Next Article in Journal
Control Techniques for a Single-Phase Matrix Converter
Previous Article in Journal
Focussed Review of Utilization of Graphene-Based Materials in Electron Transport Layer in Halide Perovskite Solar Cells: Materials-Based Issues
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Experimental Investigations on Lateral Dispersion Coefficients of Fuel Particles in Large-Scale Circulating Fluidized Bed Boilers with Different Coal Feeding Modes

1
College of Energy and Power Engineering, Nanjing Institute of Technology, Nanjing 211167, China
2
Key Laboratory of Low-Grade Energy Utilization Technologies and Systems, Ministry of Education of PRC, Chongqing University, Chongqing 400044, China
3
Sichuan Baima CFB Demonstration Power Plant Co. Ltd., Neijiang 641005, China
4
Datang Wu’an Power Plant Co. Ltd., Handan 056300, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Energies 2020, 13(23), 6336; https://doi.org/10.3390/en13236336
Submission received: 23 October 2020 / Revised: 27 November 2020 / Accepted: 28 November 2020 / Published: 1 December 2020
(This article belongs to the Section I: Energy Fundamentals and Conversion)

Abstract

:
The dispersion characteristics of fuel particles over the bed have always been a key consideration in the design of fluidized beds. However, the lateral fuel dispersion coefficients (Dsr) reported in the previous literature widely ranged from 10−4 to 10−1 m2/s, which were hard to be directly applied in large-scale CFB (circulating fluidized bed) boilers with wider bed width (close to 30 m) and variable coal feeding modes. To solve this problem, field tests were conducted on the first 600 MW CFB boiler in this paper, and the distributions of flue gas composition and flue gas temperature were obtained near the coal feeding port under four working conditions. The dispersion characteristics of fuel particles were analyzed in detail combined with the dispersion model. In addition, a new method based on bed heat balance was also proposed to estimate Dsr and applied in a 300 MW CFB boiler with a different coal feeding mode. The results revealed that Dsr through the local heat balance method ranged from 0.10–0.35 m2/s, which were 9–18% higher than the values through the dispersion model. Compared with the coal feeding port immersed in the bed, Dsr of the fuel particles fed into the splash zone increased by about 34.7%. Dsr under the coal feeding mode of a screw feeder with pressurized air ranged from 0.12–0.16 m2/s, which were lower than Dsr under the coal feeding method of importing fuel into circulating ash. The method and results in this paper could expand the applicability of fuel dispersion, and provide the most direct guidance for the design and optimization of coal feeding ports in large-scale CFB boilers.

1. Introduction

In recent decades, the circulating fluidized bed (CFB) boiler has been widely adopted because of the advantages in the treatment of low-grade energy and pollutant control, and is developing towards the direction of large capacity and high parameters [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. With the increasing furnace dimensions, a series of non-uniform problems in gas-solid flow and combustion appear to be more and more obviously [9,10]. One of the most important factors is the mixing characteristics of fuel particles in the dense phase zone. On one hand, the uniformity of reactant distribution over the cross-section of the bed depends on the reaction rate and lateral particle dispersion. If the dispersion rate is lower than the reaction rate, it shows to be a non-uniform distribution. On the other hand, the operating commercial CFB boilers are often with higher bed width to depth ratios, and the numbers of coal feeding ports in a fluidized bed with a large cross-section are limited for cost reasons, which will makes it critical for fuel mixing over the bed, affecting the combustion stability as well as pollutant generation and distribution in the dense phase zone. Thus, the shortages of the fuel dispersion process have seriously hindered the scale-up and diversified development of CFB boilers.
Particle mixing and dispersion in dense phase zone is one of the important problems in the fundamental research of fluidization; Kunii and Levenspiel [11] first proposed the bubble bed mechanism model. Svensson [12] found that the particle dispersion characteristics in the fast bed should be similar to that of the bubbled bed so the investigation methods could be consistent. After decades of research [13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22], scholars believed that the factors affecting particle mixing included particle size and density, fluidization air distribution, static bed height and bed width, and the dispersion coefficient Dsr was generally introduced to describe this dispersion ability [23,24], which was derived from the Fickian-type diffusion equation. Some scholars [25] defined this quantitative description as the macroscopic method of particle dispersion. By means of particle tracking (both experiments and CFD simulations), many lateral dispersion coefficients in fluidization systems of various dimensions have been obtained. In contrast, based on the Einstein’s Brownian motion theory, the particle dispersion coefficient can also be solved by tracking the trajectory information of a single particle in a period of time. Some typical approaches and calculation results are listed in Table 1.
A significant amount of work on solids mixing in fluidized beds are available in the literature. However, two shortcomings are remain with regard to lateral fuel dispersion: (1) the source term was not considered in the traditional dispersion model. For a CFB boiler of at least industrial-grade, it is difficult to eliminate the momentum of returning materials immediately after entering the furnace. In other words, the distribution of fuel concentration following dispersion law is strongly affected by its initial concentration distribution, which is hardly to be predicted through the cold test apparatus. Unfortunately, most of the experiments were conducted under the cold state. (2) The research objects were mostly lab-scale or two-dimensional fluidized beds, so the influence of bed width on the dominant factors of the particle mixing mechanism is still uncertain. In addition, the reported lateral dispersion coefficients differ up by over three orders of magnitude, so the previous results cannot be directly applied to large-scale furnace with higher bed width to depth ratio. To the author’s knowledge, the prediction based on the field test of supercritical CFB boilers with different coal feeding modes have not yet been reported. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to explore lateral dispersion characteristics of fuel particles in large-scale CFB boilers and to quantify the corresponding lateral dispersion coefficients. Specifically, the authors carried out comprehensive field tests in the coal feeding zones of the first 600 MW CFB boiler. According to the measured flue gas composition and temperature, the dispersion distance and trajectory of coal particles were determined, and the influence of operating parameters on fuel dispersion characteristics were also analyzed in detail. Then, a new prediction method based on local heat balance was proposed to estimate Dsr, and the results were compared with those adopted the traditional dispersion model. Eventually, this new method was applied and validated in another 300 MW CFB boiler with a different coal feeding mode. The method in this paper can provide a convenient approach to predict the dispersion process of fuel particles under different conditions, and the calculated Dsr can also make up for its shortcomings in the application of various industrial-grade CFB boilers effectively.

