction,
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thermophoresis and condensation in his deposition simulation. In Hansen’s work23,
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models including diffusion, condensation, thermophoresis, impaction and reaction were
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considered to simulate the ash deposition. However, the alkali metal release process
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and gaseous reactions were treated simply by using thermodynamics software 4
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Factsage21, or using empirical formula23 in those literature. Additionally, the effect of
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condensation sodium species on the sticking probability was not considered and
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coupled in those work. The existing models have difficulty to simulate the sodium fate.
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In this work, a detailed sodium migration model including the sodium species
93
release, chemical reactions, vapor condensation, particles deposition and shedding was
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developed and coupled with a 3D comprehensive CFB combustion model. It was
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applied to a 30 kW CFB test rig to investigate the sodium fate for ZD coal. Predicted
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results, such as hydrodynamics, temperature, gas species and sodium distributions,
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were compared with the measurement data from the 30 kW CFB test rig.
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2. Model description
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This work focused on the sodium fate during the ZD coal combustion. Since the
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sodium behavior was related with the ZD coal combustion process, the hydrodynamics
101
and combustion in a CFB furnace should be obtained first. In this work, they were
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calculated based on the 3D comprehensive CFB combustion model24.
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A sodium migration model was developed and coupled with the 3D
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comprehensive combustion model, including sodium species release, homogeneous and
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heterogeneous reactions, vapor condensation, particles deposition (inertial impaction
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and thermophoresis) and shedding. Details of these models are shown in the following
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parts.
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2.1 Hydrodynamics and combustion model
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The developed 3D comprehensive CFB combustion model is the fundamentals of
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the simulation. It incorporates gas–solid hydrodynamics, coal combustion, heat transfer 5
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on heat exchange surfaces in the furnace, and heat transfer between furnace and
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working medium in the heat transfer tubes. Distributions of solid concentration, gas
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species, heat flux, and working medium temperature in a CFB boiler furnace could be
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obtained. Detail information can be found in our previous work24.
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2.2 Sodium species release
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The existence forms of sodium in the raw coal have impact on the release behavior
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of sodium species. Generally, sodium compounds in coal were classified into four
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portions, including water-soluble (H2O-soluble), ammonium acetate-soluble (NH4Ac-
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soluble), hydrochloric acid-soluble (HCl-soluble) and insoluble25-27. Our previous work
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indicated that contents of different sodium forms in the ZD coal were 72.1% H2O-
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soluble, 13.3% NH4Ac-soluble, 2.8% HCl-soluble and 11.8% insoluble, respectively25.
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At 900 oC, 26% of the H2O-soluble and 7% of the NH4Ac-soluble sodium were released
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to the gas phase, and 20% of the H2O-soluble sodium was transformed into HCl-soluble,
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while content of the insoluble sodium kept constant as the temperature increased25.
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The H2O-soluble sodium was released from the coal particle during the
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devolatilization stage, and one possible mechanism was the direct vaporization of NaCl
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from the coal particle28. The acid-soluble sodium (NH4Ac-soluble and HCl-soluble)
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was considered to release in the form of Na during the char combustion process28, 29.
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Therefore, it’s assumed that 26% of the H2O-soluble sodium is released in the
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form of NaCl during devolatilization stage and 7% of the NH4Ac-soluble sodium is
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released in the form of Na during char combustion stage, as shown in equations (1~3).
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Mass fractions of the volatile components in equation (1) are determined by Loison & 6
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Chauvin’s formula and adjusted by the mass/energy balance method24. Mass fractions
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of the N and S compounds are calculated based on our previous work24, 30.
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Volatile 0.8094CH 4 16.495H 2 0.05CO2 0.1CO 14.259 H 2 O 0.034Tar 0.0238H 2 S 0.0045 NH 3 0.0402 HCN 0.0235NaCl 0.0124HCl
(1)
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CN 0.00371 S0.00198 Na0.00015 0.50384O2 CO 0.00371NO 0.00198SO2 0.00015Na
(2)
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CN 0.00371 S0.00198 Na0.00015 1.00384O2 CO2 0.00371NO 0.00198SO2 0.00015Na
(3)
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2.3 Sodium species reactions
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Released from the coal particles, the vaporized sodium will participate in
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homogeneous and heterogeneous reactions. In this work, only NaCl and Na2SO4 are
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considered as the stable gaseous sodium species during combustion, since other sodium
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compounds were not observed in Oleschko’s on-line measurement experiments31, 32.
