Ash and ash deposition for solid fuels Bengt-Johan Skrifvars FPK II, ÅA, 2018

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1 Ash and ash deposition for solid fuels Bengt-Johan Skrifvars FPK II, ÅA, 2018

2 Ash and ash deposition for solid fuels Content 1. Ash related problems Principles Facts 2. Co-firing 3. Corrosion 4. Summary

3 Why? Ash related problems Slagging, fouling and corrosion most important single reason for unscheduled shut downs of boilers Fireside deposits on heat exchanger tubes - decreased heat transfer to steam/water side - increased pressure drop in fluegas channel - corrosion of heat exchanger tubes Emission problem Trace elements, health risk

4 Amager Power Station: Pendant SH after 1 week of Coal-Firing /F.Frandsen DTU Ash Chemistry Course, October 1998/

5 Ash related problems Depend on - fuel ash content and type - boiler type and operation Fireside deposits and corrosion - all types of boilers Bed agglomeration - fluidized bed boilers Trace emissions - all types of boilers

6 Ash and ash deposition for solid fuels Content 1. Ash related problems Principles Facts 2. Co-firing 3. Corrosion 4. Summary

7 Slagging, fouling Fly ash separation Transportation, transformation, reactions Fuel Air Additives Release of ash forming elements Bottom ash Pathways of ash forming elements entering a boiler

8 Formation of a troublesome deposit: Fuel Formation of ash particles Transportation of ash particles to a surface Adhesion of ash particles to a surface Densification of ash particles on a surface

9 Formation of a troublesome deposit: Fuel Formation of ash particles Transportation of ash particles to a surface Adhesion of ash particles to a surface Densification of ash particles on a surface

10 Ash-forming elements in a fuel Ash = incombustible rest Quality & quantity depends on fuel Major elements: Si, Al, Fe, Ti, Ca, Mg, Mn, P, Na, K, S, Cl Minor elements (trace elements, EU heavy metals): As, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Hg, Mn, Ni, Pb, Sb, Tl, V

11 Ash-forming elements in a fuel Expressed often as weight-% oxides in ash Si SiO 2 Mn MnO Al Al 2 O 3 P P 2 O 5 Fe Fe 2 O 3 Na Na 2 O Ti TiO 2 K K 2 O Ca CaO S SO 3 Mg MgO Cl Cl Elements as oxides in ash is an assumption everything in the fuel has oxidized If all elements have been analyzed oxide sum = 100 %

12 Ash-forming elements in a fuel Minerals: - included minerals - excluded minerals - Si, Al, Fe, Ca, Mg, Na, K, S Included mineals Excluded minerals Organically associated: - Ca, Mg, K, Na, S Na + O - O Org S Water soluble: - Na, K, S, Cl H 2 O-soluble salts

13 Summary Ash-forming elements in a fuel FUEL ORGANICALLY MINERAL ASSOCIATED PART Brown coal 30 % 70 % Bit. coal 15 % 85 % Antrasite 5 % 95 % Wood 100 % 0 % Bark 98 % 2 % Annual biom. 98 % 2 % Oil 100 % 0 % Waste derive % %

14 Formation of a troublesome deposit: Fuel Formation of ash particles Transportation of ash particles to a surface Adhesion of ash particles to a surface Densification of ash particles on a surface

15 Homogeneous nucleation Coagulation Heterogeneous condensation Fly ash mm Mineral inclusions Convective transport Vaporization Excluded minerals Pyrolysis Char burning and fragmentation Formation of fly ash from coal /Flagan & Seinfield 1988/ Mineral coalescence and fragmentation Fly ash mm

16 Mass concentration frequency dm/d(logdp) g m Minerals Particles condensed from gas phase (aerosols) mm Particle size dp Mass-size distribution of fly ash from PC coal combustion /Flagan & Seinfield 1988/

17 Mass concentration frequency, dm/d(logdp)?? g/m 3???

18 Number Number frequency frequency Let s consider: 1000 particles 0 50 mm size nbr 0-4 mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm 18 S /Hinds, W: Aerosol technology 2 nd Ed. Wiley & Sons, 1999/ Particle size, mm

