Abstract

This paper reports on preliminary results of an experimental investigation aimed at the development of a phenomenological model of the fate of coal/ash particles in entrained-flow slagging coal gasifiers. The study specifically addresses the interaction between the lean-dispersed particle phase and the reactor walls, and the establishment of a particle segregated phase in the near-wall region of the gasifier. Better mechanistic understanding of particle–wall interaction patterns in entrained-flow gasifiers is pursued using the tool of physical modeling. To this end a lab-scale cold flow reactor (0.04m-ID) has been designed and set up, where molten wax is air-atomized (droplets of 50–100μm size) into a mainstream of air to simulate the near-wall fate of char/ash particles in a real hot environment. Preliminary characterization of the hydrodynamics of the lean-dispersed phase, of its interaction with the wall, of the build-up of the liquid wall layer has been accomplished with a focus on the “sticky wall–sticky particle” subregime.The particle deposition rate at the wall and the partitioning of wax droplets between the lean-dispersed phase and the wall liquid layer have been assessed under a range of operating conditions. Temperatures of the atomized wax, of the mainstream air and of the reactor wall have been set in a range of values (120–155°C) at which the wax was fluid. Experiments with wax feeding rate of 0.2gs−1 and flow rate of atomizing air in the order of 0.30m3h−1 demonstrated that the fractional mass of wax in the dispersed phase decreased from 91% to 12% as the reactor length increased from 0.03m to 0.27m. The velocity of the descending wall liquid layer, whose thickness was in the order of 0.2mm, ranged between 3mms−1 and 6mms−1. The effects of the flow rate of atomization air and of the nozzle temperature were limited.

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