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For the homogeneous reactions, Glarborg and Marshall33, 34 presented a detailed
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mechanism (115 species, 1342 reactions) of alkali metal reactions involving
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C/H/O/N/S/Cl/K/Na. However, it is difficult to couple all the reactions to the
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combustion model due to the huge computation time. Based on our previous sensitivity
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analysis35 on the influences of varied reactions on NaCl/Na2SO4 formations, it is
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concluded that the reactions (R1-1) ~ (R1-5) in Table 1 are essential for the sodium
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species migration during the operating temperature for CFB boilers. Additional, the
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transformation reaction between NaCl(g) and Na2SO4(g) is also taken into
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consideration36, as shown in (R1-6).
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Regarding the heterogeneous reactions, the absorption of alkali vapor by
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aluminium silicate clay is considered in this work37. Punjak, Uberoi and Shadman38-40
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investigated the interactions of alkali-metal vapors with various solid sorbents, 7
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including bauxite, kaolinite, emathlite, and developed a mathematical model to describe
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the absorption process. Based on Punjak et al., Uberoi et al. and Mann et al.’s work,
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Niksa29 presented a simplified overall reaction (R1-7). This reaction is applied in this
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work.
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160 161 162
Table 1. Coefficients of sodium species reactions a
a.
No.
Reaction
A
n
E
R1-1
Na HCl NaCl H
2.41e8
0
41800
R1-2
Na O2 NaO2
1.38e6
-2.05
1713
R1-3
NaO2 HCl NaCl HO2
1.39e8
0
0
R1-4
Na SO2 NaSO2
9.25e6
0
0
R1-5
NaSO2 NaO2 Na2 SO4
1.0e8
0
0
R1-6
2 NaCl SO2 H 2 O 0.5O2 Na2 SO4 2 HCl
5.0e8
0
10100
R1-7
Six Al y Oz Na( g ) Six Al y Oz Na
7.2e9
0
63000
A, n and E refer to pre-exponential reaction constant, temperature exponent and activation energy for the Arrhenius formula k A T n exp(
E ). Rg T
2.4 Condensation
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In a combustion chamber, alkali vapors will be supersaturated due to the flue gas
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cooling or some chemical reactions. This will further induce the condensation process.
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The formation of a sticky layer, coming from condensed vapors, is expected to be
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crucial for particles deposition in the early stage41.
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Normally, three types of condensation were proposed42: (1) directly condensing
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on the heating exchanging surface - called as direct condensation, (2) condensing on 8
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the particle surface - called as heterogeneous condensation, (3) form new aerosol
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particles - called as nucleation. In this work, the nucleation condensation is neglected
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due to the high furnace temperature22.
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For the direct condensation, the vapor condensation mass flux is depending on
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saturation pressure and determined by equation (4~6)21,
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pressure of the condensing species in equation (4) may be calculated via equation (7)42.
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Coefficients A0, B0, C0 for varied sodium species are obtained from Kleinhans’s work42. Chet Sh
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( Di (Tg ) Di (Ts ))0.5 Dh Rg
[
pi (Tg ) Tg
22.
pi , s (Ts ) Ts
The saturation vapor
]
(4)
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Sh 0.023Re0.8 Sc 0.4
(5)
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Sc g / ( g Di (Tg ))
(6)
179
where Chet is the heterogeneous condensation rate, Di(T) is the diffusion coefficient for
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gas either at the flue gas temperature(Tg) or deposit surface temperature (Ts), pi(Tg) is
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the partial pressure of the vapor, pi,s(Ts) is the saturation vapor pressure at the deposit
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surface temperature.
