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1.
B. Arias  J.J. Pis 《Fuel》2008,87(12):2753-2759
Oxy-fuel combustion is a GHG abatement technology in which coal is burned using a mixture of oxygen and recycled flue gas, to obtain a rich stream of CO2 ready for sequestration. An entrained flow reactor was used in this work to study the ignition and burnout of coals and blends with biomass under oxy-fuel conditions. Mixtures of CO2/O2 of different concentrations were used and compared with air as reference. A worsening of the ignition temperature was detected in CO2/O2 mixtures when the oxygen concentration was the same as that of the air. However, at an oxygen concentration of 30% or higher, an improvement in ignition was observed. The blending of biomass clearly improves the ignition properties of coal in air. The burnout of coals and blends with a mixture of 79%CO2-21%O2 is lower than in air, but an improvement is achieved when the oxygen concentration is 30 or 35%. The results of this work indicate that coal burnout can be improved by blending biomass in CO2/O2 mixtures.  相似文献   

2.
《Fuel》2005,84(7-8):833-840
Pulverized coal combustion in air and the mixtures of O2/CO2 has been experimentally investigated in a 20 kW down-fired combustor (190 mm id×3 m). Detailed comparisons of gas temperature profiles, gas composition profiles, char burnouts, conversions of coal–N to NOx and coal–S to SO2 and CO emissions have been made between coal combustion in air and coal combustion in various O2/CO2 mixtures. The effectiveness of air/oxidant staging on reducing NOx emissions has also been investigated for coal combustion in air and O2/CO2 mixtures. The results show that simply replacing the N2 in the combustion air with CO2 will result in a significant decrease of combustion gas temperatures. However, coal combustion in 30% O2/70% CO2 can produce matching gas temperature profiles to those of coal combustion in air while having a lower coal–N to NOx conversion, a better char burnout and a lower CO emission. The results also confirm that air/oxidant staging is very effective in reducing NOx emissions for coal combustion in both air and a 30% O2/70% CO2 mixture. SO2 emissions are proved to be almost independent of the combustion media investigated.  相似文献   

3.
As part of CO2 abatement strategies for climate change, we are investigating coal combusion behaviour in various O2/CO2 mixtures and in air. The goal is to simulate conditions of coal combustion with flue gas recirculation in order to maximize the CO2 concentration in the flue gas prior to its recovery. A western Canadian sub‐bituminous coal and a U.S. eastern bituminous coal were investigated. Thermal input was set at 0.21 MW with a flue gas oxygen concentration of 5 vol%. Experiments were done using various O2/CO2 mixtures and air. The oxygen concentration ranged from 21% to 42%. Up to 95% CO2 concentrations were achieved in the flue gas. This paper describes experimental results in terms of flame temperatures and pollutant emissions (NOx', SO2 and CO).  相似文献   

4.
Lian Zhang  Eleanor Binner  Chun-Zhu Li 《Fuel》2010,89(10):2703-6646
Experimental investigation of the combustion of an air-dried Victorian brown coal in O2/N2 and O2/CO2 mixtures was conducted in a lab-scale drop-tube furnace (DTF). In situ diagnostics of coal burning transient phenomena were carried out with the use of high-speed camera and two-colour pyrometer for photographic observation and particle temperature measurement, respectively. The results indicate that the use of CO2 in place of N2 affected brown coal combustion behaviour through both its physical influence and chemical interaction with char. Distinct changes in coal pyrolysis behaviour, ignition extent, and the temperatures of volatile flame and burning char particles were observed. The large specific heat capacity of CO2 relative to N2 is the principal factor affecting brown coal combustion, which greatly quenched the ignition of individual coal particles. As a result, a high O2 fraction of at least 30% in CO2 is required to match air. Moreover, due to the accumulation of unburnt volatiles in the coal particle vicinity, coal ignition in O2/CO2 occurred as a form of volatile cloud rather than individual particles that occurred in air. The temperatures of volatile flame and char particles were reduced by CO2 quenching throughout coal oxidation. Nevertheless, this negative factor was greatly offset by char-CO2 gasification reaction which even occurred rapidly during coal pyrolysis. Up to 25% of the nascent char may undergo gasification to yield extra CO to improve the reactivity of local fuel/O2 mixture. The subsequent homogeneous oxidation of CO released extra heat for the oxidation of both volatiles and char. As a result, the optical intensity of volatile flame in ∼27% O2 in CO2 was raised to a level twice that in air at the furnace temperature of 1273 K. Similar temperatures were achieved for burning char particles in 27% O2/73% CO2 and air. As this O2/CO2 ratio is lower than that for bituminous coal, 30-35%, a low consumption of O2 is desirable for the oxy-firing of Victorian brown coal. Nevertheless, the distinct emission of volatile cloud and formation of strong reducing gas environment on char surface may affect radiative heat transfer and ash formation, which should be cautioned during the oxy-fuel combustion of Victorian brown coal.  相似文献   

