4.7 Article

Fouling tendency of ash resulting from burning mixtures of biofuels. Part 2: Deposit chemistry

Journal

FUEL
Volume 85, Issue 14-15, Pages 1992-2001

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2006.03.015

Keywords

co-firing; deposition; chemical fractionation analysis

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Mixtures of peat with bark and peat with straw were burned in a lab-scale entrained flow reactor under controlled conditions, and deposits were collected on an air-cooled probe at a temperature of 550 degrees C. The fuel and deposit compositions were compared using chemical fractionation analysis and SEM/EDX. Chemical fractionation analysis was capable of explaining the relative fouling tendency of peat, bark, and straw. The composition of deposits obtained from firing peat, bark, and straw individually resembled the composition of their ashes. When firing peat-bark and peat-straw mixtures, it was found that the deposition rate only started to increase when the Cl/S molar ratio in the feed ash exceeded 0.15. The composition of the ensuing deposits resembled the deposits obtained from burning either bark or straw individually. For peat-bark mixtures it was concluded that the presence of S in the feed suppresses deposition by sulfating chloride compounds, leading to deposits that contain less Cl and have less molten phase. For peat-straw mixtures it was concluded that the deposition behaviour is governed by other mechanisms than the interaction of Cl and S. (C) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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