Login Icon  Customer Login
Basket Icon  Shopping Basket
There are no items in your basket.

Reducing carbon-in-ash, CCC/167

Author(s): Nigel S Dong

Price: £255.00


Ref: CCC/167
ISBN: 978-92-9029-487-0
Published Date: 05/08/2010

No. of Tables: 15
No. of Figures: 19
No. of Pages: 64

High levels of carbon-in-ash cause difficulties for power plant operators. It leads to reduced overall plant efficiency and higher fuel costs, degrades the performance of electrostatic precipitators and leads to increased emissions of particulates. Increased carbon levels in the fly ash can lead to problems with ash use in cement/concrete production, the most profitable and largest ash utilisation option. This report reviews current measures and technologies that can be used to prevent excessive carbon-in-ash in pulverised coal combustion (PCC) power plants. These include coal cleaning, coal fineness improvement, reduction of distribution imbalance of coal among burners, increasing coal-air mixing rates at both burner and OFA levels and optimising excess air ratios.A plasma-assisted combustion enhancement technology can help achieve better ignition and more stable flame for coals that are normally difficult to burn. Computer-based combustion optimisation using expert systems, neural network systems and coal combustion simulation is becoming an invaluable means to tackle the carbon-in-ash issue. This report also reviews the regulations in nine major coal-consuming countries, which stipulate the maximum unburnt carbon levels permitted for fly ash for use in concrete/cement production. The Loss on Ignition (LOI) parameter is used in all national standards, although it is considered inadequate and may exclude some usable fly ash from being utilised. Performance-based regulations are more appropriate and have been adopted by Canada and USA. The EU and Canada now permit the use of fly ash produced from co-combustion of coal and biomass although its dosage is limited. Apart from China and Russia where very high LOI levels are allowed for certain fly ash, the other countries require similar LOI limits for fly ash for use in concrete. Finally, this report discusses measures and technologies for reduction of carbon-in-ash, including classification, froth flotation, triboelectrostatic separators, thermal processes (combustion, fusion or steam gasification), and carbon surface modification.

Back to previous page Back to previous page

Add document to basket Add to basket

Customers who bought this report also bought...

Uncontrolled fires in coal and coal wastes, CCC/16

CCC/16 - ISBN: 92-9029-324-1

Fire remains one of the principal hazards facing all stages of the coal production and transport cycle. Most of the world's major coalfields have experienced some incidents, the prevalence depending on factors such as the typ... More...

Price: £60.00 Add document to basket Add to basket

Trace elements - emissions from coal combustion and gasification, IEACR/49

IEACR/49 - ISBN: 92-9029-204-0

This report reviews the origin of trace elements in coal and their partitioning through coal-fired combustion and gasification processes, and downstream pollution control equipment. The importance of coal utilisation as a sou... More...

Price: £60.00 Add document to basket Add to basket

FGD handbook (2nd edition), IEACR/65

IEACR/65 - ISBN: 92-9029-226-1

Use of flue gas desulphurisation (FGD) equipment on utility coal-fired plants began in earnest in the early 1970s and expanded rapidly in the 1980s. The trend is expected to continue into the next century. FGD equipment ... More...

Price: £60.00 Add document to basket Add to basket

Cement and concrete - benefits and barriers in coal ash utilisation, CCC/94

CCC/94 - ISBN: 92-9029-409-4

The coal combustion products industry is facing major challenges despite decades of beneficial utilisation of coal ash in a wide variety of applications. Fly ash is especially affected by recent trends towards greater impleme... More...

Price: £180.00 Add document to basket Add to basket

Land uses of coal fly-ash - benefits and barriers, CCC/96

CCC/96 - ISBN: ISBN 92-9029-411-6

This report focuses on three major sectors of fly ash utilisation: soil stabilisation, mine backfill and agriculture. Requirements are generally less rigor... More...

Price: £180.00 Add document to basket Add to basket