NO formation during co-combustion of coal with two thermally treated biomasses
Journal article, 2022

The combustion behavior of biomass as a fuel varies dependent on source of the raw material, but also on the type of pre-treatment. In this work steam exploded and torrefied woody biomass were studied with respect to NOx formation in co-firing experiments. Most of the reported data is based on small scale experiments and simulations. In this work, however, have three different cases been investigated experimentally in a 1.5MW(th) combustor supported by reaction simulations. One case corresponds to firing 100% Utah bituminous coal and two cases where 15% of the coal (on a mass basis) has been replaced with either torrefied or steam exploded biomass. Two of the cases was also studied in a utility scale 1.3 GW(th) industrial boiler. In both units did the case with pure coal result in the highest amount of NO formed, which was expected due to the higher amount of fuel-bound nitrogen in the coal, as compared to the biomass fuels. The fuel analyses indicate that the nitrogen content is the same in the two investigated biofuels. However, the amount of NO formed differed. Gas composition measurements reveal that the partitioning of volatile nitrogen species (HCN and NH3) varies between the biomass co-firing cases. This was investigated further using detailed reaction simulations and is suggested as the main reason for the observed difference in NO formation.

Nitrogen oxides

Coal

Combustion

Co-combustion

Biomass

Author

Thomas Allgurén

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Energy Technology

Klas Andersson

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Energy Technology

Andrew Fry

Brigham Young University

Eric G. Eddings

University of Utah

Fuel Processing Technology

0378-3820 (ISSN)

Vol. 235 107365

Subject Categories

Energy Engineering

Chemical Process Engineering

Bioenergy

DOI

10.1016/j.fuproc.2022.107365

More information

Latest update

8/23/2022