Title: Solid Fuels
1Solid Fuels
- Properties and Testing of Coal
2Testing of Coal
- Proximate analysis of coal
- Ultimate Analysis
- Determination of Calorific Value
- Swelling Index
3Testing of Coal
- Ultimate Analysis
- Determination of Carbon and Hydrogen
- A known amount of coal is burnt in dry oxygen
- C and H are converted into CO2 and H2O
respectively - The products of combustion are passed over
weighed tubes of anhydrous CaCl2 and KOH - The increase in the weight of CaCl2 tube
represents the weight of water formed - The increase in the weight of KOH tube represents
the weight of CO2 formed
4Testing of Coal
- Ultimate Analysis
- Determination of Carbon and Hydrogen
- Xweight of coal sample
- Yincrease in the weight of CaCl2 tube
- Zincrease in the weight of KOH tube
- carbon in coal
- Hydrogen in Coal
5Testing of Coal
- Ultimate Analysis
- Determination of Sulphur
- A known quantity of coal is burnt in bomb
calorimeter in oxygen - The residue ash is treated with dilute
hydrochloric acid - Acid extract is treated with barium chloride
solution to precipitate the sulphate as barium
sulphate - The precipitate is filtered washed dried and
weighed - The age of sulphur is computed from the weight
of BaSO4
6Testing of Coal
- Ultimate Analysis
- Determination of Nitrogen
- The KjeldahlGunning macro method is the one most
widely used for determining nitrogen (ASTM
D-3179) - By this method, any nitrogen present in the
sample is converted into ammonium salts by a
hot mixture of concentrated sulfuric acid and
potassium sulfate - sodium or potassium hydroxide is added to
alkaline the mixture - ammonia is expelled which is absorbed into a
sulfuric acid solution - The excess acid is titrated with sodium
hydroxide solution
7Example
- The analysis of the coal in boiler is
- C 81 , H2 4.5 , O2 8 and remainder is
incombustible - The dry flue gas analysis is CO2 8.3 , CO 1.4
O2 10 N2 80.3 - Determine
- The weight of air supplied per kg of coal
- The percentage of excess air
8Solution
Volume Mol. weight Proportional weight Analysis by weight Carbon /kg of constituent Weight of Carbon/kg dry flue gas
CO2 CO O2 N2 8.3 1.4 10.0 80.3 44 28 32 28 365.2 39.2 320.2 2249 0.1228 0.0132 0.1076 0.756 12/44 12/28 0.0335 0.00566
Total 100 2973 0.03916
9Solution
Weight of dry flue gas per kg of coal
0.81/0.03916
20.68 kg Water formed
0.045 x 9 0.405 kg per kg of coal Incombustible
s 1 -0.81 -0.045 -0.08 0.065 kg / kg of
coal Air supplied per kg of coal ? Air Coal
Dry Flue gas Water Incombustibles Air
20.15 kg per kg of coal
Dry Flue Gas 20.68 kg H2O 0.405
kg Incombustibles0.065 kg
Air ? Coal 1 kg
Combustion
Theoretical air 11.6 C 34.8(H2
O2/8)10.6175 age excess air (20.15
10.6175)/10.6175 ?
10Determination of Calorific Value
- Determination of Calorific Value by Bomb
Calorimeter - Already discussed
- If a coal does not have a measured calorific
value, it is possible to make a - close estimation of the calorific value (CV) by
means of various formulas, one of the most
popular formula is - Modified Dulong Formula for G.C.V.
- G.C.V.
C, H, O, N and S are the percentages of carbon,
hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and sulphur
11Swelling Index/Number of Coal
- It denotes the caking capacity of Coal. Caking
power is the ability to form a fused coke when
coal is heated out of contact with air. - The crucible swelling index is determined by
heating 1 gm of coal in a special crucible to 820
C under standardized conditions for 2.5 minutes
or until no observable volatile matter is evolved
- The profile of the coke produced is compared with
series of standards
12Swelling Index/Number of Coal
- No. Less than 2.5 very weak caking properties or
non-caking. Coal is suitable for stem raising but
unsuitable for carbonisation - No. 3 - 3.5 weak to moderate caking power.
Suitable for all combustion purposes. Marginally
suitable for carbonisation - No. 4 - 6.5 coals of moderate caking power.
These are suitable for combustion but may be
strongly caking for some forms of mechanical
stokers. They are suitable for gas-work and
second grade metallurgical coke
13Swelling Index/Number of Coal
- No. 7- 9 Strongly caking coals. These are too
strongly caking to be suitable for combustion.
They are best for metallurgical cokes