• Title of article

    Calcium-based sorbents behaviour during sulphation at oxy-fuel fluidised bed combustion conditions

  • Author/Authors

    Garcيa-Labiano، نويسنده , , Francisco and Rufas، نويسنده , , Arلnzazu and de Diego، نويسنده , , Luis F. and Obras-Loscertales، نويسنده , , Margarita de las and Gayلn، نويسنده , , Pilar and Abad، نويسنده , , Alberto and Adلnez، نويسنده , , Juan، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    3100
  • To page
    3108
  • Abstract
    Sulphur capture by calcium-based sorbents is a process highly dependent on the temperature and CO2 concentration. In oxy-fuel combustion in fluidised beds (FB), CO2 concentration in the flue gas may be enriched up to 95%. Under so high CO2 concentration, different from that in conventional coal combustion with air, the calcination and sulphation behaviour of the sorbent must be defined to determine the optimum operating temperature in the FB combustors. s work, the SO2 retention capacity of two different limestones was tested by thermogravimetric analysis at typical oxy-fuel conditions in FB combustors. The effect of the main operating variables affecting calcination and sulphation reactions, like CO2 and SO2 concentrations, temperature, and sorbent particle size, was analysed. observed a clear difference in the sulphation conversion reached by the sorbent whether the sulphation takes place under indirect or direct sulphation, being much higher under indirect sulphation. But, in spite of this difference, for a given condition and temperature, the CO2 concentration did not affect to the sulphation conversion, being its major effect to delay the CaCO3 decomposition to a higher temperature. e typical operating conditions and sorbent particle sizes used in oxy-fuel FB combustors, the maximum sorbent sulphation conversions were reached at temperatures of about 900 °C. At these conditions, limestone sulphation took place in two steps. The first one was controlled by diffusion through porous system of the particles until pore plugging, and the second controlled by the diffusion through product layer. As a consequence, the maximum sulphation conversion increased with decreasing the particle size and increasing the SO2 concentration.
  • Keywords
    Oxy-fuel combustion , Sulphation , SO2 retention , Fluidised beds , Calcium-based sorbents
  • Journal title
    Fuel
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Fuel
  • Record number

    1467010