2. Experimental Section

2.1. Description of the 600 MW CFB Boiler

As shown in Figure 1, the 600 MW CFB boiler adopts the pant-leg design with twin furnaces and air distributors at two sides. Also, it is separated by double-exposed division walls. The cross-section of the upper furnace is 15 m (width) × 28 m (depth), and the height of the furnace is 55 m. Six steam-cooled cyclones and six EHEs (external heat exchangers) are arranged on the two sides of the boiler [35,36]. Six coal feeding ports are arranged at each loop seal and EHE of one furnace side. The fuel enters the furnace after mixing with circulating ash. Part of the high-temperature circulating ash directly enters the furnace through six loop seals, the rest is fed into the EHEs to heat the steam, and then enters the furnace with lower temperature. By controlling the solid flux of circulating in the EHEs, the temperatures of bed and steam can be adjusted [37].

2.2. Experiment Procedure

Due to the symmetrical structure of the boiler, only the right furnace was tested. It is well known that the particle mixing could be extremely affected by the secondary air (SA) jet, so the coal feeding port near the furnace corner of the rear wall was selected for the field test. Figure 2 exhibits the layout diagram of the measurement ports, where the blue arrows indicate the primary air (PA) and part of the SA nozzles, and the red marks indicate the coal feeding inlets (the return tubes are not shown in this figure). The lower and upper measurement ports are composed of casings and sealed ball valves, which are 0.82 m from the rear wall and 1.93 m and 7.50 m from the air distributor respectively.
A 316 stainless steel tube with an outer diameter of 18 mm was adopted as the sampling probe in this test. Because of the high bed pressure at the bottom of the dense phase zone, the low measurement port was used to measure the temperature, and the upper measurement port was used to obtain the flue gas composition along the horizontal direction of the furnace width. The maximum sampling depth was close to 3 m, the replicated measurements were conducted when the probe was pulled out. As the selected coal feeding port shown in Figure 2 was about 1.5 m from the right wall, the maximum sampling depth could characterize the lateral dispersion process of the fuel entering the furnace.
The flue gas analysis system was mainly composed of the sampling probe, an air filter apparatus, a vacuum pump with straight tee, an ash filter apparatus and an Ecom-J2KN type flue gas analyzer (measurement accuracy: oxygen-0.2%, other composition-10 ppm). As the dynamic distribution of the flue gas composition showed to be sinusoidal [38], at least two trough values of each composition were recorded to guarantee the repeatability of the tests. To avoid chemical reactions of the extracted flue gas with the long sampling probe, this probe was equipped with corundum as inside lining. This method has been adopted in our measurement of other CFB boilers. In addition, limited by the special location of the measurement ports and narrow fin width between the membrane tubes, it was impossible to adopt the water-cooled sampling device, so the flue gas could continue to react in the sampling probe. In this case, the sampled gas composition could deviate from the actual situation. After strict comparative tests [39], the authors found that the measurement deviations of O2 and CO were no more than −4% and 8.6% respectively with and without water-cooling, and the influence of SO2 condensation could be ignored under this sampling condition. Thus, the final results of the measured values have been updated accordingly.

2.3. Working Conditions Arrangement

To predict the lateral fuel dispersion coefficients and discern the main influencing factors, four sets of comparative experiments under 100%, 75% and 60% BMCR (Boiler Maximum Continuous Rating) loads were carried out, i.e., Case 1 to Case 4 in Table 2. The proximate analysis and particle size distributions of the feeding coal are exhibited in Table 3 and Figure 3, respectively.