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log pi , s (Ts ) A0 (10000 / Ts B0 ) C0
(7)
184
For the heterogeneous condensation, the condensation mass flux is determined by
185
equation (8~9)43. It is also dependent on the partial pressure of the condensing vapors.
186
187
Chom
Fi
Fi MWi 6 i d p 3
2 Di (Tg ) d p ( pi (Tg ) pi , s (Tp )) k B Tg
(8)
(9)
188
where Chom is the homogeneous condensation rate, MWi is the molecular weight of the
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condensing compound, ρi is the density of the condensing compound, Tp is the particle 9
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temperature, kB is the Boltzmann constant.
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The deposit surface temperature Ts can be calculated as follows:
192
Ts
Ldep
qh Tw
(10)
193
where Ldep and qh are deposit thickness and heat flux, respectively, obtained from the
194
CFD calculations. λ is the thermal conductivity of deposit, Tw is the probe surface
195
temperature.
196
2.5 Deposition
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Sodium in solid particles will be transformed to deposits through the deposition
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process. Several mechanisms contributed to the build-up of deposition on the heating
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surface23, 44, including condensation (C), inertial impaction (I), thermophoresis (TH),
200
Brownian diffusion (BD) and eddy diffusion (ED), as shown in equation (11). For these
201
mechanisms, condensation contributes to the initial sticky layer and the calculation
202
method have been discussed in section 2.4. Larger particles (dp > 10 μm) are primarily
203
affected by inertial impaction, while thermophoresis is significant for particles smaller
204
than 1 μm. For Brownian and eddy diffusion, particles of sizes less than 0.1 μm are
205
influenced.
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dm(t , ) C (t , ) TH (t , ) I (t , ) BD(t , ) ED(t , ) dt
(11)
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According to the size distribution analysis of fly ash from our experiment (in
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Section 4, Figure 4), particles smaller than 0.1 μm are negligible. Hence, Brownian and
209
eddy diffusion are not considered in this model.
210 211
Mechanisms of inertial impaction and thermophoresis will be discussed as follows. (1) Inertial impaction 10
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The deposition rate of particles by inertial impaction is expressed by the total
213
particle mass flux, the impact efficiency and sticking probability, as shown in equation
214
(12). A general expression (equation (13)) determining the impact efficiency is
215
presented in Huang’s work44, which is a function of Stokes number St. Here, St
216
represents the ratio of inertial and drag forces44.
217
I qim
218
(12)
[1 b ( St a)1 c ( St a)2 d ( St a)3 ]1 , St 0.14
219
0, St 0.14
(13)
220
St
p d p2 u p 9 g Dh
(14)
221
where I is the inertial impaction deposition rate, qim is the particle flux by impaction, η
222
is the impact efficiency, ξ is the sticking probability, a, b, c and d are modified
223
coefficients44.
224
The sticking probability depends on two factors: the impacted particles’ properties
225
and thickness of the sticky layer on a particle or heating surface. After impaction, if the
226
surface-particle interfacial energy is greater than kinetic energy of the reflected particle,
227
the particle will be captured. Lee20 established a series of expressions to describe the
228
sticking probability (equation (15-17)).
229
2 Ac 0.5 m p (u p r ) 2
(15)
230
0.5 m p (u p i )2 0.5 m p (u p r / ev )2 DE
(16)
231
DE i (u p i )2 Ac sin 2 (1 f / tan )
(17)
232
where γ is the surface tension, upr is the velocity of reflected particle, upi is the velocity 11
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of impact particle, ev is the coefficient of restitution for velocity, DE is the kinetic
234
energy loss, ρc is the density of the condensed compound, δ is the thickness of the sticky
235
layer, μf is the friction coefficient between surface and particle, β is the impact angle.
236
(2) Thermophoresis
237
Thermophoresis is a phenomenon by which particles transport due to the
238
temperature gradients. The deposition rate by thermophoresis could be obtained from
239
equation (18). It’s assumed that all particles transformed to the surface will collide on
240
the surface23. The sticking probability ξ is determined by equation (15) as well.
