Energy & Fuels, Vol.15, No.3, 680-690, 2001
Behavior off chlorine and enrichment of risky elements in bubbling fluidized bed combustion of biomass and waste assisted by additives
High contents of chlorine and alkalies restrict the use of biomass in energy production. Alkali chlorides vaporize during combustion. Chlorine tends to produce corrosive deposits and unacceptably high emissions of HCl and dioxins. Chlorine recovery and enrichment of Cl, Na, K, Ca, Al, and Si in coarse and fine fly ash were studied experimentally with two electrically stabilized bubbling fluidized bed (BFB) reactors capable of reproducing the particle residence times existing in full-scale BFB plants. Feedstocks were fir (mixture of heartwood and bark), paper sludge, and blends; of fir with agricultural waste or plastic waste. Sulfur concentrations of feed components were low (<0.5 wt %), while chlorine and potassium concentrations ranged widely (0.02-3.2 wt % for Cl and 0.07-3.1 wt % for K). Aluminum-containing additives (kaolin, bauxite and fly ash from a pulverized coal plant) and limestone were added to the feedstocks at various dosages to evaluate their influence on Cl behavior and enrichment of the elements of interest. HCl was measured by FTIR and wet-absorption methods. Different ash samples (bed, cyclone and filter ash) were characterized for their Cl content and the major ash-forming constituents. CI was completely volatilized from bed ash and recovered only in coarse (cyclone) and fine (filter) fly ash fractions. AZ-containing additives increased HCl formation and decreased Cl concentration in the fly ash. In the case of AI-Si based additives, evidence was found of the formation of alkali aluminum silicates from alkali chlorides. The aluminum silicates were transferred mainly to the-coarse fly ash fraction. AI-based additives also seemed to liberate CI from alkali chlorides with reactions forming water-soluble alkali compounds. Limestone had the opposite effect to the AI-containing additives by binding CI from gas phase to fly ash, but mainly to the coarse fly ash fraction. The results will be useful in optimizing the behavior of chlorine in bubbling bed combustion of Cl- and alkali-containing biomass.