From bubbling to circulating fluidized bed combustion—development and comparison
Journal article, 2024

The most significant introduction of fluidized bed combustion technology took place about 50 years ago. Initially the combustion beds were of the bubbling type. Once the designs had reached commercial application, several drawbacks were discovered: Erosion on in-bed heat-exchanger tubes, insufficient combustion and desulphurization efficiencies with coal, unfavourable scale-up to electric utility-size. The problems were solved by applying circulating systems. The present text compares these bubbling and circulating designs. It is concluded that the bubbling bed may not be suitable for coal combustion, but for biomass and organic waste most of the drawbacks disappear, and the bubbling bed, being simpler, may have an economic advantage over CFB that should be considered. In addition, combinations of CFB and BFB are quite favourable in many applications.

Circulating fluidized bed

Sulphur capture

Bubbling fluidized bed

Fluidized bed conversion

NOx emission

Author

Bo G Leckner

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Energy Technology

Heliyon

24058440 (ISSN)

Vol. 10 13 e33415

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Energy Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e33415

More information

Latest update

7/1/2024 1