Abstract

Production of sludge as waste in pulp and paper plants can be considered as one of the serious environmental problems that have to be solved. While landfilling is not a suitable solution from the environmental point of view, thermal treatment proved to be the most appropriate one. This paper describes an efficient way of processing sludge including waste-to-energy aspects. A thermal treatment unit with a capacity of more than 100 tons of wet sludge per day had been built in a large pulp and paper plant some years ago. This pulp and paper plant is located in a mining area. When built, this unit was quite modern. However, because of more and more sweeping environmental laws affecting the process industry, the unit needed a complete retrofit. The retrofit has been realised in three stages. A brief description of the unit for the thermal treatment of sludge is as follows: the waste sludge (after transport from a sludge storage system) is burnt in a multiple hearth incinerator with a fluidised-bed chamber. Then, the flue gas enters a secondary combustion chamber (afterburner chamber). During the first stage of retrofit, only a part of heat from flue gas was utilised for heat recovery (pre-heating air for combustion and fluidisation) and a contact cooler was involved in the unit. The second stage of retrofit can be characterised as a “waste-to-energy” one. The contact cooler was replaced by a system for preheating water for steam generation. Off-gas cleaning system consists of a filter for particulate removal and a three-stage scrubber system. (Several alternatives of retrofit were considered and simulated and the most promising one was selected.)

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