19 Number frequency/size 1000 particles 0 50 mm nbr size nbr size 0-4 mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm S 1000 mm Particle size, mm

20 Number fraction/size 1000 particles 0 50 mm nbr nbr fract size nbr size size 0-4 mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm S 1000 mm dn/d(dp) = f(dp) Particle size, mm

21 Mass fraction/size 1/mm mg of particles 0 50 mm mass mass mass fract size (mg) size size 0-4 mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm S dm/d(dp) = f(dp) Particle size, mm

22 Concentration frequency/size 1000 mg/nm 3 of particles 0 50 mm conc conc/size size (mg/nm 3 ) (mg/nm 3 /mm) 0-4 mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm S 1000 mg/(nm 3 mm) dc/d(dp) = f(dp) Particle size, mm

23 Mass concentration frequency dm/d(logdp) mg Nm mm Particle size dp Mass-size distribution of fly ash from PC coal combustion /Jokiniemi & Kauppinen, 1995/

24 Mass concentration frequency, dm/d(logdp) = - average mass of particles within a certain particle size range - particle size range expressed on a log-scale - may be treated mathematically as a frequency function for ex. total mass concentration = total area under the curve mass concentration within a certain range log(dp) 0 f(log(dp)d(log(dp))) g/m 3 = - should actually be g/m 3 /1 since the term log(dp) is in the denominator

25 Mass concentration frequency dm/d(logdp) mg Nm mm Particle size dp Mass-size distribution of fly ash from PC coal combustion /Jokiniemi & Kauppinen, 1995/

26 ~10 µm r p : particle density C(dp): Cunningham slip factor function v: jet velocity dp: particle diameter m: gas viscosity W: jet diameter Stk = r p C(dp) v dp 2 9 m W ~10 nm Particle size-distribution measurements with a low-pressure cascade impactor /Berner 1972/

27 Number concentration frequency dn/d(logdp) 1 cm 3 1E+08 1E+07 1E+06 1E+05 1E Particle size dp mg Nm mm Mass concentration frequency dm/d(logdp) Number-size and mass-size distribution of fly ash from PC coal combustion /Jokiniemi & Kauppinen, 1995/

28 Particle size plots - number-size distribution, mass-size distribution, or concentration-size distribution - expressed often as a frequency-per-size function - x-axis particle size range often expressed on a log-scale - y-axis numbers do not express directly number-, mass-, or concentration values. Particle size measurements - Low pressure cascade impactor useful - Gives mass vs size or number vs size information ~10 nm 10 mm

29 Formation of ash particles Ash formation from other fuels, indications from coal: High amount of organically associated minerals a lot of sub-micron sized fly ash particles High amount of excluded minerals a lot of larger fly ash particles

30 Formation of a troublesome deposit: Fuel Formation of ash particles Transportation of ash particles to a surface Adhesion of ash particles to a surface Densification of ash particles on a surface

31 Transport of ash particles to a surface Diffusion small particles (< mm) Impaction large particles (> mm) /Hedley et al., Samms et al. 1966/

32 Transport of ash particles to a surface Diffusion - small particles (< 0.1 mm) - diffusion in direction of concentration gradient (Fick s law) Thermophoresis - small particles (< 5 mm) - diffusion in direction of temperature gradient Inertial impaction - large particles (> 5 mm) - dependent on gas velocity - angle of impact

33 Temperature Particle net movement gas molecule movements small ash particle gas molecule movements The physics of thermophoresis

34 Transport of ash particles in a boiler Large particles Small particles

35 Transport of ash particles to a surface Summary Diffusion - small particles (< 0.1 mm) - diffusion down the concentration gradient (Fick s law) - Termophoresis one diffusion mechanism in heat gradient direction Impaction - large particles (> 5 mm) - dependent of gas velocity & particle mass

36 Formation of a troublesome deposit: Fuel Formation of ash particles Transportation of ash particles to a surface Adhesion of ash particles to a surface Densification of ash particles on a surface

37 2-component phase diagram o C Liquid T NaCl(s)+ L Na 2 SO 4 (s)+l 600 NaCl(s)+Na 2 SO 4 (s) T NaCl mol-% Na 2 SO 4

