On the application of surface ionization detector for the study of alkali capture by kaolin in a fixed bed reactor
Journal article, 2004

Alkali metals, mainly potassium, together with other ash forming inorganic components in biomass are believed to be responsible for bed agglomeration in fluidized bed boilers burning biomass. A solution to the problem is to capture alkali vapor released from the fuel during combustion by inorganic solid additives such as kaolin. In this study, the capture of vaporous potassium chloride was investigated in a fixed bed reactor equipped with an on-line alkali detector. The detector, which is based on surface ionization, is capable of operating at alkali metal concentrations as low as those encountered after reaction with kaolin during biomass combustion (of the order of 1 ppb). Various experiments of KCl capture by kaolin powder were made at a reactor temperature of 850 degreesC. Kaolin removed up to 99% of alkali species in gas phase. The efficiency slightly decreased when KCl concentration decreased. The effect of kaolin addition on the release of alkali metals during wood combustion was studied at 650 degreesC in air. During pyrolysis, the alkali metal release increased slightly when kaolin was mixed with the wood due to the release of alkali metal impurities in the kaolin additive. The alkali metal release during char combustion was reduced to approximately 50% of the original value. The reduction increased as the amount of kaolin addition increased. Overall, the addition of kaolin suppressed the alkali metal release from the wood by approximately 20%. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

COMBUSTION

PYROLYSIS

solid sorbent

ASH

PARTICLES

ATMOSPHERIC-PRESSURE

SOLID SORBENTS

BIOMASS FUELS

bed agglomeration

alkali capture

biomass combustion

surface ionization

DEPOSITION

AGGLOMERATION

STRAW

Author

K. Q. Tran

University of Gothenburg

K. Iisa

University of Gothenburg

Magnus Hagström

University of Gothenburg

Britt-Marie Steenari

Chalmers, Department of Environmental Inorganic Chemistry

Oliver Lindqvist

University of Gothenburg

Jan B. C. Pettersson

University of Gothenburg

Fuel

Vol. 83 7-8 807-812

Subject Categories

Physical Chemistry

More information

Created

10/8/2017