Thermogravimetric Analysis of Coal Semi-Char Co-Firing with Straw in O<sub>2</sub>/CO<sub>2</sub> Mixtures

For coal semi-char as a by-produced of low-temperature pyrolysis, combustion for power generation is one of the effective utilization methods to realize its clean and efficient utilization. However, the coal semi-char combustion process has a difficult ignition, unstable combustion and low burnout r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Debo Li, Ning Zhao, Yongxin Feng, Zhiwen Xie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Processes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9717/9/8/1421
Description
Summary:For coal semi-char as a by-produced of low-temperature pyrolysis, combustion for power generation is one of the effective utilization methods to realize its clean and efficient utilization. However, the coal semi-char combustion process has a difficult ignition, unstable combustion and low burnout rate. The co-firing of the semi-char with biomass under oxy-fuel conditions can improve the combustion behavior and reduce fossil CO<sub>2</sub> emissions. In this paper, the combustion behavior of Shenhua coal semi-char (SHC) co-firing with straw (ST) in O<sub>2</sub>/CO<sub>2</sub> mixture is investigated using thermogravimetric analysis. The results show that each curve lays between those of the individual fuels and presents three peaks (i.e., three stages). The thermogravimetric curves of SHC co-firing with ST can be divided into three stages: the volatile combustion of ST, the co-combustion of SHC and ST fixed-carbons and the SHC fixed-carbon combustion and the decomposition of the difficult pyrolytic material of ST. Blending ST into the SHC can significantly decrease the ignition temperature and improve the comprehensive combustion behavior of blended samples. In increasing the proportion of ST from 25 to 100%, the change of the blended ignition temperature is slight, but the burnout temperature decreases greatly. Kinetic parameters of combustion are calculated by using the Coats–Redfern integral method. Compared to that of stage I and stage III, the activation energy of stage II is significantly lower. As increasing blending ratio from 25% to 100%, the activation energy increases at stage I and decreases at stage III. Furthermore, the O<sub>2</sub> concentration obviously affects stage III of 50% SHC + 50% ST, and the thermogravimetric curves at this stage are obviously shifted to the lower temperature zone as the O<sub>2</sub> concentration increases. The activation energy of 50% SHC + 50% ST increases as the oxygen concentration increases. Besides, the activation energy shows that the combustion characteristics cannot be determined only by the activation energy obtained by the Coats–Redfern method. These findings can provide useful information for semi-char co-firing with biomass.
ISSN:2227-9717