38 Amount of melt = Amount of solid = o C Lever-rule A - B C - B A - C C - B x 100 % x 100 % Liquid Bulk composition = A Liquid composition = C Solid composition = B T Na 2 SO 4 (s)+l NaCl(s)+ L C A B NaCl(s)+Na 2 SO 4 (s) T NaCl mol-% Na 2 SO 4

39 Amount of melt, w-% Amount of melt vs temperature mol-% Na 2 SO 4 15 mol-% NaCl Temperature, ( C)

40 Deposit at its initial growth T fluegas 1000 o C T sticky, sticky temperature silicates, glas, slag : viscosity < 10 5 dpa s /Walsh et al 1990/ 450 o C T steam T sticky low-viscous melt: melt amount > 15 % /Backman et al 1987/

41 Deposit at its equilibrium thickness T flow T fluegas 1000 o C T flow, flow temperature silicates, glas, slag : viscosity < 10 5 dpa s /Walsh et al 1990/ 450 o C T steam low-viscous melt: melt amount > 70 % /Backman et al 1987/

42 Amount of melt, w-% Melting behavior of different alkali salts T 70 T Temperature, o C

43 Deposit thickness, mm 10 Deposit equilibrium thickness T 15 T Temperature, o C

44 Deposit thickness, mm Deposit equilibrium thicknesses for various compositions 10 8 T 15 = 850 o C, T 70 = 900 o C T 15 = 710 o C, T 70 = 830 o C T 15 = 530 o C, T 70 = 690 o C Temperature, o C

45 Adhesion of ash particles to a surface Amount of melt dominating reason for - large impacting particles (> 10 mm) - front side of tubes (wind side) Physical & physico-chemical forces important for - small particles (< 1 mm) - electrostatic forces, van der Waal s forces - around the tube (both wind & lee) Chemical reactions in the deposit sometimes important - Ca particles reactive with SO 2 & CO 2

46 Formation of a troublesome deposit: Fuel Formation of ash particles Transportation of ash particles to a surface Adhesion of ash particles to a surface Densification of ash particles on a surface

47 Densification of ash particles Sintering - small amount of freezing melt, partial melting - slow flowing of amorphous glas -phase viscous flow sintering - chemical reactions between particles and gas - solid particles growing together solid state sintering

48 Ash related problems - Principles - Summary Large effect from used fuel (what is fed into the boiler) ash composition (how the feed behaves thermally) flow field (where the particles go) temperature (amount of melt)

49 Ash and ash deposition for solid fuels Content 1. Ash related problems Principles Facts 2. Co-firing 3. Corrosion 4. Summary

50 Opportunity fuels Annual biomasses Forrest residues & prunings Agricultural rests, -shells Olive residues Sorted wastes Sludges Coal slurry, pet coke Others MBM (meat and bone meal) Solid animal excrement

51 ÅA fuel database Analyzed per wood bark fuels 46 wood based fuels (trunk, forest residues, construction residues) 11 annual biomass fuels 18 peats 15 coals 37 other (sorted wastes, sludges, biomassbased wastes, chicken litter) TOT 145 fuels

52 Analyzing ash forming elements in a fuel Conventional - done on the ash of the fuel - ashing + element analysis from ash - all other elements except S & Cl - ashing affects the analysis Advanced - done directly on fuel - dissolving of fuel + element analysis of solution - all elements - no ashing For ex. selective leaching (=chemical fractionation) various microscopic methods (SEM/EDS, CCSEM) others

53 Stepwise leaching /Benson & Holm 1985, Baxter 1994, Zevenhoven 2001/ Total mineral matter - all major ash-forming elements H 2 O Water leachible - alkali sulfates/carbonates/chlorides NH 4 Ac Buffer solution leachible - organically associated HCl Acid leachible - carbonates/sulfates Rest - silicates, unsoluble rest

54 Stepwise leaching /Benson & Holm 1985, Baxter 1994, Zevenhoven 2001/ Total mineral matter All major ash-forming elements Easily soluble Water leachible - alkali sulfates/carbonates/chlorides Buffer solution leachible - organically associated Mineral part Acid leachible - carbonates/sulfates Rest - silicates, unsoluble rest

