Inorganic vapors and their condensation
can lead to severe operational
problems in pulverized fuel systems such as integrated gasification
and combined-cycle power plants or a conventional pulverized fuel
combustion system. In order to understand these phenomena, a laboratory-scale
cooling line for hot gases is used to measure and quantify the deposition
of alkali vapors caused by heterogeneous condensation on a horizontal
probe. The cooling line consists of two zones, an isothermal evaporation
zone for the vaporization of alkali salts and a condensation zone.
A condensation probe equipped with steel rings is placed inside the
condensation zone with a gradually decreasing temperature. Different
concentrations of inorganic vapors are studied under controlled conditions,
and condensation rates on a probe, maintained at different temperatures,
are quantified. A computational fluid dynamics model
is developed and used to validate a heterogeneous condensation model
based on Ficks’ law of diffusion. Numerical modeling can predict
the location and amount of condensed inorganic vapors. The model shows
a high sensitivity to the wall temperature which needs to be predicted
accurately. A calculation procedure for saturation pressures and diffusion
coefficients for gaseous alkali salts is presented and discussed.
With this fundamental model it is possible to predict condensation
rates of inorganic vapors. The model can also be applied for the calculation
of condensation of vapors on existing fly ash particles. The model
is essential for the prediction of hot gas cleaning systems for future
integrated gasification combined-cycle plants or the formation of
an initial layer on a superheater tube in pulverized fuel boilers
firing alkali-rich biomass. The present study can serve as a development
case for simplified empirical models in which the boundary layer is
not resolved with a high number of nodes, e.g., for a model of a full-scale
boiler.
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