3. Calculation Methodology

3.1. Prediction of Lateral Dispersion Coefficient Based on Macroscopic Dispersion Model

In this 600 MW CFB boiler, the fluidization air is evenly distributed in the local area [40], and the coal and limestone powder entering the furnace are evenly mixed. The limestone with small size is mainly distributed in the upper part of the furnace, while the coal with larger size may remain in the bottom part. Thus, it can be considered that the coal is relatively more than limestone in the region with higher SO2 concentration, the coal is more than fluidization air in the region of higher CO concentration and the region with higher NOX concentration corresponds to the area of more volatile matter or oxygen. In addition, if the coal type was changed, the distributions of temperature and flue gas composition were bound to update with the change of fuel dispersion. Therefore, whatever the fuel type is, the updated concentration distributions of flue gas composition can also correspond to the coal feeding distributions. Eventually, the dispersion of coal could be determined from the SO2/CO distributions.
According to Einstein Brownian motion theory [41], there is:
D n , x = ( Δ r n ) 2 2 Δ t
where Dn,x is the dispersion coefficient of the nth particle in the x direction. Δrn is the displacement within Δt of the single particle. The average dispersion coefficient Dx is the mean value of the dispersion coefficients of all particles,
D x = 1 N n = 1 N D n , x = 1 N n = 1 N ( Δ r n , x ) 2 2 Δ t , n = 1 , , N
that is,
D x = 1 2 Δ t ( 1 N n = 1 N ( Δ x n ) 2 ) = 1 2 Δ t ( Δ x ) 2
where (Δx)2 is defined as the mean square value of displacement of all particles along x direction during Δt. Since the displacement curve cannot be traced instantly with time, the time needed to carry the particles at the coal feeding ports to the measurement port height was taken as Δt, and the particle dispersion rates were calculated by combination with SO2/CO distributions. In a FB reactor, the particle dispersion rate is closely related to the velocity of fluidization air and bubble behavior, while the rates of bubble breakage and throwing particles are obviously greater than the entrainment rate. Therefore, the area of intense combustion was regarded as the position that the coal was bound to reach. It is extremely difficult to track the accurate time of particle dispersion in the field test. Štefanica et al. [42] has proposed a method to estimate the radial gas dispersion coefficient in a bubbling fluidized bed cold model, but difficult to directly apply in the circulating bed under thermal state. In this paper, Δt could be estimated based on the entrainment effect of the fluidization air, as illustrated in Equation (4),
Δ t = Δ H u p = Δ H u g u t
where ΔH is the distance from the air distributor to the measurement height, up is the particle velocity, equal to the difference between fluidization air velocity ug and the terminal velocity of particles ut.This method to calculate Δt was proposed based to two reasons: (1) the particles sampled from the upper measuremenrt port were less than 4 mm, accounting for over 80% of the feeding coal, and the fine particles could be directly transported vertically to the upper part; (2) this boiler adopted in-furnace desulfurization, the ultra-fine limestone could also be directly entrained upward after entering the furnace. For the solution of particle velocity up, the calculation method of the Reynold number of terminal settlement Ret was introduced in this paper and the influence of particle interaction on settlement velocity was also considered, as shown in Equations (5) and (6) [36].
u t = υ d p R e t
R e t = A r ( 1 ε p ) 4.75 18 + 0.61 [ A r ( 1 ε p ) 4.75 ] 0.5
where dp is the particle diameter, ν is the kinematic viscosity, εp is solid volume fraction and Ar is the Archimedes number [25], which indicates the influence of mechanical properties of particles on the mixing rate of particles.

3.2. Prediction of Lateral Dispersion Coefficient Based on Local Heat Balance

The first step is to determine the mass distribution of circulating ash in each cell of the dispersion route. The bed temperature should be evenly distributed if the fuel is not considered. When the feeding coal enters the furnace, the temperature distribution starts to change due to gas absorption, coal combustion and heat exchange between bed and circulating ash, as shown in Figure 4a. When the temperature distribution and flue gas composition are kept constant, it is considered a steady-state condition, and the mass of circulating ash of each cell along the dispersion process reaches a dynamic balance. The heat balance of each cell is as follows,
Q b u r n , i ( T i ) = Q g , i ( T i ) + Q C B , i ( T i )
where Qburn,i(Ti) is the heat release of fuel particles in cell i at T temperature, Qg,i is the heat absorption of fluidization air and QC-B,i represents the heat transfer between bed materials and circulating ash. To solve the unknowns in Equation (7), there are,
Q b u r n , i = G c o a l , i h c o a l
Q g , i ( T i ) = V g , i [ ρ g , i ( T i ) h g ( T i ) ρ g , i ( T 0 ) h g ( T 0 ) ]
Q C B , i ( T i ) = G c , i [ h s ( T c ) h s ( T i ) ]
where Gc,i is the mass flow rate of circulating ash in cell i and can be obtained according to authors’ previous study [25], Gcoal,i is the coal feeding rate, hcoal is the low calorific value of the feeding fuel. Vg,i is the volume flow rate of primary air. After the preliminary cold test and optimization [40], the PA uniformity has been significantly improved. ρg,i is the gas density at T temperature. hg(T) and hs(T) respectively correspond to the enthalpy values of the gas and ash at T temperature.
After obtaining the mass distribution of circulating ash, the lateral dispersion coefficient can be solved because fuel and circulating ash in each cell must came from the lateral dispersion of the only return tube. According to Fick’s first law, the dispersion flux J passing through a unit cell perpendicular to the dispersion direction in a unit time is proportional to the corresponding concentration gradient. The dispersion coefficient can be described as,
J = d m c o a l A d t = D s r ( C x )
where J is the particle dispersion flux passing through a cross-section with area A, m is the mass of fuel particles in cell i, C is the concentration of fuel particles. Due to the fuel particles in the adjacent area must come from the only coal feeding port, the time item can be included in coal feeding rate Gcoal,i,
d m c o a l A d t = G c o a l , i Δ y Δ z
where Δy and Δz are the width and height of the flow section. Also, based on Equations (7)–(10) and Figure 4b, the concentration gradient in Equation (11) can be rewritten as,
C x = m c o a l , i + 1 m c o a l , i Δ x 2 Δ y Δ z
This method has three advantages: (1) The coal feeding rate Gcoal,i (including time item) directly determines the particle dispersion flux J. Thus, the time term is included in Gcoal,i. This eliminates the calculation of Δt that is hard to be determined in the field test; (2) the space length in the Y/Z direction can be reduced, so the location of the temperature measurement port has little effect on the measured values. As a result, the lateral dispersion coefficient in different zones can be determined based not only on the adjacent cells but also on the initial feeding position, and the coefficients corresponding to various dispersion distances can also be characterized. (3) the actual coal distribution is different from the initial one during boiler operation; thus, the results obtained through local heat balance are more scientific and realistic.