241
However, in equation (18), the particle mass flux qth needs to be modified, since the
242
incident velocity uth is changed with the thermophoresis effect. In this work, uth is
243
considered by Fick’s law for fine particles by thermophoresis43, as shown in equation
244
(19-20).
245
TH qth
(18)
246
qth p uth Ac
(19)
247
uth
K th
(20)
Tp
Tgas
248
where TH is the thermophoresis deposition rate, qth is the particle flux by
249
thermophoresis, Kth is the thermophoretic coefficient and is determined by Talbot45,
250
Tg is temperature gradient prevailing in the gas phase.
251
2.6 Shedding
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For the presence of large amount of bed material inside a CFB boiler, the deposited
253
particles have probability to fall off from the heating surface. The shedding process is
254
mainly related to the forces acting on the deposited particles. 12
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Four forces are considered in this simulation, including drag force Fd, gravity G,
256
adhesion force Fa and contact force Fn. When the four forces reach equilibrium, it’s
257
called the critical remove velocity for the incident particles. As the incident velocity
258
exceeds the critical remove velocity, the forces equilibrium can’t be maintained and the
259
deposited particles will fall off. The adhesion force and contact force are calculated by
260
equation (21-22)46.
261
Fa 1.5 Rc
262
Fn
4 EY R p 0.5 1.5 3
(21)
(22)
263
where Fa is the adhesion force, Fn is the contact force, Rc is the curvature radius, Γ is
264
the surface energy between the particles, EY is the Youngs modulus, τ is the
265
interpenetration distance46.
266 267
In general, the fate of sodium in a CFB boiler during combustion may be summarized shown in Figure 1.
268 269 270
Figure 1. Sodium fate in CFB combustion
3. Model setup
271
A finite volume method is applied to the mathematical models’ computation. All
272
convective terms are solved by first-order upwind discretization scheme. The algorithm 13
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of phase coupled SIMPLE is selected for pressure-velocity coupling. The
274
heterogeneous reaction rates, as well as the condensation and deposition flux are coded
275
by the User-Defined Functions (UDFs) and coupled with FLUENT. Approximately
276
1410000 grid cells are contained in the meshes.
277
4. CFB test rig and the experimental measurement
278
The computing object of the simulation is a 30 kW hot CFB test rig47. Figure 2
279
shows the schematic diagram and mesh of the CFB test rig. The cylindrical furnace is
280
4.2 m high with an inner dimeter of 0.13 m. A coal inlet is positioned at the height of
281
0.43 m. The exiting solid materials from the outlets return to the furnace through a UDF
282
program. Six secondary air inlets (S1~S6) are located along the height. The lower three
283
inlets (H(S1) = 1.02 m, H(S2) = 1.19 m, H(S3) = 1.35 m) are used during the experiment.
284
The ash deposition probe has an outer diameter of 0.03 m and a length of 0.4 m, as
285
shown in Figure 3. It is inserted into the furnace through the port in S4 (H = 2.12 m)
286
and fixed by flanges. Its insert length is 0.2 m. The probe is made of jacket tubes of
287
stainless steel. Its surface temperature is controlled by air flow inside the tube and
288
measured by a thermocouple installed inside the probe.
14
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Figure 2. Geometry and mesh of the furnace
291 292
Figure 3. Schematic structure of the probe
293
In the tests, the gas temperature and pressure were measured by thermocouples
294
(T1~T9) and pressure taps (P1~P2) located along the furnace, respectively. The
295
measuring points are marked in Figure 2. Flue gas were sampled at the furnace exit and
296
analyzed. Fly ash was collected by a bag filter47. Its mass flow was determined based
297
on the weight increment of the bag filter. Deposits were sampled on the probe surface
298
after the experiments. The compositions of fly ash and deposits were determined by the
299
X-ray Fluorescence (XRF). A Malvern Mastersizer 2000 size analyzer was used to
300
obtain the particle size distributions of fly ash. The ash samples were collected when
301
the probe was not inserted into the furnace. Result was shown in Figure 4.
