Abstract
The formation of NO x during the combustion of pulverized brown and subbituminous coals from Victoria and Queensland respectively was investigated in an entrainment reactor. As no NO 2 was detected, all the NO x was present in the form of NO. The brown coals exhibited a significantly greater potential for NO emission under fuel-lean conditions than did the subbituminous coal, even though the latter coal had a higher nitrogen content. However, under fuel-rich conditions the conversion of coal nitrogen to NO for the subbituminous coal was higher than for the brown coals. The differences in conversion efficiency may have been related in part to the nature and reactivity of the volatile nitrogen species. Reactivity differences between the chars produced from the brown and subbituminous coals may also have accounted for different extents of removal of NO. There was a significant reduction in the amount of NO emitted when brown coal was added to a combustion gas stream containing an appreciable quantity of NO before coal injection.
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