4. Results and Discussions

4.1. Effect of Fuel Dispersion Process on Flue Gas Composition at the Bottom Zone of the CFB Boiler

The distributions of flue gas composition (O2, CO, SO2 and NOx) along the horizontal direction of the upper measurement port under various cases are shown in Figure 5. Since the center line of the selected coal feeding port was exactly located at the 1500 mm depth, the lateral dispersion process of fuel particles along both sides should be similar, and the measured results showed obvious symmetrical. At 60% BMCR load (Case 1 and Case 2), the average O2 concentration exceeded 3.5%. This distribution first decreased and then increased along the sampling direction, with the lowest value existed at 1500 mm depth. At 75% and 100% BMCR loads, the distributions of O2 concentration were more uniform but the average values were decreased to 3.3% and 2.6%, respectively. This indicated that the dense phase zone of a large-scale CFB boiler presented a completely opposite combustion atmosphere at different loads, i.e., it showed an oxidizing condition at low load and the distribution of O2 concentration was determined by that of fuel particles. At high load, the furnace showed a reducing condition and the volume flow rate of supplied air could not meet the fully burning of fuel particles. Thus, the O2 concentration showed a more uniform trend. This can also be confirmed by Figure 5c that no SO2 was detected at low load. With the increase of boiler load, the SO2 concentration gradually increased.
It can also be concluded from Figure 5 that there were reasonable corresponding relationships between each flue gas composition. The concentration distributions of SO2 and CO were consistent, but opposite to that of NOx. At low load, the CO concentration was at a low level and evenly distributed due to relatively sufficient oxygen, but the NOx concentration was higher and the gradient was larger. In the zone near the right wall, the NOx concentrations at high loads were higher than those in Case 2. It is considered that more fuel was dispersed into adjacent zones at high load, and the combustion of volatiles promoted the formation of more NOx.

4.2. Calculation Results of Lateral Fuel Dispersion Coefficient

4.2.1. Dispersion Model Method

In this method, the key goal is to determine the particle dispersion positions There was only one coal feeding port and was not affected by the secondary air jet. Also, the PA was evenly distributed. Therefore, the changes of gas composition directly reflected the mass of fuel in each local part. When the concentration gradient of one key composition increased significantly, it showed to be the boundary of fuel particle dispersion. Thus, the lateral fuel dispersion can be predicted reasonably by combining with the measured flue gas composition [43], i.e., the position of coal dispersion was determined based on the distributions of CO/SO2 concentration at high load, and based on NOx concentration at low load. These positions have been marked with red circles in Figure 5. At 60% BMCR load, the dispersion distance of fuel particles in Case 1 was longer than that in Case 2. Although higher PA velocity promoted the mixing of fuel and bed materials, the static bed height in Case 2 was higher, and the height of dense phase zone in fluidization condition can be calculated by Equation (14) [44],
H d e n = R d e n H 0
where H0 is the static bed height, and the expansion ratio Rden can be described as Equation (15) [45],
R d e n = { 6.01 ( d p ρ p ) 0.3 ( u g / u t ) , u g / u t > 0.267 ( d p ρ p ) 0.6 3.1 ( u g / u t ) 0.5 u g / u t < 0.267 ( d p ρ p ) 0.6
where ρp is the density of particles. Accordingly, the height of the coal feeding port (H = 1200 mm) was completely immersed in Case 2, while consistent with the Hden in Case 1. Therefore, compared with increasing the fluidization velocity, the throwing and collision of the particles caused by bubble breakage were more conducive to the mixing of fuel particles in the horizontal direction when the particle injection position was close to Hden. With the increase of boiler loads (Case 1, 3 and 4), the dispersion positions of fuel particles extended from X = 500 mm to 250 mm. In addition to the increasing fluidization velocity, the flow rate of circulating ash at high load was larger, which could strengthen the ash spreading to improve the ability of lateral fuel dispersion. According to the above analyses, especially the determined locations of fuel particles, the lateral dispersion coefficient can be calculated based on the dispersion model.

4.2.2. Local Heat Balance Method

The distributions of mixed bed temperature along the horizontal direction of the lower measurement port at various cases are shown in Figure 6. The circulating ash temperature were also marked as auxiliary lines in the figure to reflect the temperature differences. Except X = 1000 mm in Case 1, the temperature from the coal feeding port (X = 1500 mm) to the right wall decreased with a maximum temperature deviation up to 30 °C. With the increase of boiler loads, the temperature of circulating ash increased from 840 °C to 900 °C and gradually exceeded the corresponding mixed bed temperature under stable conditions. In Case 2, the heat transfer between particles dominated within X = 0–500 mm as the circulating ash temperature was higher than the mixed bed temperature. While at X = 500–1500 mm, the circulating ash absorbed heat from the bed, and the distribution of bed temperature mainly came from the heat release of fuel particles in different zones. Thus, it can be concluded that the stable distribution of bed temperature at low load is affected by fuel dispersion characteristics and combustion, while greatly affected by circulating ash temperature at high load. Thus, the dispersion coefficients of fuel particles in different cells can be calculated based on the local heat balance in dense phase zone.

4.2.3. Results and Comparison of the Two Methods

The lateral fuel dispersion coefficients Dsr calculated through the two methods are shown in Figure 7. With changes in load and operation parameters, the Dsr ranged from 0.10 to 0.35 m2/s, which were significantly higher than the results of most literature [26,27,30,31,32,33], but in the same order of magnitude as the predicted values from Liu [24] and Schlichthaerle [29]. Under various working conditions, the Dsr obtained from the dispersion model were 9–18% lower than the average Dsr from the local heat balance method. This was mainly attributed to the selection of Δt, which had a certain influence on the calculation of Dsr [25,31].
With the increase of boiler loads, the Dsr calculated by the local heat balance increased gradually, which were consistent with the criterion from flue gas composition. Under the same case, the Dsr along lateral direction (i = 1, 2, 3) showed a gradual decreasing trend. There are three reasons for this. First, the initial momentum of fuel particles from the coal feeding port still existed and gradually lost during the dispersion process. Secondly, due to a certain proportion of fuel combustion in the dispersion process, the actual fuel concentrations far away from the coal feeding port were less than the theoretical values. In Case 4, the Dsr of cell 3 were higher than those of cell 2, which might be due to the influence of the fuel dispersed from the adjacent coal feeding port. Judged from the results, the average deviation caused by this factor did not exceed 15%. In addition, the Dsr of Case 2 was about 34.7% lower than that of Case 1 at 60% BMCR load. Although the velocity of fluidization air in Case 2 was higher, the coal feeding port was immersed in the expanded bed, which greatly restricted the dispersion ability of fuel particles.

