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Explore ash deposit properties including thermal conductivity, strength, and emissivity variations. Detailed in-situ data collection crucial for accurate modeling. Radiative properties play a key role. Significant implications for facility design and operation.
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Ash Deposition Modeling and Deposit Properties Larry Baxter Brigham Young University Provo, UT 84602 17th Annual ACERC Conference Salt Lake City, UT February 20, 2003
Focus Is On Three Properties • Thermal Conductivity • Major factor is deposit structure • Varies with sintering • Upper and lower bounds can be set by theory • Precise value difficult to establish without porosity and structural information. • Strength • Parallels thermal conductivity in many ways • Emissivity • Difficult to predict for particulate/porous material • Good theoretical grounding • Good data • Poor parameters (optical constants)
q q Upper Limit for Thermal Conductivity • Columnar Structure : Deposit Surface Solid Phase Gas Phase f Deposit Surface Robinson, A. L., S. G. Buckley and L. L. Baxter (2001). Experimental measurements of the thermal conductivity of ash deposits: Part 1. Measurement technique. Energy and Fuels,15: 66-74. Robinson, A. L., S. G. Buckley, N. Yang and L. L. Baxter (2001). Experimental measurements of the thermal conductivity of ash deposits: Part 2. Effects of sintering and deposit microstructure. Energy and Fuels15: 75-84.
q q Lower Limit for Thermal Conductivity • Layered structure: Deposit Surface Gas Phase kg = 0.06 W/(m K) f Solid Phase kg = 1.3 W/(m K) Deposit Surface
Measurements of Deposit Thickness Test Section Deposition Probe
Radiative Properties are Important • Deposit surface temperature and heat flux depend strongly on thermal conductivity and emissivity • Between the theoretical bounds or thermal conductivity lies a large variation in performance • It is essential that in situ thermal conductivity data are collected
Radiative Properties are Important • Theoretically rigorous approaches are being attempted to describe emissivities • Fundamental data (optical constants) are in significant disagreement • New optical constants are being calculated using several approaches
Reflectivity Depends on Size and Direction • Small, non-absorbing particles are highly reflective and are typical of recovery boiler deposits • Reflectivity/emissivity depend strongly on direction • Strong local effects are common, especially with small transparent particles, near the angle of the incident beam
Impaction efficiency: Inertial impaction (clean surface)
BL mechanisms Inertial deposition flux [g/m2/h] BL deposition flux [g/m2/h]
Vapor deposition Vapor deposition flux [g/m2/h]
Entrained particles Small particles capture in recirc. Most large particles impact lower region of SH2
Conclusions • Major deposition mechanisms are quantified. • Deposit properties depend in predictable ways on deposit microstructure. • Comprehensive computer codes can accommodate deposition mechanisms. • Predictions suggest major changes in design and operation for some facilities that can optimize operations.