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HERO ID
2848561
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
The Fate of Char Nitrogen in Black Liquor Combustion-Cyanate Formation and Decomposition
Author(s)
Vaha-Savo, N; Demartini, N; Engblom, M; Brink, A; Hupa, M
Year
2015
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research
ISSN:
0888-5885
EISSN:
1520-5045
Volume
54
Issue
11
Page Numbers
2831-2842
DOI
10.1021/ie503450r
Web of Science Id
WOS:000351972600001
Abstract
The main gaseous nitrogen emissions from a Kraft pulp mill are in the form of NOx and NH3. In black liquor combustion roughly 60% of the black liquor nitrogen is released during the devolatilization,phase and finally forms N-2 or NO. The remaining 40% is retained in the chair and forms, sodium cyanate during char conversion. A part of the sodium cyanate decomposes in,the lower furnace, while the rest exits the recovery boiler with the smelt. Sodium cyanate decomposes to NH3 in green and white liquor, which can contribute to the overall nitrogen emissions of a,pulp Mill. The purpose of this work is to better understand the formation and decomposition of cyoriate during thermal conversion of black liquor. The formation and stability of cyanate was studied during thermal conversion of black liquor droplets in different gas compositions, And the formation was also studied by controlled char gasification in CO2 atmosphere. The decomposition was studied by exposing laboratory Made black liquor smelt to various gas atmospheres at different temperatures. The results show that gas atmosphere and temperature play a role in how much cyanate is formed as well as the rate of decomposition. The share of black liquor nitrogen converted to cyanate is clearly higher if the gas composition contains CO2 or O-2 mixed with N-2. Less cyanate is formed if the surrounding atmosphere is pure N-2 gas or contains water vapor. The formed smelt cyanate is stable at 800 degrees C in atmospheres containing only CO2 and N-2, whereas it decomposes slowly at 900 degrees C in atmospheres containing only CO2 and N-2. The cyanate in smelt decomposes quickly in oxygen and Water vapor containing atmosphere compared to pure N-2 atmosphere. Also, importantly, cyanate leads to very little NO for-Motion (less than 5% of the original black liquor N) in all of the conditions tested. This information will be utilized in the future to develop a simplified char-N model for implementation in computational fluid dynamics (CFD) with the ultimate goal of finding new ways of further lowering NO emissions from recovery boilers without downstream NOx reduction technologies.
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