Abstract

Three methods of improving spray fineness by fuel treatment were investigated—1) the heating of the Coal Water Fuel (CWF) under pressure to produce steam as the pressure drops during passage of the CWF through the atomizer nozzle, 2) the absorption of CO2 gas in the CWF to produce a similar effect, and 3) the addition of a chemical additive which will cause microexplosions in the droplets upon heating. These treatments are expected to produce disruptive atomization, i.e., the disintegration of slurry droplets subsequent to their leaving the atomizing nozzle and, hence, to yield better burnout and finer fly ash particle size distribution upon combustion. The effects of disruptive atomization upon CWF spray size distribution were studied using a spray test chamber equipped with a laser diffraction particle size analyzer; the data were fitted to the Rosin-Rammler particle size distribution function. The combustion characteristics of the treated CWFs were investigated in the MIT Combustion Research Facility. The spray chamber tests established that thermally-assisted atomization produced reductions both in the mean droplet size and in the mass fraction of large particles in the spray. For fuel delivery temperatures up to 100°C this effect is attributable to lowered fuel viscosity, while further heating of the CWF (to 150°C in these experiments) produces disruptive atomization. In-flame measurements and high speed cine pictures made during combustion tests provided detailed information for comparisons of treated and untreated CWF. Thermally-assisted atomization was the most effective of the methods studied for improving carbon conversion efficiency and reducing fly ash particle size. CO2 and picric acid addition techniques showed substantial improvements but they were less effective.

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