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COMBUSTION OF COAL CHARS IN OXYGEN-ENRICHED ATMOSPHERES
50
Citations
38
References
2007
Year
Chemical EngineeringHigh Temperature AerosolEngineeringCombustion ScienceCombustion TheoryPulverized Coal CharsFire ChemistryThermodynamicsChemistryHeat TransferCoal UtilizationThermal EngineeringChemical KineticsSingle Char ParticlesOxygen Mole Fraction
Abstract This work pertains to the high-temperature combustion of pulverized coal chars under oxygen-enriched atmospheres. Single char particles were burned in a drop-tube furnace, electrically-heated to 1300–1500 K, in 21%, 50% and 100% O2, in a balance of N2. Their luminous combustion histories were observed with two-color ratio pyrometry. A solution of the Planckian ratio-pyrometry equation for temperature was implemented, extending on Wien's approximation. The temperature and time histories for 45–53 µm bituminous chars experienced wide particle-to-particle disparity, and varied depending on oxygen mole fraction and furnace temperature. Average char surface temperatures increased from 1600–1800 K in air, to 2100–2300 K in 50% O2, to 2300–2400 K in 100% O2, at gas temperatures of 1300–1500 K, respectively. Combustion durations decreased from 25–45 ms in air, to 8–17 ms in 50% O2, to 6–13 in 100% O2. Thus, average particle temperatures increased by up to 45%, whereas burnout times decreased by up to 87% as combustion was progressively enriched in O2 until 100% was attained. The apparent and intrinsic reactivity of the chars burning at 1500 K gas temperature were found to increase by factors of to 8 and 35, respectively, as the oxygen mole fraction increased by a factor of five, from 21% to 100%.
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