4.6 Article

Dynamic Modeling of the Reactive Side in Large-Scale Fluidized Bed Boilers

Journal

INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY RESEARCH
Volume 60, Issue 10, Pages 3936-3956

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.0c06278

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Energy Agency [46459-1]

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This study presents a dynamic model of the reactive side of large-scale fluidized bed boilers, validated against operational data from industrial units, and analyzes the performance of the boilers under transient conditions. The results highlight the key role of heat capacity in stabilization time, and show that gas velocity and load condition also affect the stability of the boilers.
This work presents a dynamic model of the reactive side of large-scale fluidized bed (FB) boilers that describes the infurnace transient operation of both bubbling and circulating FB boilers (BFB and CFB, respectively). The model solves the dynamic mass and energy balances accounting for the bulk solids, several gas species, and the fuel phase. The model uses semi-empirical expressions to describe the fluid dynamics, fuel conversion, and heat transfer to the furnace walls, as derived from units other than the studied ones. The model is validated against operational data from two different industrial units: an 80 MW CFB and a 130 MW BFB, both at steady-state and transient conditions. The validated model is used to analyze: (i) the performance of the reactive side of two FB boilers under off-design, steady-state conditions of operation; and (ii) the open-loop transient response when varying load or fuel moisture. The results underline the key role of heat capacity on the stabilization time. Within a given unit, the differences in heat capacity between the top and bottom of the furnace affect also the stabilization times, with the furnace top (lower heat capacity) being 1-3 times faster in the CFB unit and up to 10 times faster in the BFB unit. Due to the differences in gas velocity, the investigated boilers are found to stabilize more rapidly to input changes when running at full load than at partial load. Lastly, a variable ramping rate analysis shows that the inherent transient responses of the reactive side disappear when disturbances are introduced at (slower) rates, typical of industrial operation. Thus, the reactive side could be modeled as pseudo-static.

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