4.2.4. Application and Validation

The 600 MW CFB boiler adopted the scraper conveyor to feed the coal with circulating ash, while many others adopted the screw feeder with pressurized air to spread the fuel [46]. Hence, the universality of this calculation method was applied and verified in a 300 MW CFB boiler. Under some extreme working condition, the #1 and #2 coal feeding port (1100 mm above the air distributor) were in a coal cut-off state, as shown in Figure 8, and the temperature of bed and circulating ash are exhibited in Table 4. It can be concluded that the coal in these zones were completely from the lateral dispersion of coal particles at the #3 coal feeding port.
Based on the local heat balance method, the Dsr of fuel particles dispersed from #3 port to the zones near the #2 and #1 ports were 0.16 and 0.12 m2/s respectively. The calculated values also showed a decreasing trend along the lateral direction, which were similar to the results of the 600 MW CFB boiler. The values of the two coal feeding modes were in the order of 0.1 m2/s, but the latter was obviously lower. Compared with the coal feeding port, the cross-sectional area and solid flow rate of the returning tube were much larger. These factors provided a good prerequisite for the radial spreading and lateral dispersion of fuel particles.

5. Conclusions

To investigate the lateral dispersion characteristics of fuel particles in large-scale CFB boilers, field tests were conducted on the first 600 MW supercritical CFB boiler. The distributions of flue gas composition and temperature near the coal feeding port under four working conditions were obtained, and the influence of operating parameters on the dispersion process were analyzed. In addition to the traditional dispersion model, a simple method for calculating the lateral fuel dispersion coefficient by using the local heat balance was also proposed, and the results of the two methods were compared. Under the extreme working condition of fuel cut-off, the local heat balance method was applied and validated in a 300 MW CFB boiler with a different coal feeding mode. The conclusions related to fuel dispersion are as follows:
(1)
The lateral fuel dispersion coefficients through the local heat balance method ranged from 0.10–0.35 m2/s and increased with boiler load increasing. The values were 9–18% higher than those of the dispersion model. When the coal feeding port was below the expanded bed, the fuel dispersion would be greatly limited. Compared with that in the splash zone, the calculated lateral dispersion coefficient decreased by about 34.7%.
(2)
Based on the local heat balance method, the lateral fuel dispersion coefficient of various CFB boilers could be calculated. The predicted values under the coal feeding mode of a screw feeder with pressurized air ranged from 0.12–0.16 m2/s, which were lower than those adopted the scraper conveyor to feed the coal with circulating ash, but still in the same order of magnitude.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, X.L. (Xiaofeng Lu) and J.Y.; investigation, J.Y., X.F. and X.L. (Xiaofeng Lu); methodology, X.L. (Xiaofeng Lu) and J.Y.; writing—original draft preparation, J.Y.; writing—review and editing, X.L. (Xiaofeng Lu), X.Z. and R.X.; validation, S.L. and X.L. (Xiujian Lei). All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Key Research & Development Program of China (No. 2016YFB0600201) and the Scientific Research Start-up Foundation funding of High-level Introduction Talents of Nanjing Institute of Technology (Grants No. YKJ201962).

Acknowledgments

Authors are thankful to Xiong Xie, Changxu Liu from Baima Power Plant, and Zhenguo Yang, Liyuan Fan, Huixin Yang from Wu’an Power Plant for valuable support during the field tests over the past year.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Nomenclature

AArea of flow section, m2
AadAsh content in fuel (wt%, air dry basis)
ArArchimedes number
BMCRBoiler maximum continuous rating
CConcentration of fuel particles, kg/m3
Dn,xDispersion coefficient of a single particle along x direction, m2/s
DsrLateral dispersion coefficient of fuel particles, m2/s
dpDiameter of the particles, m
EHEsExternal heat exchanger
FcadFixed carbon content in fuel (wt%, air dry basis)
GMass flow rate of coal/ash, kg/s
H0Static bed height, m
HdenHeight of dense phase zone at fluidization state, m
hSpecific enthalpy, kJ/kg
ILSAInner lower secondary air
IUSAInner upper secondary air
JFuel dispersion flux, kg/(m2·s)
MadMoisture content in fuel (wt%, air dry basis)
mmass of fuel particles in a certain area, kg
NParticle numbers
OUSAOuter upper secondary air
PAPrimary air
QHeat absorption, kW
RDiameter of fuel particles, mm
Retthe Reynold number of terminal settlement
RdenExpansion ratio
SASecondary air
TTemperature, °C
ugFluidization velocity, m/s
upParticle velocity, m/s
utTerminal velocity of particles, m/s
VVolume flow rate of PA, Nm3/s
VadVolatiles content in fuel (wt%, air dry basis)
Greek symbols
ΔxParticles displacement along the x direction, m
ΔyWidth of the flow section, m
ΔzHeight of the flow section, m
ΔtTime required to carry particles from coal feeding port to the measurement height, s
Δrndisplacement of a single particle within a specified time, m
ΔHDistance from the air distributors to the measurement height, m
εpSolid volume fraction
ρpParticle density, kg/m3
νkinematic viscosity, m2/s
Subscripts
burnBurning fuel
C-BHeat transfer between circulating ash and bed materials
gFlue gas/fluidization air
iith cell (i = 1, 2, 3)
returnCirculating ash
sSolid

