Abstract

In the present work, a shaft-type furnace model in which the furnace column is divided into multiple cells was proposed and equilibrium reaction calculation software was used to describe the model. The model was used to study the effects of gasification and melting conditions such as temperature, oxygen partial pressure, and chlorine content on the volatilization behaviors of the low-boiling-point metals Na, K, Pb, and Zn during the gasification and melting process of municipal solid waste in a shaft-type furnace. Consequently, the volatilization ratios of Na, K, Pb, and Zn compounds in the exhaust gas from a pilot plant shaft-type furnace were found to be in good agreement with the calculation results, and the Na, K, Pb, and Zn compounds were volatilized mainly as metal chlorides in the temperature range up to approximately 1173 K. With a further rise in temperature, these low-boiling point metals were volatilized as metallic forms. It was found that almost 100% of Pb and Zn compounds were volatilized regardless of the chlorine content in municipal solid waste; in contrast, the volatilization rates of Na and K increased when the chlorine content increased. Finally, Na, K, Pb, and Zn compounds were converted from reduced metals to metal chlorides such as NaCl, KCl, PbCl2, and ZnCl2 with an increase in the ratio of chlorine to each metal.

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