Abstract

Biomass is considered a replacement fuel over fossil fuels to mitigate climate change. The switch to biomass in the combustors changes the inorganic chemistry of the flue gases and leads to more severe corrosion of the construction materials of the combustors. The integrity of most high temperature steels relies on the formation of a protective Cr2O3 layer on the steel surface at a high temperature environment. The ash compound found on the heavily corroded steel in biomass combustion and gasification plants is KCl, but the mechanism, which triggers the breakdown of the protective Cr2O3 layer under the KCl salt is not known. We studied the chemical reactions involved with furnace exposure of KCl and KOH with Cr2O3 and identified the formed reaction products with XRD analysis. The amount of reaction products was analyzed from the leachates of the salt-oxide mixtures by UV/VIS spectroscopy. We also used thermodynamic Gibbs energy minimization calculations to evaluate the evolution of reactions as a function of temperature. The results suggests that the reaction of KCl with Cr2O3 involves a KOH reaction intermediate that forms before K2CrO4 is formed. The amount of reacted potassium as a function of temperature follows the trend of KCl decomposition to KOH and HCl(g) as predicted by thermodynamics calculations. Therefore, we argue that the suggested overall reaction of KCl with Cr2O3 as found in the corrosion literature: , starting with the initiation step: KCl + H2O(g) ⇒ KOH + HCl(g) and then the formed KOH reacts with Cr2O3 to form K2CrO4. This explains the initial breakdown of the protective Cr2O3 under KCl salt in water containing high temperature atmospheres. The result is essential for the development of new alloys for biomass fired combustors.

Highlights

  • Burning coal is responsible for approximately 25% of anthropogenic CO2 emissions

  • In this work we studied in detail the reactivity of KCl and KOH towards Cr2O3 and Fe2O3, the protective oxide components formed on the Fe–Cr alloys in high temperature oxidizing service conditions

  • KOH reacts with both oxides at temperatures higher than 200 C while KCl reacts with Cr2O3 at temperatures > 400 C, but no reaction with Fe2O3 was detected in the temperature range from room temperature to 800 C

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Summary

Introduction

Burning coal is responsible for approximately 25% of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. The largest use of coal as a fuel is in electricity and heat production, which accounts for about 16% of the total CO2 emissions.[1] Replacing coal with sustainable biomass as the fuel in power boilers would lead to substantial reductions in the net CO2 emission. SO2 emissions would be diminished due to the generally much lower sulphur content of biomass based fuels compared to coal. Biomass combustion leads to more severe fouling and corrosion issues of the heat transfer surfaces in boilers.[2,3,4,5] One way to minimize these

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