Experimental Study of a Single Particle Reactor at Combustion and Pyrolysis Conditions

Emission formation during thermal conversion of biomass fuels at different conditions has been the scope of this study. The experiments were conducted in a quartz glass reactor where the temperature and atmosphere can be adjusted. The fuels were selected accurately in order to cover a wide range of...

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Main Authors: E. Houshfar, L. Wang, N. Vaha-Savo, A. Brink, T. Lovas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2013-09-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/6051
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spelling doaj-7d37f21e45954b6aaa33e37c13773f2e2021-02-21T21:04:37ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162013-09-013510.3303/CET1335102Experimental Study of a Single Particle Reactor at Combustion and Pyrolysis ConditionsE. HoushfarL. WangN. Vaha-SavoA. BrinkT. LovasEmission formation during thermal conversion of biomass fuels at different conditions has been the scope of this study. The experiments were conducted in a quartz glass reactor where the temperature and atmosphere can be adjusted. The fuels were selected accurately in order to cover a wide range of biomass/waste compositions. They are torrefied softwood, spruce bark, waste wood, miscanthus, and wheat straw. The fuels were first grinded and then pressed into pellets of the same size and weight with a pellet maker. Each pellet was about 200 mg. The experiments were performed under combustion and pyrolysis condition, with atmosphere of 3 % O2 and 100 % N2, respectively. Each fuel was combusted under temperatures of 800, 900, and 1,050 °C. O2 and the formed SO2, NO, CO and CO2 were monitored by three analysers. The fuel pellet was kept under combustion and pyrolysis at four residence times. The residue weight was measured after each process and the comparison with the ash content of the original fuel is made. Time dependent formation of NO and SO2 and other emissions is presented and discussed in this paper. Effect of temperature and combustion condition is also considered for the conclusion.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/6051
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author E. Houshfar
L. Wang
N. Vaha-Savo
A. Brink
T. Lovas
spellingShingle E. Houshfar
L. Wang
N. Vaha-Savo
A. Brink
T. Lovas
Experimental Study of a Single Particle Reactor at Combustion and Pyrolysis Conditions
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet E. Houshfar
L. Wang
N. Vaha-Savo
A. Brink
T. Lovas
author_sort E. Houshfar
title Experimental Study of a Single Particle Reactor at Combustion and Pyrolysis Conditions
title_short Experimental Study of a Single Particle Reactor at Combustion and Pyrolysis Conditions
title_full Experimental Study of a Single Particle Reactor at Combustion and Pyrolysis Conditions
title_fullStr Experimental Study of a Single Particle Reactor at Combustion and Pyrolysis Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Study of a Single Particle Reactor at Combustion and Pyrolysis Conditions
title_sort experimental study of a single particle reactor at combustion and pyrolysis conditions
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2013-09-01
description Emission formation during thermal conversion of biomass fuels at different conditions has been the scope of this study. The experiments were conducted in a quartz glass reactor where the temperature and atmosphere can be adjusted. The fuels were selected accurately in order to cover a wide range of biomass/waste compositions. They are torrefied softwood, spruce bark, waste wood, miscanthus, and wheat straw. The fuels were first grinded and then pressed into pellets of the same size and weight with a pellet maker. Each pellet was about 200 mg. The experiments were performed under combustion and pyrolysis condition, with atmosphere of 3 % O2 and 100 % N2, respectively. Each fuel was combusted under temperatures of 800, 900, and 1,050 °C. O2 and the formed SO2, NO, CO and CO2 were monitored by three analysers. The fuel pellet was kept under combustion and pyrolysis at four residence times. The residue weight was measured after each process and the comparison with the ash content of the original fuel is made. Time dependent formation of NO and SO2 and other emissions is presented and discussed in this paper. Effect of temperature and combustion condition is also considered for the conclusion.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/6051
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