The insufficient
capacity of a conventional electrostatic precipitator
for fine-particle control limited the realization of ultralow emission
in coal-fired power plants. Focused on this problem, the study described
here reveals the design of a lab-scaled wet electrostatic precipitator
(WESP) and the investigation of its removal performance for fine particles.
The atomization of charged water drops was adopted to replace the
traditional water film and mechanical atomization. Experiments for
particle removal were conducted under controlled electric field intensities,
water flow rates, residence time, and dust concentrations. The results
demonstrated that the charged droplets effectively improved the corona
current and particle removal efficiency compared with that of the
dry ESP, and the advantage was increasingly apparent with increasing
applied voltage and water supply. The efficiency difference between
the ESPs with and without charged droplets increased from 1 to 17%
as the electric field intensity increased from 2 to 5 kV/cm. Longer
residence time coupled with a higher applied voltage led to an improvement
in collection performance, while the removal efficiency was elevated
to 97.70–99.09% from 89.91–94.94% as they enhanced from
2.14 s and 2 kV/cm to 4.04 s and 5 kV/cm. Moreover, increasing the
dust concentration caused two opposite trends: the removal efficiency
first increased to an inflection point and then decreased gradually
due to the combined mechanisms of particle agglomeration and suppression
of the corona current. Notably, the combination of charged water drop
atomization and an electric field largely decreased the water consumption
while keeping the comparable removal efficiencies with conventional
WESPs.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.