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Impact of Coal Fly Ash Addition on Combustion Aerosols (PM<sub>2.5</sub>) in Pilot- and Full-Scale Pulverized Wood Combustion: A Comparative Study

R. Nowak Delgado, Thorben de Riese, Philipp Johne, Sebastian Fendt, H. Spliethoff

2022Energy & Fuels14 citationsDOI

Abstract

The impact of coal fly ash addition as in-furnace alkali capture additive on the fine particle formation is investigated. Therefore, measurements in two full-scale boilers (the tangentially fired 800 MWth boiler Avedøre Power Station Unit 2 and the boxer-fired 900 MWth Studstrup Power Station Unit 3) and a pilot-scale combustion test rig at the Technical University of Munich (120 kWth) were carried out. Combustion aerosol measurements with an electrical low-pressure impactor varying the inserted coal fly ash load were conducted and PM1 and PM2.5 values were determined. Detailed particle-size-dependent characterization of the chemical composition of the aerosols was performed using scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. The results show that the chemistry of the submicron particles migrated from high Na, K, S, and Cl shares toward P- and Ca-rich particles when increasing the coal fly ash load. Significant PM reduction effects are observed when using coal fly ash for both, the full-scale boilers and the pilot-scale test rig. PM1 emission reductions of 36.4% for AVV2 and 42.2% for SSV3 were reported when coal fly ash load was increased from 0.94 to 2.42 wt % (dry/dry) and 2.14 to 3.22 wt % (dry/dry), respectively. The results from the pilot-scale tests revealed drastically higher PM values compared with the full-scale measurements. The reference experiment without additives showed a PM1 of 234.6 mg/Nm3. A reduction efficiency of 31.8% was obtained using 1.05 wt % coal fly ash (dry/dry). The discrepancy of the observed PM emissions between the tests could be explained by lower temperatures in the pilot-scale reactor, enhanced PM reduction by condensation of gaseous metal vapors, impaction of PM onto cooled heat exchanger surfaces in the full-scale boilers, and increased capture via the liquidus pathway.

Topics & Concepts

Fly ashCombustionPulverized coal-fired boilerBoiler (water heating)CoalCoal combustion productsAerosolChemistryWaste managementNOxParticle sizeEnvironmental scienceMineralogyEngineeringPhysical chemistryOrganic chemistryThermochemical Biomass Conversion ProcessesCoal and Its By-productsFire dynamics and safety research
Impact of Coal Fly Ash Addition on Combustion Aerosols (PM<sub>2.5</sub>) in Pilot- and Full-Scale Pulverized Wood Combustion: A Comparative Study | Litcius