55 Ash forming elements, g/kg dry fuel Stepwise leaching /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ Leached in H 2 O Leached in Acetate Leached in HCl Rest fraction Untreated fuel 267 g/kg 312 g/kg Coal Peat Bark Wood AB Other

56 Ash-forming elements, weight-% d.b. Ash forming elements, g/kg d.b. 30 Ash-forming elements in fuels /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ Wood Forest res. Bark Const res. An. biom. Peat Coal Others 0

57 Ash-forming elements, weight-% d.b. Ash forming elements, g/kg d.b. 30 Ash-forming elements in fuels /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ Ash-forming elements, easily soluble Ash-forming elements, mineral part Wood Forest res. Bark Const res. An. biom. Peat Coal Others 0

58 Sulphur in fuel, mg/kg d.b Sulphur in fuels /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ Wood Forest res. Bark Const res. An. biom. Peat Coal Others

59 Chlorine in fuel, mg/kg d.b Chlorine in fuels /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ Wood Forest res. Bark Const res. An. biom. Peat Coal Others

60 Potassium in fuel, mg/kg d.b Potassium in fuels /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ Potassium, easily soluble Potassium, mineral part 0 Wood Forest res. Bark Const res. An. biom. Peat Coal Others

61 Sodium in fuel, mg/kg d.b Sodium, easily soluble Sodium, mineral part Sodium in fuels /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ Wood Forest res. Bark Const res. An. biom. Peat Coal Others

62 Calcium in fuel, mg/kg d.b Calcium, easily soluble Calcium, mineral part Calcium in fuels /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ Wood Forest res. Bark Const res. An. biom. Peat Coal Others

63 Silicon in fuel, mg/kg d.b Silicon, easily soluble Silicon, mineral part Silicon in fuels /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ 0 Wood Forest res. Bark Const res. An. biom. Peat Coal Others

64 EU heavy metals in fuel, mg/kg d.b EU heavy metals in fuels /ÅA fuel database, 2006/ Wood Forest res. Bark Const res. An. biom. Peat Coal Others

65 Summary Opportunity fuels Opportunity fuels challenging, from an ash point-of-view don not necessarily increase the ash amount increase clearly ash aggressiveness High Chlorine, Alkali (Na, K), Calcium sulphur, silicon as in conventional fuels ( heavy metals higher than ) in conventional fuels

66 Ash and ash deposition for solid fuels Content 1. Ash related problems Principles Facts 2. Co-firing 3. Corrosion 4. Summary

67 Contractual fuels in the large FBC deliveries Wood based 16/23 Peat 10/23 Coal 8/23 Sludges 8/23 Pet Coke 4/23 Co-firing vs single-fuel-firing 20 vs 3 /Hupa 2003; FBC plenary session/

68 Slagging & Fouling Co-firing, effect on slagging & fouling Fuel A 50% Fuel B /Hupa 2003; FBC plenary session/

69 Deposition, g/m 2 h Co-firing, effect on slagging & fouling Deposit probe measurements Full-scale BFB h 10h Bark share in rice husk, weight-% /Skrifvars et al 2004; Energy & Fuels/

70 Deposition, g/m 2 h Full-scale deposit probe measurements - Deposition vs fuel mix - /ÅA deposit probe measurements, 2006/ Biomass Thermal share Peat or Coal

71 Deposition, g/m 2 h) Peat/straw co-firing lab-scale drop-tube tests Peat Share of straw in peat, weight-% Straw /Theis 2006; Dr thesis /

72 Deposition, g/m 2 h Cl & S in fuel vs deposition - lab-tests Peat-straw Peat-bark 2 KCl + SO 2 + ½ O 2 + H 2 O K 2 SO HCl Molar ratio of Cl/S in fuel 72 /Theis 2006; Dr thesis /

73 Cl in deposit, weight-% Full-scale deposit probe measurements - Cl i deposit vs fuel mix - /ÅA deposit probe measurements, 2006/ Wind Lee Biomass Thermal share Peat or coal

74 Co-firing Summary seldom a linear ash behavior co-firing worse than single-fuel-firing if fuel ashes cause a melt when mixed together silicate-based ashes may function as cleaning agents, through an erosive effect sulphur may stop chlorine from getting into deposits

