Effect of granulation on chlorine-release behavior during municipal solid waste incineration.

RSC Adv

Jiangsu Provincial Key Laboratory of Materials Cycling and Pollution Control, School of Energy and Mechanical Engineering, Nanjing Normal University Nanjing 210023 China.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Refuse-derived fuel (RDF) is a useful way to manage rural municipal waste, but burning it releases chlorine, leading to pollution and corrosion issues.
  • In combustion tests at different temperatures, organic chlorine was released below 800 °C, while inorganic chlorine was released above 900 °C, with granulation pressure affecting release timing and amounts.
  • Calcium-based additives, particularly CaO, significantly improved dechlorination, achieving over 90% efficiency at 900 °C; however, their effectiveness was influenced by granulation pressure during heating.

Article Abstract

The preparation of refuse-derived fuel (RDF) is an effective and simple means of rural municipal solid waste utilization. The release of chlorine during RDF combustion is important as it causes high-temperature corrosion and pollutants emission such as HCl, dioxins, In this paper, constant-temperature and increasing-temperature combustion experiments were carried out using an electrically heating furnace to analyse the effects of granulation (pressure and additives) on the release of chlorine in particles. During the constant-temperature combustion below 800 °C, only organic chlorine was released from the RDF. The increase of granulation pressure from 1 MPa to 10 MPa did not affect the total amount of chlorine release, but delayed the organic chlorine release by increasing the gas diffusion resistance. During the constant-temperature combustion above 900 °C, inorganic chlorine was released as well. The increase of granulation pressure enhanced the inorganic chlorine release significantly by promoting the reactants contact. During the increasing-temperature combustion, the increase of granulation pressure delayed the organic chlorine release as well but inhibited the inorganic chlorine release. This was mainly attributed to the slow temperature rise to 900 °C, during which the inherent calcium in the RDF reacted with silicon and aluminium, resulting in less reactants for an inorganic chlorine release reaction. Three calcium-based additives were used to inhibit chlorine release. CaCO showed no dechlorination effect, and CaO showed better dechlorination effect than Ca(OH). For the constant-temperature combustion at 900 °C, the addition of CaO with a Ca/Cl ratio of 2 achieved a dechlorination efficiency of over 90%, with little influence from the granulation pressure. For the increasing-temperature combustion, the granulation pressure had a significant influence on CaO dechlorination effectiveness. Only at a granulation pressure as high as 10 MPa, did the addition of CaO with the Ca/Cl ratio of 2.5 achieve a dechlorination efficiency of 95%.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10441276PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra04615jDOI Listing

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