Investigation of the biofuel flue and producer gases cleaning efficiency using ESP

The use of biofuel has been increasing in Europe over the last years, and the reason for that is acceptable cost and the least negative impact on the environment. However, NOx and emissions of fine particulates are important, and biofuel is still a disadvantage compared to oil and natural gas fired...

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Main Authors: Poškas Robertas, Sirvydas Arūnas, Poškas Povilas, Striūgas Nerijus, Pedišius Nerijus, Valinčius Vitas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2017-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20172200138
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spelling doaj-4398c77894a14ddc836783d8f915bb9c2021-08-11T14:28:56ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422017-01-01220013810.1051/e3sconf/20172200138e3sconf_asee2017_00138Investigation of the biofuel flue and producer gases cleaning efficiency using ESPPoškas RobertasSirvydas ArūnasPoškas PovilasStriūgas NerijusPedišius NerijusValinčius VitasThe use of biofuel has been increasing in Europe over the last years, and the reason for that is acceptable cost and the least negative impact on the environment. However, NOx and emissions of fine particulates are important, and biofuel is still a disadvantage compared to oil and natural gas fired systems. Usually, flue gas is filtered in multicyclones or fibre filters before discharge into the atmosphere. Yet, in the case of fine particulates, the filters of such type do not show high effectiveness, thus electrostatic precipitators are used. In this comparative study on biofuel (wood pellets), the collection efficiency of solid particles from a class 3 boiler (50 kW) and from a gasification unit (100 kW) was investigated. Although releases of solid particles from modern boilers are low, a combination of such a boiler with an electrostatic precipitator may reduce the releases of particles to the minimum, and the collection efficiency of the electrostatic precipitator obtained during the investigation was ~98-99%. There is a big difference in particle concentrations comparing the systems with flue gas and producer gas. As the working conditions in the test section with producer gas were harder, it led to lower efficiency of the electrostatic precipitator (~75%).https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20172200138
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Poškas Robertas
Sirvydas Arūnas
Poškas Povilas
Striūgas Nerijus
Pedišius Nerijus
Valinčius Vitas
spellingShingle Poškas Robertas
Sirvydas Arūnas
Poškas Povilas
Striūgas Nerijus
Pedišius Nerijus
Valinčius Vitas
Investigation of the biofuel flue and producer gases cleaning efficiency using ESP
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Poškas Robertas
Sirvydas Arūnas
Poškas Povilas
Striūgas Nerijus
Pedišius Nerijus
Valinčius Vitas
author_sort Poškas Robertas
title Investigation of the biofuel flue and producer gases cleaning efficiency using ESP
title_short Investigation of the biofuel flue and producer gases cleaning efficiency using ESP
title_full Investigation of the biofuel flue and producer gases cleaning efficiency using ESP
title_fullStr Investigation of the biofuel flue and producer gases cleaning efficiency using ESP
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of the biofuel flue and producer gases cleaning efficiency using ESP
title_sort investigation of the biofuel flue and producer gases cleaning efficiency using esp
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The use of biofuel has been increasing in Europe over the last years, and the reason for that is acceptable cost and the least negative impact on the environment. However, NOx and emissions of fine particulates are important, and biofuel is still a disadvantage compared to oil and natural gas fired systems. Usually, flue gas is filtered in multicyclones or fibre filters before discharge into the atmosphere. Yet, in the case of fine particulates, the filters of such type do not show high effectiveness, thus electrostatic precipitators are used. In this comparative study on biofuel (wood pellets), the collection efficiency of solid particles from a class 3 boiler (50 kW) and from a gasification unit (100 kW) was investigated. Although releases of solid particles from modern boilers are low, a combination of such a boiler with an electrostatic precipitator may reduce the releases of particles to the minimum, and the collection efficiency of the electrostatic precipitator obtained during the investigation was ~98-99%. There is a big difference in particle concentrations comparing the systems with flue gas and producer gas. As the working conditions in the test section with producer gas were harder, it led to lower efficiency of the electrostatic precipitator (~75%).
url https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20172200138
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AT striugasnerijus investigationofthebiofuelflueandproducergasescleaningefficiencyusingesp
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