75 Ash and ash deposition for solid fuels Content 1. Ash related problems Principles Facts 2. Co-firing 3. Corrosion 4. Summary

76 Traditional corrosion protection of steel Compact steel-oxide layer - protects from further oxidation - requires the presence of oxygen Steel

77 Traditional corrosion protection of steel Does not work if - the steel-oxide layer breaks - oxygen is abscent - the steel-oxide layer is porpous Steel

78 Traditional corrosion protection of steel Usually handleled by materials people only Novel thinking needed - challenging interface, steel-deposit-gas - chemistry-physics-engineering

79 Other low melting compounds (Ni-P, V 2 O 5, MoO 3, etc.) Sulfidation High-temperature corrosion mechanisms Sulfur Low melting compounds OXYGEN O 2 CO/CO 2 H 2 /H 2 O Carburization Carbon Molten salts corrosion Molten salts /Salmenoja 2001, Dr Thesis/

80 Corrosion caused by Chlorine Fe Cl S /Salmenoja 2001, Dr Thesis/

81 /Westen-Karlsson 2008, Lic. Thesis/ ÅA, laboratory-scale corrosion tests Before Heat treatment After Heat treatment For SEManalysis

82 Corrosion layer thickness, (µm) /Westen-Karlsson 2008, Lic. Thesis/ ÅA, laboratory-scale corrosion tests - SEM analysis Mean, median, most frequent, max Cross-section, mm

83 Corrosion layer thickness, mm /Skrifvars et al, Corr. Sci. 2008/ ÅA, laboratory-scale corrosion tests (Na, K) 2 SO p-% Cl Synthetic ash T 0 = 834 o C 0% Cl 10% K

84 Corrosion layer thickness, mm /Skrifvars et al, Corr. Sci. 2008/ ÅA, laboratory-scale corrosion tests (Na, K) 2 SO p-% Cl 140 Synthetic ash 120 T 0 = 526 o C % Cl 10% K

85 Corrosion layer thickness, mm /Skrifvars et al, Corr. Sci. 2008/ ÅA, laboratory-scale corrosion tests (Na, K) 2 SO p-% Cl 140 Synthetic ash 120 T 0 = 522 o C % Cl 10% K

86 Cl in deposit, weight-% Deposit probe measurements, full-scale boilers - Cl in deposit vs probe surface temperature /ÅA deposit meaurements database, 2006/ Probe surface temperature, o C? Wind Lee

87 Corrosion Summary alkali chlorides enhance corrosion strongly already a small amount of Cl increases corrosion sulphur may stop chlorine to get into the deposit increase of steam temperature very challenging

88 Ash and ash deposition for solid fuels Content 1. Ash related problems Principles Facts 2. Co-firing 3. Corrosion 4. Summary

89 Summary 1(4) From ash-forming elements to deposits Strong influence of fuel fired (what is fed into the boiler) ash composition (how the element react to ash in the boiler) flow fields (where the ash particles flow/impact) temperature (amount of melt in the ash/deposit)

90 Summary 2(4) New fuels, Opportunity fuels challenging, from an ash point-of-view don not necessarily increase the ash amount increase clearly ash agressiveness High Chlorine, Alkali (Na, K), Calcium sulphur, silicon as in conventional fuels ( heavy metals higher than ) in conventional fuels

91 Summary 3(4) Co-firing seldom a linear ash behavior co-firing worse than single-fuel-firing if fuel ashes cause a melt when mixed together silicate-based ashes may function as cleaning agents, through an erosive effect sulphur may stop chlorine from getting into deposits

92 Summary 4(4) Corrosion alkali chlorides enhence corrosion strongly already a small amount of Cl increases corrosion sulphur may stop chlorine to get into the deposit increase of steam temperature very challenging

93 Acknowledgments Prof. Rainer University of Umeå Assoc. Prof. Flemming University of Denmark Dr. Mischa Germany Prof. Mikko Hupa Mr. Tor Laurén Mr. Linus Silvander Dr. Johan Werkelin Dr. Patrik Yrjas Dr. Maria Akademi University Ms. Micaela