References

  1. Yue, G.X.; Cai, R.X.; Lyu, J.F.; Zhang, H. From a CFB reactor to a CFB boiler—The review of R&D progress of CFB coal combustion technology in China. Powder Technol. 2017, 316, 18–28. [Google Scholar]
  2. Liu, X.M.; Yang, H.R.; Lyu, J.F. Optimization of Fluidization State of a Circulating Fluidized Bed Boiler for Economical Operation. Energies 2020, 13, 376. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  3. Cheng, L.M.; Qiang, J.J.; Wei, Y.J.; Wang, Q.H.; Fang, M.X.; Luo, Z.Y.; Ni, M.J.; Cen, K.F. A note on large-size supercritical CFB technology development. Powder Technol. 2020, 363, 398–407. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Li, D.F.; Ke, X.W.; Yang, H.R.; Ahn, S.G.; Lyu, J.F.; Jeon, C.H.; Zhang, M. The ash formation and attrition characteristics of an Indonesia lignite coal ash for a 550 MWe ultra supercritical CFB boiler. Chem. Eng. Res. Des. 2019, 147, 579–586. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Basu, P. Combustion of coal in circulating fluidized-bed boilers: A review. Chem. Eng. Sci. 1999, 54, 5547–5557. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Nowak, W.; Mirek, P. Circulating Fluidized Bed Combustion (CFBC), Chapter 16 in. Fluidized Bed Technologies for Near-Zero Emission Combustion and Gasification; Scala, F., Ed.; Woodhead Publishing: London, UK, 2013; Volume 541, pp. 701–764. [Google Scholar]
  7. Oka, S.N. Fluidized Bed Combustion; CRC Press: Boca Raton, FL, USA, 2003. [Google Scholar]
  8. Leckner, B.; Szentannai, P.; Winter, F. Scale-up of fluidized-bed combustion—A review. Fuel 2011, 90, 2951–2965. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Blaszczuk, A.; Nowak, W. Heat transfer behavior inside a furnace chamber of large-scale supercritical CFB reactor. Int. J. Heat Mass Tran. 2015, 87, 464–480. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Zheng, W.J.; Zhang, M.; Zhang, Y.; Lyu, J.F.; Yang, H.R. The effect of the secondary air injection on the gas-solid flow characteristics in the circulating fluidized bed. Chem. Eng. Res. Des. 2019, 141, 220–228. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Kunii, D.; Levenspiel, O. Fluidization Engineering, 2nd ed.; Butterworth-Heinemann Press: Boston, MA, USA, 1991. [Google Scholar]
  12. Svensson, A.; Johnsson, F.; Leckner, B. Bottom bed regimes in a circulating fluidized bed boiler. Int. J. Multiphas. Flow. 1996, 22, 1187–1204. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Peng, Z.B.; Alghamdi, Y.; Moghtaderi, B.; Doroodchi, E. CFD-DEM investigation of transition from segregation to mixing of binary solids in gas fluidised beds. Adv. Powder Technol. 2016, 27, 2342–2353. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Peng, Z.B.; Doroodchi, E.; Alghamdi, Y.; Moghtaderi, B. Mixing and segregation of solid mixtures in bubbling fluidized beds under conditions pertinent to the fuel reactor of a chemical looping system. Powder Technol. 2013, 235, 823–837. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Lin, J.J.; Luo, K.; Wang, S.; Sun, L.Y.; Fan, J.R. Particle-Scale Simulation of Solid Mixing Characteristics of Binary Particles in a Bubbling Fluidized Bed. Energies 2020, 13, 4442. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Peng, Z.B.; Moghtaderi, B.; Doroodchi, E. A simple model for predicting solid concentration distribution in binary-solid liquid fluidized beds. AICHE J. 2017, 63, 469–484. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Doraiswamy, L.K.; Kulkarni, B.D. Transport Processes in Fluidized Bed Reactors, Advances in Transport Processes; Wiley Eastern Limited: New Delhi, India, 1987; Volume VII, p. 242. [Google Scholar]
  18. Hartge, E.U.; Evard, M. Gas distribution via nozzles—Design and operational experience. In Proceedings of the VGB Workshop, Operating Experience with Fluidised Bed Firing Systems, Berlin, Germany, 22–24 September 2004. [Google Scholar]
  19. Johnsson, F.; Larsson, G.; Leckner, B. Pressure and flow fluctuations in a fluidized bed interaction with the air-feed system. Chem. Eng. Sci. 2002, 57, 1379–1392. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Chyang, C.S.; Han, Y.L.; Chien, C.H. Gas dispersion in a rectangular bubbling fluidized bed. J. Taiwan Inst. Chem. Eng. 2010, 41, 195–202. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Mirek, P. Designing of primary air nozzles for large-scale CFB boilers in a combined numerical–experimental approach. Chem. Eng. Process. 2011, 50, 694–701. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Pallarès, D.; Johnsson, F. Time-resolved modeling of gas mixing in fluidized bed units. Fuel Process. Technol. 2015, 134, 73–84. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Sánchez-Prieto, J.; Hernández-Jiménez, F.; Garcia-Gutierrez, L.M.; Soria-Verdugo, A. Experimental study on the characteristic mixing time of solids and its link with the lateral dispersion coefficient in bubbling fluidized beds. Chem. Eng. J. 2017, 307, 113–121. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Liu, D.Y.; Chen, X.P. Lateral solids dispersion coefficient in large-scale fluidized beds. Combust. Flame 2010, 157, 2116–2124. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Liu, D.Y. Experimental and Numerical Researches on the Particle Mixing in Fluidized Beds. Ph.D. Thesis, Southeast University, Nanjing, China, 2011. [Google Scholar]
  26. Liu, D.Y.; Chen, X.P.; Tang, Z.; Zhao, C.-S. Experimental study on the mixing of particles feeding into the bottom of a CFB. J. Eng. Thermophys. 2009, 30, 529–532. [Google Scholar]
