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Coal char characteristics variation in the gasification process and its influencing factors
Author(s) -
Zhenyong Yin,
Hao Xu,
Yanpen Chen,
Tiantian Zhao
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
energy exploration and exploitation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.435
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 2048-4054
pISSN - 0144-5987
DOI - 10.1177/0144598720935523
Subject(s) - coal , char , adsorption , coal gasification , heat of combustion , chemical engineering , desorption , specific surface area , volume (thermodynamics) , carbonization , combustion , gas composition , chemistry , syngas , waste management , materials science , organic chemistry , catalysis , thermodynamics , physics , engineering
Underground coal gasification is a burgeoning coal exploitation technique that coal is directly converted into gaseous fuel by controlled combustion. In this paper, the gasification experiments of Inner Mongolia lignite, Xinjiang subbituminous coal, and Hancheng medium volatile bitumite were conducted respectively by using the tube furnace coal gasification experiment system. The gasification process was conducted under 3°C/min increment within the range of 600–900°C. The gas composition was analyzed by gas chromatography and the pore structure of the coal char was detected by low-temperature N 2 adsorption. The results show that the gasification temperature, gasification agent, and coal type have an important influence on the gasification reaction. With the increase of gasification temperature, the effective component, gas calorific value, and gas production rate increase. When CO 2 is used as the gasifying agent, the effective components in the gas are mainly CO. When H 2 O(g) is used as the gasifying agent, the effective component of gas is H 2 . The coal gasification performance with low thermal maturity is obvious better than the high rank coal with higher coalification. N 2 adsorption–desorption experiments show that the pore is mainly composed by transition pore and the micropores, the specific surface area is chiefly controlled by a pore size of 2–3 nm. With the increase of coalification degree, the adsorption amount, specific surface area, and total pore volume show a decreasing trend. The gasifying agent has a great influence on the pore structure of the coal char. The gasification effect of H 2 O (g) is significantly better than that of CO 2 . Analyzing the gasification characteristics and pore changes of different coal rank coals under different gasification agents, we found that Inner Mongolia lignite is more conducive to the transport of gasification agents and gaseous products in coal.

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