Abstract

The traditional practice of employing a two-stage coal-fed gasification process is to feed all of the oxygen to provide a vigorous amount of combustion in the first stage but only feed the coal without oxygen in the second stage to allow the endothermic gasification process to occur downstream of the second stage. One of the merits of this 2-stage practice is to keep the gasifier temperature low downstream from the 2nd stage. This helps to extend the life of refractory bricks, decrease gasifier shut-down frequency for scheduled maintenance, and reduce the maintenance costs. In this traditional 2-stage practice, the temperature reduction in the second stage is achieved at the expense of a higher than normal temperature in the first stage. This study investigates a concept totally opposite to the traditional two-stage coal feeding practices in which the injected oxygen is split between the two stages, while all the coal is fed into the first stage. The hypothesis of this two-stage oxygen injection is that a distributed oxygen injection scheme can also distribute the release of heat to a larger gasifier volume and, thus, reduce the peak temperature distribution in the gasifier. The increased life expectancy and reduced maintenance of the refractory bricks can prevail in the entire gasifier and not just downstream from the second stage. In this study, both experiments and computational simulations have been performed to verify the hypothesis. A series of experiments conducted at 2.5 - 3.0 bars shows that the peak temperature and temperature range in the gasifier do decrease from 600?C - 1550?C with one stage oxygen injection to 950?C - 1230?C with a 60 - 40 oxygen split-injection. The CFD results conducted at 2.5 bars show that 1) the carbon conversion ratio for different oxygen injection schemes are all above 95%; 2) H2 (about 70% vol.) dominates the syngas composition at the exit; 3) the 80% - 20% case yields the lowest peak temperature and the most uniform temperature distribution along the gasifier; and 4) the 40% - 60% case produces the syngas with the highest HHV. Both experimental data and CFD predictions verify the hypothesis that it is feasible to reduce the peak temperature and achieve more uniform temperature in the gasifier by adequately controlling a two-stage oxygen injection with only minor changes of the composition and heating value of the syngas.

Highlights

  • IntroductionBrief Review of Fuel Feeding Scheme of Entrained Coal Gasification

  • Since all the fuel is injected from the top, the gas temperature is higher in the top injection region than at the second stage location

  • 2) In cases of split two-stage oxygen injections from 100% to 40% with 0.6 stoichiometric oxygen at 2.5 bars, the CFD predicts a) the similar trend of changing temperature as in the experimental data; b) the 80% - 20% case yields the lowest peak temperature and the most uniform gas temperature distribution along the gasifier; and c) the 60% - 40% case produces the syngas with the highest Higher Heating Value (HHV)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Brief Review of Fuel Feeding Scheme of Entrained Coal Gasification. There are four main classes of gasifiers: fixed bed gasifier, fluidized bed gasifier, entrained flow gasifier, and transport gasifier. The fixed bed gasifier and fluidized bed gasifier have low (425 ̊C - 650 ̊C) and moderate (900 ̊C - 1050 ̊C) outlet gas temperatures, respectively. Entrained flow gasifiers have high outlet temperatures (1250 ̊C - 1600 ̊C) and operate in the slagging range (the ash is fully liquid with low viscosity). The main benefits of entrained flow gasifiers can be summarized as: the ability to handle practically any coal as feedstock, syngas being free of oils and tars, high carbon conversion, suitable for synthesis gas products, and high throughput because of high reaction rates at elevated temperature

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.