15
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Page 16 of 34
302 303
Figure 4. Ash particle distribution
304
The boundary conditions used are given in Table 2. Primary and secondary air
305
velocities are determined by the total air flow and SA/(PA+SA) ratio. The total air flow
306
is calculated by the given superficial gas velocity, while SA/(PA+SA) ratio is set as 0.3
307
to reduce the NOx emission. The probe surface temperature is selected as 700 K
308
according to the typical heating surface temperature in larger scale CFB boilers48, 49.
309
The ambient temperature is set as 300 K. Insulated cotton with a thickness of 0.1 m is
310
set as the object of the furnace wall according to the test rig.
311 312 313
Table 3 and Table 4 give the proximate, ultimate and ash composition analysis of the combusted ZD coal, respectively. Table 2. Boundary conditions in the simulation Parameter
Unit
Value
Superficial gas velocity
m/s
4.0
Coal feed rate
kg/s
0.00291
Primary air velocity
m/s
0.635
16
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314
Energy & Fuels
Secondary air velocity
m/s
0.399
SA/(PA+SA)b
-
0.3
Primary air temperature
K
300
Secondary air temperature
K
300
Solid return temperature
K
1123
Probe surface temperature
K
700
b. PA and SA refer to primary air and secondary air, respectively.
315
Table 3. Proximate and Ultimate Analysis Proximate Analysis c,d
Ultimate Analysis
Aad
6.43 w%
Cad
62.89 w%
Vad
27.91 w%
Had
3.04 w%
Mad
11.17 w%
Nad
0.55 w%
Mt
23.42 w%
Sad
0.51 w%
Qnet,ar
19589 kJ/kg
Oad
15.41 w%
Nat
0.226 w%
Ash density
2400 kg/m3
Packing limit e
0.6
316
c.
317
d. ar, ad and t refer to as received basis, air dried basis and total content, respectively.
318
e.
319
A, V and M refer to ash, volatile and moisture, respectively.
limits the maximum volume fraction for the solid phase. Table 4. Ash composition analysis Ash fusion temperature f/ oC
Ash composition/ w%
17
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320
SiO2
Al2O3
Fe2O3
CaO
MgO
K2O
Na2O
SO3
DT
ST
HT
FT
41.57
11.16
4.79
16.21
6.48
0.51
3.5
8.05
1134
1145
1162
1192
f.
DT-deformation temperature; ST-softening temperature; HT-hemispherical temperature; FT-
321
flowing temperature.
322
5. Result and discussion
323
5.1 Hydrodynamic and combustion
324 325
Page 18 of 34
Figure 5 shows the pressure drops along the furnace height. The computing and experimental results are in good agreement.
326
Figure 6 shows the axial distribution of gaseous temperature along the furnace
327
height. Compared with the experiment results, reasonable results are obtained for
328
temperature distribution. It shows that the temperature increases at the bottom of the
329
furnace due to the rapid oxidizing reaction of volatiles and char particles. After reaching
330
the peak point, the gaseous temperature experiences a mild decrease due to the heat
331
exchange through the furnace wall.
332 18
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333
Energy & Fuels
Figure 5. Pressure drop
Figure 6. Gas temperature distribution
334
Figure 7~10 give contours of O2, CO, NO and SO2 distributions. The O2
335
concentration decreases at the coal inlet due to the oxidation reactions. An increment
336
of O2 content is observed at 1m because of the secondary air injection. CO gathers at
337
the bottom of the furnace due to the inadequate oxygen in this region during staged
338
combustion. As secondary air is injected, CO concentration decreases quickly.
339
Comparing the averaged gaseous species concentrations (O2, CO, NOx, SO2) with the
340
measurement at the outlet of the furnace, they are matched reasonably well (Table 5).
341 342
Figure 7. O2 content
Figure 8. CO content
343
344
Figure 9. NO content
Figure 10. SO2 content
Table 5. Gas species contents at the outlet O2
CO
NO
SO2
(%)
(ppm)
(ppm)
(ppm)
simulation
9.0
443.4
158.4
153.6
experiment
8.4
508.9
167.3
146.4
5.2 Sodium fate 19
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345
As shown in Figure 1, the final occurrences of sodium in a CFB boiler are
346
classified into three portions: in gas phase, in ash and in deposits. The distributions of
347
sodium in gas phase and solid phase, as well as the transformation behavior of sodium
348
species are discussed as bellow.
