Abstract

Energy conservation and consumption reduction have always been the goals pursued by the power industry. Based on these goals, this study explored a new type of whitening and water-saving technology for industrial equipment. Unlike existing direct heating and condensation heating technologies, the main innovation of this work lies in not changing the saturated wet flue gas before it is discharged into the atmospheric environment. A series of experiments were conducted on electrode plates with different wind speeds, supersaturation levels, and porosities using three principles, namely droplet electrostatic adsorption, ionic-wind-enhanced condensation, and droplet dipole deflection, through the construction of a parameter-adjustable and -controllable enthalpy and humidity chamber and a pilot development platform with a wind volume of 10,000 m3/h. In addition, the collection efficiency was calculated using thermodynamic laws. The results showed that, under the working conditions of white mist supersaturation of 5.77 g/kg, a hole opening rate of 70%, and a wind speed of 3 m/s, the water collection efficiency was the highest—close to 60%—verifying the feasibility of this technology. This technology not only eliminates white smoke but also saves water resources and has certain economic benefits, providing support for the development of industrial equipment for smoke removal in the future.

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