Comparative study on the combustion and gasification of solid recovered fuels. Emphasis on residues characterisation and chlorine partitioning

Thermal treatment is recognised as a valid option within the waste management hierarchy for the recovery of the energy content of waste. Recent developments in the field are signposted from emergent technologies and the standardisation of solid recovered fuels. This work comparatively examines the f...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Balampanis, Dimitris E.
Other Authors: Villa, R.
Published: Cranfield University 2009
Subjects:
662
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.515105
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-515105
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5151052015-03-20T04:29:31ZComparative study on the combustion and gasification of solid recovered fuels. Emphasis on residues characterisation and chlorine partitioningBalampanis, Dimitris E.Villa, R.2009Thermal treatment is recognised as a valid option within the waste management hierarchy for the recovery of the energy content of waste. Recent developments in the field are signposted from emergent technologies and the standardisation of solid recovered fuels. This work comparatively examines the fluidized bed combustion and gasification of a novel material; East London’s solid recovered fuel. Emphasis is given on the characterisation of the solid residues produced from the two thermal treatment techniques and chlorine partitioning, in particular. Chlorine mass balances are studied under steady state conditions for combustion and gasification. Furthermore, trace metals content, chlorobenzenes, major elements, crystalline structures, and leaching behaviours are compared in the two residues types. For the characterisation of these residues a series of analytical methods have been applied and compared for their efficiencies. Results indicate that gasification produces 5-6 times less HCI than combustion. Furthermore, gasification residues retain higher amounts of CI and in less water soluble forms. However, gasification residues have 3-8 times higher organochlorides load, expressed chlorobenzenes. This work generates novel data on the comparative characterisation of waste thermal treatment residues. These data contribute towards the technical confidence for further utilisation of solid recovered fuels, and the knowledge over the residues’ properties.662Cranfield Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.515105http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/4692Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 662
spellingShingle 662
Balampanis, Dimitris E.
Comparative study on the combustion and gasification of solid recovered fuels. Emphasis on residues characterisation and chlorine partitioning
description Thermal treatment is recognised as a valid option within the waste management hierarchy for the recovery of the energy content of waste. Recent developments in the field are signposted from emergent technologies and the standardisation of solid recovered fuels. This work comparatively examines the fluidized bed combustion and gasification of a novel material; East London’s solid recovered fuel. Emphasis is given on the characterisation of the solid residues produced from the two thermal treatment techniques and chlorine partitioning, in particular. Chlorine mass balances are studied under steady state conditions for combustion and gasification. Furthermore, trace metals content, chlorobenzenes, major elements, crystalline structures, and leaching behaviours are compared in the two residues types. For the characterisation of these residues a series of analytical methods have been applied and compared for their efficiencies. Results indicate that gasification produces 5-6 times less HCI than combustion. Furthermore, gasification residues retain higher amounts of CI and in less water soluble forms. However, gasification residues have 3-8 times higher organochlorides load, expressed chlorobenzenes. This work generates novel data on the comparative characterisation of waste thermal treatment residues. These data contribute towards the technical confidence for further utilisation of solid recovered fuels, and the knowledge over the residues’ properties.
author2 Villa, R.
author_facet Villa, R.
Balampanis, Dimitris E.
author Balampanis, Dimitris E.
author_sort Balampanis, Dimitris E.
title Comparative study on the combustion and gasification of solid recovered fuels. Emphasis on residues characterisation and chlorine partitioning
title_short Comparative study on the combustion and gasification of solid recovered fuels. Emphasis on residues characterisation and chlorine partitioning
title_full Comparative study on the combustion and gasification of solid recovered fuels. Emphasis on residues characterisation and chlorine partitioning
title_fullStr Comparative study on the combustion and gasification of solid recovered fuels. Emphasis on residues characterisation and chlorine partitioning
title_full_unstemmed Comparative study on the combustion and gasification of solid recovered fuels. Emphasis on residues characterisation and chlorine partitioning
title_sort comparative study on the combustion and gasification of solid recovered fuels. emphasis on residues characterisation and chlorine partitioning
publisher Cranfield University
publishDate 2009
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.515105
work_keys_str_mv AT balampanisdimitrise comparativestudyonthecombustionandgasificationofsolidrecoveredfuelsemphasisonresiduescharacterisationandchlorinepartitioning
_version_ 1716785263430074368