DRYING OF BROWN COAL USING A SUPERHEATED STEAM ROTARY DRYER

Author(s):  
SAM CLAYTON ◽  
DILIP DESAI ◽  
ANDREW HOADLEY
Author(s):  
Michael T. Rose ◽  
Emily L. Perkins ◽  
Biplob K. Saha ◽  
Evone C. W. Tang ◽  
Timothy R. Cavagnaro ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Atinder Pal Singh ◽  
P. S. Ghoshdastidar

Abstract The paper reports a numerical simulation study of drying of peas and rice grains in a rotary dryer with superheated steam, dry air, and humid air (20%, 40%, 60% and 80% moisture content by volume) at 1 bar as the drying media. The initial water contents in peas and rice grains are 75% and 13% (by weight), respectively. The thermal model includes turbulent convection heat transfer from the gas to the refractory wall and solids, radiation exchange among the gas, refractory wall and the solid surface, conduction in the refractory wall, and mass and energy balances of the gas and the solids. In the absence of experimental data of food drying, the present model has been satisfactorily validated with the experimental and numerical results reported in Sass (1967, Sass, A., “Simulation of Heat-Transfer Phenomena in a Rotary Kiln”, Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Process Design and Development, 6(4), pp. 532–535) for iron ore and cement. It is found that for superheated steam there is an optimum kiln inner diameter at which the predicted kiln length is the highest. For dry air, the predicted kiln length monotonically decreases with a decrease in kiln inner diameter. A detailed parametric study lent a good physical insight into the drying process. An optimization study has been conducted for superheated steam as the drying medium using the Univariate Search method to minimize the length of the kiln with an upper limit on the inlet gas temperature as the constraint.


2018 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 468-474
Author(s):  
Y. Chryat ◽  
M. Esteban-Decloux ◽  
C. Labarde ◽  
H. Romdhana

TAPPI Journal ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 65-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.B.A. (SANDY) SHARP ◽  
W.J. JIM FREDERICK ◽  
JAMES R. KEISER ◽  
DOUGLAS L. SINGBEIL

The efficiencies of biomass-fueled power plants are much lower than those of coal-fueled plants because they restrict their exit steam temperatures to inhibit fireside corrosion of superheater tubes. However, restricting the temperature of a given mass of steam produced by a biomass boiler decreases the amount of power that can be generated from this steam in the turbine generator. This paper examines the relationship between the temperature of superheated steam produced by a boiler and the quantity of power that it can generate. The thermodynamic basis for this relationship is presented, and the value of the additional power that could be generated by operating with higher superheated steam temperatures is estimated. Calculations are presented for five plants that produce both steam and power. Two are powered by black liquor recovery boilers and three by wood-fired boilers. Steam generation parameters for these plants were supplied by industrial partners. Calculations using thermodynamics-based plant simulation software show that the value of the increased power that could be generated in these units by increasing superheated steam temperatures 100°C above current operating conditions ranges between US$2,410,000 and US$11,180,000 per year. The costs and benefits of achieving higher superheated steam conditions in an individual boiler depend on local plant conditions and the price of power. However, the magnitude of the increased power that can be generated by increasing superheated steam temperatures is so great that it appears to justify the cost of corrosion-mitigation methods such as installing corrosion-resistant materials costing far more than current superheater alloys; redesigning biomassfueled boilers to remove the superheater from the flue gas path; or adding chemicals to remove corrosive constituents from the flue gas. The most economic pathways to higher steam temperatures will very likely involve combinations of these methods. Particularly attractive approaches include installing more corrosion-resistant alloys in the hottest superheater locations, and relocating the superheater from the flue gas path to an externally-fired location or to the loop seal of a circulating fluidized bed boiler.


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