349
(1) In gas phase
350
Distributions of NaCl(g) and Na2SO4(g) are shown in Figure 11~12. The content
351
of NaCl(g) increases near the coal inlet port, since majority of sodium compounds are
352
released following the rapid devolatilization and char combustion process at this
353
position. Due to the conversion reaction from NaCl(g) to Na2SO4(g) (R1-6) and the
354
absorption reaction (R1-7), NaCl(g) content start to decrease soon afterwards. Figure
355
12 shows that Na2SO4(g) mainly forms above the coal inlet port. Its content increases
356
along the furnace height, which is caused by the homogeneous reactions (R1-4, 1-5, 1-
357
6). Compared with NaCl(g), concentration of Na2SO4(g) is more evenly distributed in
358
the furnace.
359
Contents of NaCl(g) and Na2SO4(g) at the outlet of the furnace are about 0.4 ppm
360
and 1.1 ppm, respectively. They are in reasonable range compared to those from
361
literatures29, 50.
20
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Energy & Fuels
362 363 364
Figure 11. NaCl distribution
Figure 12. Na2SO4 distribution
(2) In ash
365
Generally, the sodium compounds retain in the ash through four pathways: (1)
366
inhabitation of insoluble sodium and portion of soluble sodium in coal ash, (2)
367
adsorption of sodium vapors by ash compositions, (3) condensation of sodium vapors
368
on the particle surface, (4) falling of ash particles containing sodium from the probe
369
surface. The content of ash particles containing sodium (including the ash containing
370
original sodium, ash containing adsorbed sodium and ash containing condensed sodium)
371
will increase along the furnace height, as shown in Figure 13. However, when passing
372
the probe region, ash particles containing sodium will decrease due to the inertial
373
impaction and thermophoresis process.
374
Combined the particle concentrations in Figure 13 with the sodium content in each
375
particle, the sodium distribution in ash is calculated and given in Figure 14. It shows
376
that sodium content in ash increases along the furnace height, while it decreases at the
377
probe area due to the deposition behavior. 21
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378 379
Page 22 of 34
Mass flow rate of ash, sodium in ash at the outlet of the furnace are shown in Table 6. Simulation results agree well with the experimental measurements.
380 381
Figure 13. Content of ash containing Na
382
383
Figure 14. Na distribution in ash
Table 6. Mass flow rate at the outlet ash (kg/s)
Na in ash (kg/s)
simulation
1.47×10-4
5.01×10-6
experiment
1.90×10-4
5.64×10-6
(3) In deposits
384
Results of deposits build-up on the probe surface by mechanisms of condensation,
385
inertial impaction and thermophoresis are given. Figure 15~17 show the particles
386
deposition flux and deposit–Na flux on the probe surface according to these three
387
mechanisms.
22
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Energy & Fuels
388 389
Figure 15 (a). Deposition flux by condensation
Figure 15 (b). Na flux by condensation
390 391
Figure 16 (a). Deposition flux by impaction
Figure 16 (b). Na flux by impaction
Figure 17 (a). Deposition flux by thermophoresis
Figure 17 (b). Na flux by thermophoresis
392 393 394
Shown on Figure 15 (a), 16(a) and 17 (a), the highest deposition rate is observed
395
at the impaction process. The deposition flux by condensation is lower than that by
396
impaction or thermophoresis. These results of variation tendency agree well with Yang
397
et al.’s22 and Hansen et al.’s23 work. Additionally, the deposition fluxes of condensation,
398
inertial impaction and thermophoresis have same order of magnitude with the
399
quantitative results from Hansen et al.’s23 experiments.
400
In Figure 15 (b), the flux of deposit–Na by condensation is distributed around the 23
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401
probe surface. Its value at the side surface (90o) is higher than that at the windward (0o)
402
or at the leeward (180o). The reason is that sodium vapor in the gas stream follows the
403
streamlines around the probe, which leads to the lower vapor concentration on the
404
windward or leeward surface. Additionally, almost all the condensed sodium come
405
from Na2SO4(g).
