Abstract

During deep underground coal gasification, the semicoke produced by the pyrolysis of dense coal cores is an important material for its gasification and combustion. In this paper, pressurized pyrolysis experiments were carried out on dense coal cores at 700 °C and pressures of 1, 2, and 3 MPa using a shaft furnace. The resulting semicoke and raw coal were analyzed using the characterization methods such as the N2 isothermal adsorption/desorption and scanning electron microscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectrometry (FTIR), and a pressurized thermogravimetric analyzer coupled with a FTIR spectrometer. The pyrolysis gas generation characteristics during pressurized pyrolysis were studied. The mechanisms of evolution of aliphatic functional groups and pore structures in semicoke during pressurized pyrolysis were revealed. The results indicate that the increase in pressure obviously changed the gas composition, most notably, the relative content of CH4 and H2 in the pyrolysis gas. The methane in the pyrolysis gas during pressurized pyrolysis of dense coal cores is mainly from the secondary reaction. As the pyrolysis pressure increased, the ratio of -CH2-/-CH3 became smaller, indicating that the pressure promoted the breakage of the long fat chains. With the increase of the pyrolysis pressure, the surface deformation of pressurized pyrolysis semicoke increases, and the pore structure becomes more abundant.

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