Abstract

Fully-resolved simulations of the heating, ignition, volatile flame combustion and char conversion of single coal particles in convective gas environments are conducted and compared to experimental data (Molina and Shaddix, 2007). This work extends a previous computational study (Tufano et al., 2016) by adding a significant level of model fidelity and generality, in particular with regard to the particle interior description and heterogeneous kinetics. The model considers the elemental analysis of the given coal and interpolates its properties by linear superposition of a set of reference coals. The improved model description alleviates previously made assumptions of single-step pyrolysis, fixed volatile composition and simplified particle interior properties, and it allows for the consideration of char conversion. The results show that the burning behavior is affected by the oxygen concentration, i.e. for enhanced oxygen levels ignition occurs in a single step, whereas decreasing the oxygen content leads to a two-stage ignition process. Char conversion becomes dominant once the volatiles have been depleted, but also causes noticeable deviations of temperature, released mass, and overall particle conversion during devolatilization already, indicating an overlap of the two stages of coal conversion which are usually considered to be consecutive. The complex pyrolysis model leads to non-monotonous profiles of the combustion quantities which introduce a minor dependency of the ignition delay time τign on its definition. Regardless of the chosen extraction method, the simulations capture the measured values of τign very well.

Highlights

  • Pulverized coal combustion (PCC) is a major technology for thermal energy conversion, for providing base load power

  • The analysis revealed that the pyrolysis regime for the present case is kinetically-limited isothermal, but very close to the boundary of the region where internal temperature gradients begin to become important

  • Up to this point the ignition sequence is identical to the one described for our earlier simpler model, which did not account for the particle interior flow, was based on a single-step pyrolysis model and neglected char conversion

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Summary

Introduction

Pulverized coal combustion (PCC) is a major technology for thermal energy conversion, for providing base load power. LES does not resolve the smallest scales of the process, but requires detailed sub-grid closures for effects that occur on the level of individual particles or small particle ensembles. Such closures can be derived from resolved simulation approaches, i.e. resolved laminar flow simulations (RLS) and direct numerical simulations (DNS). Previous studies by the present authors considered fully-resolved simulations of coal particle ignition and volatile flame burning of single coal particles in laminar flow [33,34,35] and of coal particle ensembles in both laminar and turbulent convective environments [36,37].

Modeling
Mathematical model
Boundary conditions
Physical properties
Kinetic model
Model fidelity
Reference experiments
Numerical setup
Results
Conclusions
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