ABSTRACT This study investigates the impact of various solvents on the static stability and flow characteristics of waste-activated carbon (WAC)-based coal-water slurry for co-gasification. Using the Euler–Euler method, we analyze slurry stability both in stationary conditions and during flow in a horizontal pipeline. Results show that glycerin offers the highest stability during slurry preparation, while acetonitrile provides the lowest. Solvents like glycerin, propanol, and formamide improve stability compared to water. In static conditions, glycerin’s stable height change rate is nearly 0, while acetonitrile peaks at 4.09. During the flow, glycerin-based slurry maintains a stable height of 40 mm with no accumulation, while acetonitrile retains only 88% of its height. The solid volume fraction difference for glycerin slurry is minimal (0.011), whereas acetonitrile slurry shows a much larger difference (0.7). However, glycerin slurry has the highest pressure drop (129 mWc/100 m), indicating higher energy consumption during transportation. This study highlights how solvent viscosity and density influence slurry properties and introduces a numerical approach for predicting slurry stability in preparation and transport.
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