  27. Olsson, J.; Pallares, D.; Johnsson, F. Lateral fuel dispersion in a large-scale bubbling fluidized bed. Chem. Eng. Sci. 2012, 74, 148–159. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Hu, N.; Guo, Z.J.; Yang, H.R.; Lyu, J.F.; Pei, Y.F. Experimental study on lateral dispersion coefficient of solid particles in a CFB boiler. J. Chinese Soc. Power Eng. 2016, 36, 168–171. [Google Scholar]
  29. Schlichthaerle, P.; Werther, J. Solids mixing in the bottom zone of a circulating fluidized bed. Powder Technol. 2001, 120, 21–33. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Yang, H.R.; Lyu, J.F.; Liu, Q.; Yue, G.X. A study of the transverse dispersion of solid particles in the dense-phase zone of a circulating fluidized bed boiler. J. Eng. Therm. Power. 2001, 16, 395–398. [Google Scholar]
  31. Gan, L.; Lu, X.F.; Wang, Q.H.; Hu, Q.; Chen, Y.; Xu, J. Experimental study on lateral mixing of particles in a quasi-slot-rectangular spouted bed. Powder Technol. 2013, 243, 1–8. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  32. Oke, O.; Lettieri, P.; Salatino, P.; Solimene, R.; Mazzei, L. Numerical simulations of lateral solid mixing in gas-fluidized beds. Chem. Eng. Sci. 2014, 120, 117–129. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  33. Oke, O.; Wachem, B.V.; Mazzei, L. Lateral solid mixing in gas-fluidized beds: CFD and DEM studies. Chem. Eng. Res. Des. 2016, 114, 148–161. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  34. Chirone, R.; Miccio, F.; Scala, F. On the relevance of axial and transversal fuel segregation during the FB combustion of a biomass. Energy Fuel 2004, 18, 1108–1117. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Yan, J.; Lu, X.F.; Xue, R.; Lu, J.Y.; Zheng, Y.; Zhang, Y.; Liu, Z. Validation and application of CPFD model in simulating gas-solid flow and combustion of a supercritical CFB boiler with improved inlet boundary conditions. Fuel Process. Technol. 2020, 208, 106512. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Lu, X.F. Equipments and Operation of Large-Scale Circulating Fluidized Bed Boiler; Electric Power Press: Beijing, China, 2006. [Google Scholar]
  37. Song, G.L.; Yang, Z.; Zhou, T.; Lyu, Q.G. Operating technical characteristics on asymmetrical arrangement of six cyclones in a 600MW supercritical CFB boiler. Appl. Therm. Eng. 2018, 143, 236–247. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Lu, J.Y.; Lu, X.F.; He, H.H.; Wang, H.; Gan, L.; Zhao, P.; Tang, X.N. Combustion characteristics of the external circulation loop on Baima’s 300 MWe circulating fluidized bed boiler. Energy Fuel 2011, 25, 3456–3464. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Yan, J.; Lu, X.F.; Wang, Q.H.; Kang, Y.H.; Li, J.B.; Xu, Z.; Lei, X.; Zheng, X.; Fan, X.; Liu, Z. Study on the influence of secondary air on the distributions of flue gas composition at the lower part of a 600 MW supercritical CFB boiler. Fuel Process. Technol. 2019, 196, 106035. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Yan, J.; Lu, X.F.; Wang, Q.H.; Kang, Y.H.; Li, J.B.; Zhou, J.; Zhang, Y.; Lv, Z.; Sicong, S. Experimental and numerical study on air flow uniformity in the isobaric windbox of a 600 MW supercritical CFB boiler. Appl. Therm. Eng. 2017, 122, 311–321. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Einstein, A. Investigations on the Theory of the Brownian Movement; Dover Publication: New York, NY, USA, 1956. [Google Scholar]
  42. Štefanica, J.; Hrdlička, J. Experimental Investigation of Radial Gas Dispersion Coefficients in a Fluidized Bed. Acta Polytech. 2012, 52, 97–100. [Google Scholar]
  43. Grace, J.R.; Avidan, A.A.; Knowlton, T.M. Circulating Fluidized Beds; Springer: Heidelberg, Germany, 1997. [Google Scholar]
  44. Cheng, L.M.; Cen, K.F.; Ni, M.J.; Luo, Z.Y. Thermal calculation of a circulating fluidized bed boiler furnace. J. CSEE 2002, 22, 146–151. [Google Scholar]
  45. Boiler Section, Electricity Department, Tsinghua University. Fluidized Combustion Boiler; Science Press: Beijing, China, 1972. [Google Scholar]
  46. Farid, M.M.; Jeong, H.J.; Kim, K.H.; Lee, J.M.; Kim, D.W.; Hwang, J.H. Numerical investigation of particle transport hydrodynamics and coal combustion in an industrial-scale circulating fluidized bed combustor: Effects of coal feeder positions and coal feeding rates. Fuel 2017, 192, 187–200. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of the 600 MW CFB boiler (1-slag cooler; 2-material returning device; 3-coal feeding route; 4-coal bunker; 5-storage tank; 6-steam separator; 7-cyclone separator; 8-flue duct; 9–11-external heat exchangers (EHEs); 12-secondary air duct; 13-ignition duct; 14-economizer; 15-low temperature reheater; 16-low temperature superheater).
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of the 600 MW CFB boiler (1-slag cooler; 2-material returning device; 3-coal feeding route; 4-coal bunker; 5-storage tank; 6-steam separator; 7-cyclone separator; 8-flue duct; 9–11-external heat exchangers (EHEs); 12-secondary air duct; 13-ignition duct; 14-economizer; 15-low temperature reheater; 16-low temperature superheater).
Energies 13 06336 g001
Figure 2. A schematic diagram of the upper/lower measurement ports and the air/coal feeding positions in adjacent zones ((a)-measurement ports from front view at the rear wall; (b)-measurement port from vertical view; (c)-arrangements of the secondary air and coal feeding port/ash returning port; ILSA-inner lower SA; IUSA-inner upper SA; OUSA-outer upper SA).
