Physical property behaviour of North Dakota lignite in an oxygen/steam blown moving bed gasifier
Abstract
In this study lignite originating from North Dakota (USA) was thermally treated in an oxygen/steam blown
commercial-scale moving bed gasifier operating on lump coal at the Dakota Gasification Company (DGC)
in order to identify the physical property changes that occur during heating. After reaction, the solid particulate
remnants were extracted from the reactor and characterised using standard techniques. Thermal fragmentation
was found to be severe with the coal tested, i.e. the lump coal was found to decrease in size to
about 90% b6.3 mm particles in the drying and de-volatilisation zones of the reactor. The particle size
(mean Sauter diameter) however increased slightly in the reduction and combustion zones due to ash melting
and subsequent agglomeration. The particle as well as the bulk density residual profiles of the fuel bed
samples in the reactor was found to be in alignment with the residual ash content profile. The ash fusion temperature
(AFT) of the feed coal to the commercial-scale moving-bed gasifier was found to be higher as compared
to the ash bed. Fluxing elements in the dominating glass phase determined in the reduction and
combustion zones are most probably the reason behind this phenomenon.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/13874https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378382012003098
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fuproc.2012.08.016
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