In this work we have tested the fluidized bed desulfurization performance of lime particles obtained by means of a limestone slow calcination pre-treatment technique. This performance was compared to that of the parent untreated limestone particles. The occurrence of particle fragmentation and attrition during the fluidized bed operation was also investigated with a specific test protocol for both raw limestone and pre-treated lime sorbent. Two particle size ranges were tested under typical fluidized bed coal combustion conditions (T = 850 °C; SO2 = 1800 ppm). The experiments were complemented by porosimetric and morphological (SEM) analyses of the sorbent. Results showed that limestone pre-treatment was able to preserve the high mechanical strength of the parent particles as opposed to the fast in situ calcination typically active in fluidized beds. In addition, a high calcium reactivity and final conversion were observed for the pre-treated lime particles, leading to a SO2 capture capacity per unit mass of sorbent much higher than that obtained with the untreated limestone. Simple economic evaluations suggest that the use of the pre-treated lime in place of limestone can involve significant economies for fluidized bed coal combustor operators.
Fluidized bed desulfurization using lime obtained after slow calcination of limestone particles
Meloni P;
2013-01-01
Abstract
In this work we have tested the fluidized bed desulfurization performance of lime particles obtained by means of a limestone slow calcination pre-treatment technique. This performance was compared to that of the parent untreated limestone particles. The occurrence of particle fragmentation and attrition during the fluidized bed operation was also investigated with a specific test protocol for both raw limestone and pre-treated lime sorbent. Two particle size ranges were tested under typical fluidized bed coal combustion conditions (T = 850 °C; SO2 = 1800 ppm). The experiments were complemented by porosimetric and morphological (SEM) analyses of the sorbent. Results showed that limestone pre-treatment was able to preserve the high mechanical strength of the parent particles as opposed to the fast in situ calcination typically active in fluidized beds. In addition, a high calcium reactivity and final conversion were observed for the pre-treated lime particles, leading to a SO2 capture capacity per unit mass of sorbent much higher than that obtained with the untreated limestone. Simple economic evaluations suggest that the use of the pre-treated lime in place of limestone can involve significant economies for fluidized bed coal combustor operators.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
1-s2.0-S001623611201006X-main.pdf
Solo gestori archivio
Tipologia:
versione editoriale (VoR)
Dimensione
998.61 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
998.61 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.