z-logo
Premium
Experimental study on ultra‐low NO x emissions from pulverized coal preheating combustion
Author(s) -
Zhang Yi,
Zhu Jianguo,
Lyu Qinggang,
Liu Jingzhang,
Pan Fei
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
asia‐pacific journal of chemical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.348
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 1932-2143
pISSN - 1932-2135
DOI - 10.1002/apj.2560
Subject(s) - pulverized coal fired boiler , combustion , coal , char , coal combustion products , fluidized bed combustion , nox , waste management , environmental science , materials science , process engineering , nuclear engineering , chemistry , engineering , organic chemistry
Realizing ultra‐low NO x emissions during coal combustion is currently a development trend and technical bottleneck of coal combustion technology. To further exploit the low‐nitrogen potentialities in preheating combustion technology, the preheating characteristics, combustion characteristics, and NO x emission characteristics of pulverized coal, after changing operating parameters such as the air equivalence ratio of circulating fluidized bed, preheating temperature, combustion temperature, and air equivalence ratio in the reduction zone, are explored. The experimental results show that changing the operating parameters has a great impact on the composition of high‐temperature coal gas, the particle size, apparent morphology, and specific surface area of the high‐temperature preheated char after preheating. Properly adjusting the operating parameters can effectively reduce NO x emissions. Based on the explored principle, experiments were designed, and the goal of reducing the initial NO x emissions from coal combustion to less than 50 mg/m 3 (the average emissions were 46 mg/m 3 [@ 6% O 2 ]) was successfully achieved. The research of this paper provides the most basic experimental guidance and theoretical support for achieving ultra‐low NO x emissions during the engineering pulverized coal combustion.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here