Figure 2. A schematic diagram of the upper/lower measurement ports and the air/coal feeding positions in adjacent zones ((a)-measurement ports from front view at the rear wall; (b)-measurement port from vertical view; (c)-arrangements of the secondary air and coal feeding port/ash returning port; ILSA-inner lower SA; IUSA-inner upper SA; OUSA-outer upper SA).
Energies 13 06336 g002
Figure 3. Particle size distributions of the feeding coal under various working conditions.
Figure 3. Particle size distributions of the feeding coal under various working conditions.
Energies 13 06336 g003
Figure 4. A schematic diagram of the lateral fuel dispersion process based on the local heat balance method ((a) materials involved in the combustion and heat transfer during solid dispersion; (b) dispersion flux of fuel particles passing through cells).
Figure 4. A schematic diagram of the lateral fuel dispersion process based on the local heat balance method ((a) materials involved in the combustion and heat transfer during solid dispersion; (b) dispersion flux of fuel particles passing through cells).
Energies 13 06336 g004
Figure 5. Distributions of flue gas composition along the horizontal direction of the upper measurement port under various working conditions ((a) O2; (b) CO; (c) SO2; (d) NOx; red circled points represent the position that fuel particles are bound to reach).
Figure 5. Distributions of flue gas composition along the horizontal direction of the upper measurement port under various working conditions ((a) O2; (b) CO; (c) SO2; (d) NOx; red circled points represent the position that fuel particles are bound to reach).
Energies 13 06336 g005aEnergies 13 06336 g005b
Figure 6. Distributions of mixed bed temperature along the horizontal direction of the lower measurement port at various cases.
Figure 6. Distributions of mixed bed temperature along the horizontal direction of the lower measurement port at various cases.
Energies 13 06336 g006
Figure 7. Comparison of lateral fuel dispersion coefficients based on the dispersion model and the local heat balance method.
Figure 7. Comparison of lateral fuel dispersion coefficients based on the dispersion model and the local heat balance method.
Energies 13 06336 g007
Figure 8. A schematic diagram of the 300 MW CFB boiler under the condition of local coal cut-off.
Figure 8. A schematic diagram of the 300 MW CFB boiler under the condition of local coal cut-off.
Energies 13 06336 g008
Table 1. Some work predicting the lateral dispersion coefficient of solids in fluidization systems.
Table 1. Some work predicting the lateral dispersion coefficient of solids in fluidization systems.
RefTechniqueStateBed Size (m)Disp. Coeff. (m2/s)
Liu [26]Thermal tracer Cold0.3 × 0.20.00025–0.0025
Olsson [27]Phosphorescent particle trackingCold1.440.00024–0.00124
Hu [28]Thermal tracer Cold0.8 × 1.20.06–0.4
Schlichthaerle [29]Sublimating CO2/thermal tracerCold1 × 0.30.12
Yang [30]Thermal tracer Cold0.9 × 0.10.0032–0.0126
Gan [31]Particle size tracer Cold0.9 × 0.20.0005–0.0025
Oke [32]Euler-EulerCold0.01 × (0.2–1)0.001–0.0135
Oke [33]CFD-DEMCold0.05 × 0.60.00015–0.025
Chirone [34]CFD-DEMThermalD = 0.37/
Table 2. Main operating parameters of the boiler during the tests.
Table 2. Main operating parameters of the boiler during the tests.
ItemUnitCase 1Case 2Case 3Case 4
LoadMW360360451600
Coal feeding ratet/h158166202264
Bed heightmm8001000800800
PA flow ratem3/s129138142163
SA flow ratem3/s117109165227
Bed pressurekPa6.77.16.85.3
Temperature of hot circulating ash°C849850868916
Table 3. Proximate analysis of the feeding coal under various working conditions (Aad-ash; Mad-moisture; Vad-volatiles; Fcad-fixed carbon @ air dry basis, wt%).
Table 3. Proximate analysis of the feeding coal under various working conditions (Aad-ash; Mad-moisture; Vad-volatiles; Fcad-fixed carbon @ air dry basis, wt%).
ItemUnitCase 1Case 2Case 3Case 4
Qnet,adMJ/kg19.2519.8320.8120.94
Aad%18.1217.9217.3917.86
Mad%11.6311.0212.412.6
Vad%21.3221.3718.617.48
Fcad%48.9349.6951.6152.06
Table 4. Temperature distributions and calculated lateral fuel dispersion coefficients under the coal cut-off condition.
Table 4. Temperature distributions and calculated lateral fuel dispersion coefficients under the coal cut-off condition.
Item#1#2#3
Bed temperature (°C)797875903
Temperature of circulating ash (°C)735831912
Dsr (m2/s)0.120.16/
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Yan, J.; Lu, X.; Zheng, X.; Xue, R.; Lei, X.; Fan, X.; Liu, S. Experimental Investigations on Lateral Dispersion Coefficients of Fuel Particles in Large-Scale Circulating Fluidized Bed Boilers with Different Coal Feeding Modes. Energies 2020, 13, 6336. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13236336

AMA Style

Yan J, Lu X, Zheng X, Xue R, Lei X, Fan X, Liu S. Experimental Investigations on Lateral Dispersion Coefficients of Fuel Particles in Large-Scale Circulating Fluidized Bed Boilers with Different Coal Feeding Modes. Energies. 2020; 13(23):6336. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13236336

Chicago/Turabian Style

Yan, Jin, Xiaofeng Lu, Xiong Zheng, Rui Xue, Xiujian Lei, Xuchen Fan, and Shirong Liu. 2020. "Experimental Investigations on Lateral Dispersion Coefficients of Fuel Particles in Large-Scale Circulating Fluidized Bed Boilers with Different Coal Feeding Modes" Energies 13, no. 23: 6336. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13236336

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop