Co-combustion of rice husk with coal in a cyclonic fluidized-bed combustor (ψ-FBC)

Journal article


Authors/Editors


Strategic Research Themes

No matching items found.


Publication Details

Author listMadhiyanon T., Sathitruangsak P., Soponronnarit S.

PublisherElsevier

Publication year2009

JournalFuel: The Science and Technology of Fuel and Energy (0016-2361)

Volume number88

Issue number1

Start page132

End page138

Number of pages7

ISSN0016-2361

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-53349165625&doi=10.1016%2fj.fuel.2008.08.008&partnerID=40&md5=2979406a8618f32661b9fdca0641c7ae

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


View in Web of Science | View on publisher site | View citing articles in Web of Science


Abstract

Thailand is well-endowed with renewable energy resources. In Thailand, rice husk, a by-product of the rice-milling process and one of the most potentially sustainable cultivated biomasses, has an annual energy equivalent of 6.6 × 107 GJ. Using rice husk alone, however, can be problematic, particularly if there is a deficit during the off-season. Coal, the most abundant fossil fuel, has thus been considered an appropriate supplementary fuel. This paper describes the combustion characteristics of co-firing rice husk with bituminous coal in a 120 kWth-capacity cyclonic fluidized-bed combustor (ψ-FBC), and how excess air ratios and fuel blends impacted emissions and combustion efficiency (Ec). Overall, excess air and blending ratios did not have tremendous effects on Ec, easily achieving >97%. Radial temperature profiles revealed that vortex combustion prevailed along the combustor walls. Concurring with axial temperature profiles, axial O2 profiles suggested that the combustion was confined chiefly to regions under the vortex ring. Despite massive CO production in the lower section, CO emissions were satisfactory (range 60-260 ppm, at 6% O2). Due to the high bed temperatures, NOx appeared rather high (260-416 ppm, at 6% O2). Not only were NOx emissions affected by coal ratio, it were also highly reliable on the operating conditions. SO2 emissions varied directly, but not proportionally, with the sulfur content of the fuel mixture. © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


Keywords

CoalFluidized-bedVortex


Last updated on 2023-04-10 at 07:35