A KINETIC EVALUATION ON NO2 FORMATION IN THE POST-FLAME REGION OF PRESSURIZED OXY-COMBUSTION PROCESS

4Citations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Pressurized oxy-combustion is a promising technology that can significantly reduce the energy penalty associated with first generation oxy-combustion for CO2 capture in coal-fired power plants. However, higher pressure enhances the production of strong acid gases, including NO2 and SO3, aggravating the corrosion threat during flue gas re-circulation. In the flame region, high temperature NOx exists mainly as NO, while conversion from NO to NO2 happened in post-flame region. In this study, the conversion of NO NO2 has been kinetically evaluated under representative post-flame conditions of pressurized oxy-combustion after validating the mechanism (80 species and 464 reactions), which includes nitrogen and sulfur chemistry based on GRI-MECH 3.0. The effects of residence time, temperature, pressure, major species (O2/H2O), and minor or trace species (CO/SOx) on NO2 formation are studied. The calculation results show that when pressure is increased from 1 to 15 bar, NO2 is increased from 1 to 60 ppm, and the acid dew point increases by over 80 °C. Higher pressure and temperature greatly reduce the time required to reach equilibrium. With increasing pressure and decreasing temperature, O plays a much more important role than HO2 in the oxidation of NO. A higher water vapor content accelerates NO2 formation in all cases by providing more O and HO2 radicals. The addition of CO or SO2 also promotes the formation of NO2. The NO2 formation in a pressurized oxy-combustion furnace can be over 10 times that of an atmospheric air-combustion furnace.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wang, X., Dai, G., Yablonsky, G. S., Vujanović, M., & Axelbaum, R. L. (2021). A KINETIC EVALUATION ON NO2 FORMATION IN THE POST-FLAME REGION OF PRESSURIZED OXY-COMBUSTION PROCESS. Thermal Science, 25(4 Part A), 2609–2620. https://doi.org/10.2298/TSCI200415236W

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free