Nitrogen oxides emission control through reburning with biomass in coal-fired power plants

Oxides of nitrogen from coal-fired power stations are considered to be major pollutants, and there is increasing concern for regulating air quality and offsetting the emissions generated from the use of energy. Reburning is an in-furnace, combustion control technology for NOx reduction. Another en...

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Main Author: Arumugam, Senthilvasan
Other Authors: Annamalai, Kalyan
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1508
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-15082013-01-08T10:37:39ZNitrogen oxides emission control through reburning with biomass in coal-fired power plantsArumugam, SenthilvasanEmissionsReburningNOx ControlBiomassOxides of nitrogen from coal-fired power stations are considered to be major pollutants, and there is increasing concern for regulating air quality and offsetting the emissions generated from the use of energy. Reburning is an in-furnace, combustion control technology for NOx reduction. Another environmental issue that needs to be addressed is the rapidly growing feedlot industry in the United States. The production of biomass from one or more animal species is in excess of what can safely be applied to farmland in accordance with nutrient management plans and stockpiled waste poses economic and environmental liabilities. In the present study, the feasibility of using biomass as a reburn fuel in existing coal-fired power plants is considered. It is expected to utilize biomass as a low-cost, substitute fuel and an agent to control emission. The successful development of this technology will create environment-friendly, low cost fuel source for the power industry, provide means for an alternate method of disposal of biomass, and generate a possible revenue source for feedlot operators. In the present study, the effect of coal, cattle manure or feedlot biomass, and blends of biomass with coal on the ability to reduce NOx were investigated in the Texas A&M University 29.31 kW (100,000 Btu/h) reburning facility. The facility used a mixture of propane and ammonia to generate the 600 ppm NOx in the primary zone. The reburn fuel was injected using air. The stoichiometry tested were 1.00 to 1.20 in the reburn zone. Two types of injectors, circular jet and fan spray injectors, which produce different types of mixing within the reburn zone, were studied to find their effect on NOx emissions reduction. The flat spray injector performed better in all cases. With the injection of biomass as reburn fuel with circular jet injector the maximum NOx reduction was 29.9 % and with flat spray injector was 62.2 %. The mixing time was estimated in model set up as 936 and 407 ms. The maximum NOx reduction observed with coal was 14.4 % and with biomass it was 62.2 % and the reduction with blends lay between that of coal and biomass.Texas A&M UniversityAnnamalai, Kalyan2005-02-17T21:03:34Z2005-02-17T21:03:34Z2004-122005-02-17T21:03:34ZBookThesisElectronic Thesistext576762 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1508en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Emissions
Reburning
NOx Control
Biomass
spellingShingle Emissions
Reburning
NOx Control
Biomass
Arumugam, Senthilvasan
Nitrogen oxides emission control through reburning with biomass in coal-fired power plants
description Oxides of nitrogen from coal-fired power stations are considered to be major pollutants, and there is increasing concern for regulating air quality and offsetting the emissions generated from the use of energy. Reburning is an in-furnace, combustion control technology for NOx reduction. Another environmental issue that needs to be addressed is the rapidly growing feedlot industry in the United States. The production of biomass from one or more animal species is in excess of what can safely be applied to farmland in accordance with nutrient management plans and stockpiled waste poses economic and environmental liabilities. In the present study, the feasibility of using biomass as a reburn fuel in existing coal-fired power plants is considered. It is expected to utilize biomass as a low-cost, substitute fuel and an agent to control emission. The successful development of this technology will create environment-friendly, low cost fuel source for the power industry, provide means for an alternate method of disposal of biomass, and generate a possible revenue source for feedlot operators. In the present study, the effect of coal, cattle manure or feedlot biomass, and blends of biomass with coal on the ability to reduce NOx were investigated in the Texas A&M University 29.31 kW (100,000 Btu/h) reburning facility. The facility used a mixture of propane and ammonia to generate the 600 ppm NOx in the primary zone. The reburn fuel was injected using air. The stoichiometry tested were 1.00 to 1.20 in the reburn zone. Two types of injectors, circular jet and fan spray injectors, which produce different types of mixing within the reburn zone, were studied to find their effect on NOx emissions reduction. The flat spray injector performed better in all cases. With the injection of biomass as reburn fuel with circular jet injector the maximum NOx reduction was 29.9 % and with flat spray injector was 62.2 %. The mixing time was estimated in model set up as 936 and 407 ms. The maximum NOx reduction observed with coal was 14.4 % and with biomass it was 62.2 % and the reduction with blends lay between that of coal and biomass.
author2 Annamalai, Kalyan
author_facet Annamalai, Kalyan
Arumugam, Senthilvasan
author Arumugam, Senthilvasan
author_sort Arumugam, Senthilvasan
title Nitrogen oxides emission control through reburning with biomass in coal-fired power plants
title_short Nitrogen oxides emission control through reburning with biomass in coal-fired power plants
title_full Nitrogen oxides emission control through reburning with biomass in coal-fired power plants
title_fullStr Nitrogen oxides emission control through reburning with biomass in coal-fired power plants
title_full_unstemmed Nitrogen oxides emission control through reburning with biomass in coal-fired power plants
title_sort nitrogen oxides emission control through reburning with biomass in coal-fired power plants
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1508
work_keys_str_mv AT arumugamsenthilvasan nitrogenoxidesemissioncontrolthroughreburningwithbiomassincoalfiredpowerplants
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