Abstract

Moderate or Intense Low oxygen Dilution (MILD) combustion is a promising technology that offers high thermal efficiency and low pollutant emissions. This study investigates the MILD combustion characteristics of pulverized coal in a laboratory-scale self-recuperative furnace. High-volatile Kingston brown coal and low-volatile Bowen basin black coal with particle sizes in the range of 38–180 μm were injected into the furnace using either CO2 or N2 as a carrier gas. A water-cooled sampling probe was used to conduct in-furnace gas sampling. Measurements of in-furnace gas concentration of O2, CO, and NO, as well as exhaust gas emissions and in-furnace temperatures, are presented. The results suggest major differences between the two coals and minor differences associated with the carrier gas. It was found that the measured CO level of brown coal cases was 10 times higher than that of black coal cases. However, NO emission for brown coal was only 37% of that measured for black coal at an equivalence ratio of Φ...

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