406
The inertial impaction is primarily acting on larger particles. Particles with large
407
inertia in a fluid stream are no longer able to follow the streamlines around the probe
408
and then collide and deposit on the surface. Due to the higher concentration of particles
409
at the windward (0o) of the probe surface, the flux of deposit–Na by inertial impaction
410
mainly concentrates on this area, as displayed in Figure 16 (b).
411
The thermophoresis phenomenon is caused by the temperature gradient between
412
the gas phase and probe surface. This induces the thermophoresis force to push the
413
particles in the direction of the colder surface. Therefore, thermophoresis deposition on
414
a cylinder is more evenly distributed51. This is the reason that the deposit–Na flux is
415
evenly distributed on the probe surface in Figure 17 (b). However, the flux at the
416
leeward (180o) surface is lower, due to the lower gas temperature near the probe in this
417
region, which decreases the temperature gradient and reduces the incident velocity of
418
particles (equation (18-20)).
419
Considering these three mechanisms of deposits build-up, as well as the shedding
420
process, the net flux of deposit–Na can be calculated (Figure 18). By statistics on the
421
whole surface, the average flux around the probe surface is 6.14×10-9 kg/s. This value
422
agrees well with the experiment result (6.59×10-9 kg/s). 24
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Energy & Fuels
423 424 425
Figure 18. Net deposit–Na flux
(4) Summary
426
Table 7 gives summarization of the distributions of sodium in varied forms. Most
427
of the sodium retain in the fly ash and leave the furnace. A small portion of sodium stay
428
as deposits on the probe surface. However, it has to be noted that the deposits will
429
accumulate with the time and finally induce the ash problems. By comparing the
430
simulation results of hydrodynamics, combustion and sodium distributions with those
431
from experiment or literature, the sodium migration model is validated.
432
433
Table 7. Sodium distributions Emission as gas phase
Emission as ash
Retained in deposits
(kg/s)
(kg/s)
(kg/s)
simulation
1.52×10-7
5.01×10-6
6.14×10-9
experiment
-
5.64×10-6
6.59×10-9
6. Conclusions
434
A sodium migration model was developed. It incorporated sub-models including
435
sodium species release, chemical reactions, vapor condensation, particles deposition
436
and shedding. These models were coupled in a 3D comprehensive combustion model. 25
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437
It predicted the release and transformation behavior of sodium compounds during a
438
high alkali coal combustion in circulating fluidized bed boilers. Distributions of sodium
439
compounds in gas phase, in ash and in deposits could be obtained.
440 441
Applying the model to a 30 kW hot CFB test rig, simulation and experiment results show good agreement.
442 443
Author information
444
Corresponding Author
445
*Email:
[email protected] 446 447
Acknowledgements
448
This work is supported by the National Key Research & Development Program of
449
China (2018YFB0605403).
450 451
Symbols
452
Ac = contact area between particle and surface (m2)
453
dp = particle diameter (m)
454
Dh = hydraulic diameter of the flow channel (m)
455
Di = diffusion coefficient (m2/s)
456
H= furnace height (m)
457
k= rate constant
458
m = mass (kg) 26
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Energy & Fuels
459
mp = particle mass (kg)
460
pi = partial pressure of the vapor (Pa)
461
pi,s = saturation vapor pressure (Pa)
462
Rg = universal gas constant (J/mol. K)
463
Rp = particle radius (m)
464
Re = Reynolds number
465
Sc = Schmidt number
466
Sh = Sherwood number
467
St = Stocks number
468
t = time (s)
469
T = temperature (K)
470
Tg = gas temperature (K)
471
Tp = particle temperature (K)
472
Ts = deposit surface temperature (K)
473
up = particle velocity (m/s)
474
μg = gas dynamic viscosity (Pa. s)
475
ν = kinematic viscosity (m2/s)
476
ρg = gas density (kg/m3)
477
ρp = particle density (kg/m3)
478
θ = angle (o)
479
η = impact efficiency
480
ξ = sticking probability 27
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481 482
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