5.
The pyrolysis and combustion behaviour of a petroleum coke (petcoke), an indigenous lignite and their 70/30 wt.% blend in air and oxy-fuel conditions were investigated by using non-isothermal thermo-gravimetric method (TGA) coupled with Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer. Blend samples were prepared by mixing lignite, which has low calorific value, high ash and moisture contents with petcoke that has high calorific value, low ash and moisture content, in the proportion of 70:30. Pyrolysis tests were carried out in nitrogen and carbon dioxide environments which are the main diluting gases of air and oxy-fuel environments, respectively. Pyrolysis curves of parent fuels and their blend reveal close resemblance up to 700 °C in both N2 and CO2 environments. At higher temperatures, further weight loss taking place in N2 and CO2 atmospheres is attributed to calcite decomposition and CO2-char gasification reaction, respectively. Gasification reaction leads to significant increase in CO and COS formation as observed in FTIR evolution profiles. Almost identical experimental and theoretical pyrolysis profiles of the blend samples show that there is no synergy between the parent fuels of the blend in both pyrolysis environments. Combustion experiments were carried out in four different atmospheres; air, oxygen-enriched air environment (30% O2–70% N2), oxy-fuel environment (21% O2–79% CO2) and oxygen-enriched oxy-fuel environment (30% O2–70% CO2). Combustion experiments show that replacing nitrogen in the gas mixture by the same concentration of CO2 leads to delay in combustion (lower maximum rate of weight loss and higher burnout temperatures). Overall comparison of derivative thermogravimetry (DTG) profiles shows that effect of oxygen content on combustion characteristics is more significant than that of diluting gas in the combustion environment. At elevated oxygen levels, profiles shift through lower temperature zone, peak and burnout temperatures decrease, weight loss rate increases significantly and complete combustion is achieved at lower temperatures and shorter times. Theoretical and experimental combustion profiles of the blend mainly display different trends, which indicate synergistic interactions between lignite and petcoke during their combustion in different environments.  相似文献   

6.
The reactivity of four pulverised Australian coals were measured under simulated air (O2/N2) and oxy-fuel (O2/CO2) environments using a drop tube furnace (DTF) maintained at 1673 K and a thermogravimetric analyser (TGA) run under non-isothermal (heating) conditions at temperatures up to 1473 K. The oxygen concentration, covering a wide and practical range, was varied in mixtures of O2/N2 and O2/CO2 in the range of 3 to 21 vol.% and 5 to 30 vol.%, respectively. The apparent volatile yield measured in CO2 in the DTF was greater than in N2 for all the coals studied. Pyrolysis experiments in the TGA also revealed an additional mass loss in a CO2 atmosphere, not observed in a N2 atmosphere, at relatively high temperatures. The coal burnout measured in the DTF at several O2 concentrations revealed significantly higher burnouts for two coals and similar burnouts for the other two coals in oxy-fuel conditions. TGA experiments with char also revealed higher reactivity at high temperatures and low O2 concentration. The results are consistent with a char–CO2 reaction during the volatile yield experiments, but additional experiments are necessary to resolve the mechanisms determining the differences in coal burnout.  相似文献   

