Font Size: a A A

Formation and destruction of nitric oxide in fuel-rich combustion: Reburning

Posted on:1991-01-31Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical CollegeCandidate:Burch, Thomas EmmettFull Text:PDF
GTID:1472390017452040Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
The effect of fuel type on reburning of a simulated flue gas containing 1000 ppm of NO is studied. Stable nitrogen species concentrations are provided for reburning experiments with five fuels in a premixed, laminar flow reactor. The reactor was operated at atmospheric pressure and gave a maximum gas temperature of approximately 1100{dollar}spcirc{dollar}C for a residence time near 0.2 seconds. The experimental facility used to collect this data is described including a novel coal feeding device. A new gas chromatographic method used to analyze fixed-nitrogen species is described.; For each of the five fuels, the fixed-nitrogen speciation as a function of stoichiometry is studied. The first three fuels, methane, hexane, and benzene, demonstrate the influence of fuel type on homogeneous gas-phase nitrogen chemistry. The last two fuels, lignite coal and bituminous coal, introduce heterogeneous and catalytic effects as well as fuel-bound nitrogen. For lignite coal, the heterogeneous reduction of NO on char and the catalytic conversion of HCN to NH{dollar}sb3{dollar} are shown to be important contributors to N{dollar}sb2{dollar} formation.; For lignite coal and bituminous coal the gas-phase nitrogen speciation is separated by origin using isotopically labelled N{dollar}sp{lcub}15{rcub}{dollar}O and GC/MS for isotope separation. Probability analysis is used to show that significant NO reduction occurs through non-NO mechanisms. Nitrogen evolution for both coals is observed to be delayed beyond the onset of NO conversion to N{dollar}sb2{dollar}.
Keywords/Search Tags:Coal, Nitrogen
Related items