7.
W. Nimmo  S.S. Daood  B.M. Gibbs 《Fuel》2010,89(10):2945-2861
Oxygen enrichment of the combustion air in pulverised coal combustion for power plant is seen as a possible retrofit measure to improve CO2 scrubbing and capture. This technique produces a reduced volume of flue gas with higher CO2 concentration than normal air combustion that will contributes to the enhancement of amine scrubbing plant efficiencies. We report in this article the results of a study at the small pilot scale into the effect of these combustion modifications on the formation of NOx and associated carbon burnout changes. Experiments were performed using a Russian coal, typical of that used in some UK power stations with shea meal and Pakistani cotton stalk as biomass fuels co-fired at a fraction of 15%th. The down-fired pulverised coal combustor was operated at 20 kWth under air-staged conditions for NOx control and the secondary and over-fire air flows were both enriched by up to 79% (100% O2) for a range of splits giving a 35% overall O2 concentration for full enrichment. When the same enrichment process was applied to biomass/coal combustion different behaviour was observed with respect to NOx formation. We have shown that oxygen enrichment can achieve benefits of improved carbon burnout with a positive impact on NOx emissions over and above the primary aim of increasing CO2 concentration in the flue gas for enhanced capture efficiencies. With all other conditions of overall stoichiometry, OFA levels and O2 enrichment levels remaining the same, NOx levels at 22% OFA initially increased over the range of secondary air enrichment, particularly for shea meal/coal co-firing. At 31% OFA the trends were to lower NOx at high enrichment levels. However, co-firing with shea meal initially showed an increase in NOx emission at lower levels of enrichment (up to 40% O2) followed by overall lower NOx emissions at 100% O2 in the secondary air. The results show that NOx emissions can either increase or decrease depending on the operating conditions. The differences in behaviour are attributed, not only to the effects of enrichment on the stoichiometry of the near-burner zone, but also on the flame dynamics and intensity of combustion related to the associated reductions in gas velocity and swirl intensity by the transition from air to pure O2 in the secondary oxidant stream.  相似文献   

8.
Hao Liu  Ramlan Zailani 《Fuel》2005,84(16):2109-2115
This paper presents experimental results of a 20 kW vertical combustor equipped with a single pf-burner on pulverised coal combustion in air and O2/CO2 mixtures with NOx recycle. Experimental results on combustion performance and NOx emissions of seven international bituminous coals in air and in O2/CO2 mixtures confirm the previous findings of the authors that the O2 concentration in the O2/CO2 mixture has to be 30% or higher to produce matching temperature profiles to those of coal-air combustion while coal combustion in 30% O2/70% CO2 leads to better coal burnout and less NOx emissions than coal combustion in air. Experimental results with NOx recycle reveal that the reduction of the recycled NO depends on the combustion media, combustion mode (staging or non-staging) and recycling location. Generally, more NO is reduced with coal combustion in 30% O2/70% CO2 than with coal combustion in air. Up to 88 and 92% reductions of the recycled NO can be achieved with coal combustion in air and in 30% O2/70% CO2 respectively. More NO is reduced with oxidant staging than without oxidant staging when NO is recycled through the burner. Much more NO is reduced when NO recycled through the burner (from 65 to 92%) than when NO is recycled through the staging tertiary oxidant ports (from 33 to 54%). The concentration of the recycled NO has little influence on the reduction efficiency of the recycled NO with both combustion media—air and 30% O2/70% CO2.  相似文献   

9.
Coal combustion under oxy‐fuel conditions shows significant differences to combustion in air. Examinations on the single‐grain level give detailed insight into the combustion phenomena of ignition, volatile combustion, and char burnout and, therefore, provide the fundamentals for the development of large‐scale oxy‐fuel facilities. The combustion of a hard coal in a size fraction of dp = 90–125 μm was investigated in a laminar flow reactor at a temperature of 1500 K. The gaseous fuel oxidizer contained 3 % O2 by volume and CO2 or N2 as diluents. A third measurement in a CO2‐rich atmosphere containing 9 % O2 is also presented to show the influence of O2 concentration. Particle temperatures were measured for three residence times with an imaging two‐color pyrometer.  相似文献   

10.
Pulverized coal injection (PCI) is employed in blast furnace tuyeres attempting to maximize the injection rate without increasing the amount of unburned char inside the stack of the blast furnace. When coal is injected with air through the injection lance, the resolidified char will burn in an atmosphere with a progressively lower oxygen content and higher CO2 concentration. In this study an experimental approach was followed to separate the combustion process into two distinct devolatilization and combustion steps. Initially coal was injected into a drop tube furnace (DTF) operating at 1300 °C in an atmosphere with a low oxygen concentration to ensure the combustion of volatiles and prevent the formation of soot. Then the char was refired into the DTF at the same temperature under two different atmospheres O2/N2 (typical combustion) and O2/CO2 (oxy-combustion) with the same oxygen concentration. Coal injection was also performed under a higher oxygen concentration in atmospheres typical for both combustion and oxy-combustion. The fuels tested comprised a petroleum coke and coals currently used for PCI injection ranging from high volatile to low volatile bituminous rank. Thermogravimetric analyses and microscopy techniques were used to establish the reactivity and appearance of the chars.  相似文献   

11.
Jyh-Cherng Chen  Jian-Sheng Huang 《Fuel》2007,86(17-18):2824-2832
For mitigating the emission of greenhouse gas CO2 from general air combustion systems, a clean combustion technology O2/RFG is in development. The O2/RFG combustion technology can significantly enhance the CO2 concentration in the flue gas; however, using almost pure oxygen or pure CO2 as feed gas is uneconomic and impractical. As a result, this study proposes a modified O2/RFG combustion technology in which the minimum pure oxygen is mixed with the recycled flue gas and air to serve as the feed gas. The effects of different feed gas compositions and ratios of recycled flue gas on the emission characteristics of CO2, CO and NOx during the plastics incineration are investigated by theoretical and experimental approaches.Theoretical calculations were carried out by a thermodynamic equilibrium program and the results indicated that the emissions of CO2 were increased with the O2 concentrations in the feed gas and the ratios of recycled flue gas increased. Experimental results did not have the same trends with theoretical calculations. The best feed gas composition of the modified O2/RFG combustion was 40% O2 + 60% N2 and the best ratio of recycled flue gas was 15%. As the O2 concentration in feed gas and the ratio of recycled flue gas increased, the total flow rates and pressures of feed gas reduced. The mixing of solid waste and feed gas was incomplete and the formation of CO2 decreased. Moreover, the emission of CO was decreased as the O2 concentration in feed gas and the ratio of recycled flue gas increased. The emission of NOx gradually increased with rising the ratio of recycled flue gas at lower O2 concentration (<40%) but decreased at higher O2 concentration (>60%).  相似文献   

12.
Oxy-fuel Circulating Fluidized Bed (CFB) combustion technology, a very promising technology for CO2 capture, combines many advantages of oxy-fuel and CFB technologies. Experiments were carried out in a 50 kWth CFB facility to investigate how operation parameters influence the NO emission in O2/CO2 atmospheres. The simulated O2/CO2 atmospheres were used without recycling the flue gas. Results show that NO emission in 21% O2/79% CO2 atmosphere is lower than that in air atmosphere because of lower temperature and higher char and CO concentrations in the dense bed. Elevating O2 concentration from 21% to 40% in O2/CO2 atmosphere enhances fuel-N conversion to NO. Increasing bed temperature or oxygen/fuel stoichiometric ratio brings higher NO emission in O2/CO2 atmosphere, which is consistent with the results in air-fired CFB combustion. As primary stream fraction increases, NO emission increases more rapidly in O2/CO2 atmosphere than that in air atmosphere. Stream staging is more efficient for controlling NO emission in oxy-CFB combustion than that in air combustion. Oxygen staging provides an efficient way to reduce NO emission in oxy-CFB combustion without influencing the hydrodynamic characteristic in the riser.  相似文献   

13.
Pyrolysis and combustion behavior of indigenous lignite, olive residue and their 50/50 wt.% blend in air and oxy-fuel conditions were investigated by using thermogravimetric analyser (TGA) combined with Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer. Pyrolysis tests were carried out in nitrogen and carbon dioxide environments which are the main diluting gasses of air and oxy-fuel environment, respectively. Pyrolysis results of the parent fuels and the blend show that weight loss profiles are almost the same up to a temperature of 700 °C in these two environments, indicating that CO2 behaves as an inert gas in this temperature range. However, further weight loss takes place in CO2 atmosphere at higher temperatures due to CO2-char gasification reaction which leads to significant increase in CO and COS formation as observed in FTIR evolution profiles. Comparison between experimental and theoretical pyrolysis profiles of the blend samples reveals that there is no synergy in both atmospheres. Combustion experiments were carried out in four different atmospheres; air, oxygen-enriched air environment (30% O2-70% N2), oxy-fuel environment (21% O2-79% CO2) and oxygen-enriched oxy-fuel environment (30% O2-70% CO2). Replacing N2 in the combustion environment by CO2 causes slight delay (lower maximum rate of weight loss and higher burnout temperature) in the combustion of all samples. However, this effect is found to be more significant for olive residue than lignite. Elevated oxygen levels shift combustion profiles to lower temperatures and increase the rate of weight loss. Combustion profiles of olive residue/lignite blends lie between those of individual fuels. Comparison between experimental and theoretical combustion profiles and characteristic temperatures of the blend samples indicates synergistic interactions between the parent fuels during co-combustion of olive residue and lignite.  相似文献   

14.
煤粉O2/CO2燃烧时PM2.5及其Fe、S的生成特性   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
温昶  徐明厚  于敦喜  周科  占中华  赵靓  姚洪 《化工学报》2011,62(4):1062-1069
沉降炉实验研究了煤粉O2/CO2燃烧时PM2.5的生成特性和主要成灰元素中危害较大的Fe、S元素生成特性.实验用DT烟煤、NMG褐煤和XLT褐煤,实验温度1300℃,在O2/CO2=1:9,1:4,3:7和O2/N2=1:4气氛下燃烧.低压撞击器(DLPI)按不同粒径大小从0.03~9.8μm共分为13级,分别收集燃烧...  相似文献   

15.
Hannes Stadler 《Fuel》2011,90(4):1604-4344
This work presents the results of an experimental investigation on NOx emissions from coal combustion in a pilot scale test facility. Three oxidiser atmospheres have been compared, namely air, CO2/O2, and O2 enriched recirculated flue gas. NOx emissions from two different combustion modes have been studied, swirl flame and flameless combustion. The influence of the burner oxygen ratio and the oxidiser O2 concentration on NOx formation and reduction have been analysed. With increasing burner oxygen ratio, an increase of NOx emissions has been obtained for air and CO2/O2 in both, swirl flame and flameless combustion. In case of the swirl flame, flue gas recirculation leads to a reduction of NOx emissions up to 50%, whereas in case of flameless combustion this reduction is around 40% compared to CO2/O2. No significant impact of the oxidiser O2 concentration in the CO2/O2 mixture on NOx emissions is observed in the range between 18 and 27 vol.% in swirl flames. An analysis of NOx formation and reduction mechanisms showed, that the observed reduction of NOx emissions by flue gas recirculation cannot be attributed to the reduction of recirculated NOx alone, but also to a reduced conversion of fuel-N to NO.  相似文献   

16.
《Fuel》2007,86(12-13):2008-2015
CO2/O2 combustion of pulverized coal is one of the promising new technology in order to reduce the emission of CO2 and NOx from coal combustion furnaces. However, several experiments with pulverized coal burners show that temperature and stability of pulverized coal flame is reduced in this condition. CO2 has distinctive thermodynamic and optical property compared with that of other gas, and it is important to know the effect of CO2 on the flame stability of pulverized coal. In this study, effect of CO2 on flame propagation velocity of pulverized coal clouds were studied experimentally using micro-gravity condition, and also numerically considering detailed radiation heat exchange using Monte Carlo method.Experiments were made by using spherical chamber with inner diameter of 200 mm. Micro-gravity condition was used in order to achieve uniform pulverized coal cloud in a chamber. Flame propagation velocity was measured from the photographic image of the flame front by using high speed camera. Results show that flame propagation velocity of pulverized coal cloud in CO2/O2 mixture gas decreases to about 1/3–1/5 of that in N2/O2 mixture gas at the same oxygen concentration. By using Ar/O2 mixture gas, it is revealed that thermal diffusivity of gas seems to have a large effect on flame propagation velocity. From the numerical analysis using Monte Carlo method, effect of absorption of radiation by CO2 gas is proven to be relatively small compared with that of thermodynamic property especially for heat capacity of CO2. Consequently, it is clarified that reduction of flame stability in CO2/O2 combustion is mainly due to the larger heat capacity of CO2 gas.  相似文献   

17.
In this paper, a comprehensive computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modelling study was undertaken by integrating the combustion of pulverized dry lignite in several combustion environments. Four different cases were investigated: an air-fired and three different oxy-fuel combustion environments (25 vol.% O2 concentration (OF25), 27 vol.% O2 concentration (OF27), and 29 vol.% O2 concentration (OF29) were considered. The chemical reactions (devolatilization and char burnout), convective and radiative heat transfer, fluid and particle flow fields (homogenous and heterogenous processes), and turbulent models were employed in 3-D hybrid unstructured grid CFD simulations. The available experimental results from a lab-scale 100 KW firing lignite unit (Chalmer’s furnace) were selected for the validation of these simulations. The aerodynamic effect of primary and secondary registers of the burner was included through swirl at the burner inlet in order to achieve the flame stability inside the furnace. Validation and comparison of all the combustion cases with the experimental data were made by using the temperature distribution profiles and species concentration (O2, CO2, and H2O) profiles at the most intense combustion locations of the furnace. The overall visualization of the flame temperature distributions and oxygen concentrations were presented in the upper part of the furnace. The numerical results showed that the flame temperature distributions and O2 consumptions of the OF25 case were approximately similar to the reference combustion case. In contrast, in the OF27 and OF29 combustion cases, the flame temperatures were higher and more confined in the closest region of the burner exit plane. This was a result of the quick consumption of oxygen that led to improve the ignition conditions in the latter combustion cases. Therefore, it is concluded that the resident time, stoichiometry, and recycled flue gas rates are relevant parameters to optimize the design of oxy-fuel furnaces. The findings showed reasonable agreement with the qualitative and quantitative measurements of temperature distribution profiles and species concentration profiles at the most intense combustion locations inside the furnace. These numerical results can provide useful information towards future modelling of the behaviour of pulverized brown coal in a large-scale oxy-fuel furnace/boiler in order to optimize the burner’s and combustor’s design.  相似文献   

18.
P. Heil 《Fuel》2009,88(7):1269-1274
This work is to clarify the underlying mechanisms of burning pulverised coal in a mixture of CO2/O2. The performance of two different burner designs, single central orifice-type (SCO) and single annular orifice-type (SAO), under oxycoal conditions was examined in a down-fired test facility. Based on detailed in-flame measurements, combined with numerical simulations, the main parameters influencing the stability of a CO2/O2 pulverised coal swirl flame were investigated. The oxycoal flame was stabilised at the burner quarl by: increasing the O2 concentration above 34 vol% without changes to the air-firing burner design and by modifications of the burner geometry thus changing its aerodynamics. The modification of the burner allowed a decrease of the O2 concentrations to 23 vol% for SCO burner and to less than 21 vol% for SAO burner. Comprehensive measurement data for axial and tangential velocity, flue gas temperature and oxygen concentration for stable oxy-firing at 21 vol% O2 is presented. The results reported can be used as a guideline for a development of an industrial swirl burner capable of stable operation in both regimes, namely: air and oxycoal.  相似文献   

19.
Pulverized coal combustion in O2/N2 and O2/CO2 environments was investigated with a drop tube furnace. Results present that the reaction rate and burn-out degree of O2/CO2 chars (obtained in O2/CO2 environments) are lower than that of O2/N2 chars (obtained in O2/N2 environments) under the same experimental condition. It indicates that a higher O2 concentration in O2/CO2 environment is needed to achieve the similar combustion characteristic to that in O2/N2 environment. The main differences between O2/N2 and O2/CO2 chars rely on the pore structure determined by N2 adsorption and chemical structure measured by FT-IR. For O2/CO2 char, the surface is thick and the pores are compact which contribute to the fragmentation reduction of particles burning in O2/CO2 environment. The organic functional group elimination rate from the surface of O2/CO2 chars is slower or delayed. The present research results might have important implications for further understanding the intrinsic kinetics of pulverized coal combustion in O2/CO2 environment.  相似文献   

20.
C.K. Man  J.R. Gibbins 《Fuel》2011,90(1):294-304
A set of 13 coals of different rank has been tested for ignition propensity in a 20-L explosion chamber simulating oxyfuel combustion gas conditions. Their char residues were also analysed thermogravimetrically. The effects of coal type, coal concentration (from 100 to 600 g/m3), O2 in CO2 atmospheres (up to 40% v/v) and particle size were investigated.The higher rank coals were significantly more difficult to ignite and mostly required higher energy chemical igniters (1000 or 2500 J) whereas the lower rank coals could be ignited with a 500 J igniter even at low coal dust concentrations.The minimum explosibility limit/ignition concentration in air varied slightly around a value of 200 g/m3, a little higher for low volatile coals and a little lower for high volatile coals.The ignition limit changed significantly, however, with O2 concentration in CO2, where coals required more oxygen to ignite. Most coals failed to ignite at all in 21% v/v O2 in CO2, but an increase to 30 or 35% v/v O2 gave ignition patterns similar to those in air. In addition, the minimum ignition concentration decreased with increase in O2. However, a further increase to 40% v/v O2 did not generally affect the minimum ignition concentration.Particle size had a non-linear effect on coal ignition. The fine particles (<53 μm) behaved almost identical to the whole coal. However, the larger size fraction (>53 μm) was generally more difficult to ignite and exhibited a much lower weight loss.  相似文献   

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