Title: Nitrogen Oxides (NOx)
1Nitrogen Oxides (NOx)
2NOx emissions include
- Nitric oxide, NO, and Nitrogen dioxide, NO2, are
normally categorized as NOx - Nitrous oxide, N2O, is a green house gas (GHG)
and receives special attention
3Smog precursors
- NOx, SO2, particulate matter (PM2.5) and volatile
organic compounds (VOC).
4Developing NOx and SOx Emission Limits
December 2002, Ontarios Clean Air Plan for
Industry
Broad base of sources with close to 50 from the
Electricity sector in 1999
5NOx reaction mechanisms
- highly endothermic with Dhf 90.4 kJ/mol
- NO formation favoured by the high temperatures
encountered in combustion processes
6Zeldovich mechanism (1946)
k1 1.8 ? 108 exp-38,370/T k-1 3.8 ? 107
exp-425/T k2 1.8 ? 104 T exp-4680/T k-2
3.8 ? 103 T exp-20,820/T k3 7.1 ? 107
exp-450/T k-3 1.7 ? 108 exp-24,560/T
7Rate-limiting step in the process ?
k1 1.8 ? 108 exp-38,370/T k-1 3.8 ? 107
exp-425/T
K1 is highly temperature dependent
8Combine Zeldovich mechanism with
To obtain
If the initial concentrations of NO and OH
are low and only the forward reaction rates are
significant
Modelling NOx emissions is difficult because of
the competition for the O species in combustion
processes
9Prompt NO mechanism (1971)
This scheme occurs at lower temperature,
fuel-rich conditions and short residence times
10Fuel NOx
Organic, fuel bound nitrogen compounds in solid
fuels
C-N bond is much weaker than the N-N bond
increasing the likelihood of NOx formation
11Example of proposed reaction pathway for
fuel-rich hydrocarbon flames
12NOx control strategies
Combustion Modification
Modified Operating Conditions
- Reduce peak temperatures
- Reduce residence time in peak temperature zones
- Reduce O2 content in primary flame zone
- Low excess air
- Staged combustion
- Flue gas recirculation
- Reduce air preheat
- Reduce firing rates
- Water injection
13Control strategies
- Reburning injection of hydrocarbon fuel
downstream of the primary combustion zone to
provide a fuel-rich region, converting NO to HCN. - Post-combustion treatment include selective
catalytic reduction (SCR) with ammonia injection,
or selective noncatalytic reduction (SNCR) with
urea or ammonia-based chemical chemical injection
to convert NOx to N2.
14SCR process
4 NO 4 NH3 O2 ? 4 N2 6 H2O 2
NO2 4 NH3 O2 ? 3 N2 6 H2O
15SNCR process
4 NH3 6 NO ? 5 N2 6 H2O CO(NH3)2
2 NO ½ O2 ? 2 N2 CO2 2 H2O
16Low NOX burners
Dilute combustion technology
17Industrial furnace combustion
- Natural gas is arguably cleanest fuel perhaps
not the cheapest. - Independent injection of fuel and oxidant streams
(non-premixed). Industrial furnaces have
multi-burner operation. - Traditional thinking has been that a rapid mixing
of fuel and oxidant ensures best operation. - This approach gives high local temperatures in
the flame zone with low HC but high NOx
emissions. - Heat transfer to a load in the furnace
(radiatively dominated) must be controlled by
adjustment of burners.
18- High intensity combustion with rapid mixing of
fuel and oxidant - High temperature flame zones with low HC but
high NOx - Furnace efficiency increased by preheating the
oxidant stream
19A conventional burner
20Dilute oxygen combustion
- An extreme case of staged-combustion.
- Fuel and oxidant streams supplied as separate
injections to the furnace. - Initial mixing of fuel and oxidant with hot
combustion products within the furnace
(fuel-rich/fuel-lean jets). - Lower flame temperature (but same heat release)
and more uniform furnace temperature (good heat
transfer). - Low NOx emissions single digit ppm levels
21Strong-jet/Weak-jet Aerodynamics
- Strong jet oxidant
- Weak jet fuel
22Strong-jet/Weak-jet aerodynamics
23CGRI burner
24- Dilute oxygen combustion operation with staged
mixing of fuel and oxidant - No visible flame (flameless combustion)
- More uniform temperature throughout flame and
furnace - Low HC and NOx emissions
25Queens test facility
26Queens test facility
27CGRI burner in operation at 1100OC
28CFD rendering of the fuel flow pattern
29CGRI burner performance (1100OC)
30Oxygen-enriched combustion
- Oxidant stream supplied with high concentrations
of oxygen. - Nitrogen ballast component in the oxidant
stream is reduced less energy requirements and
less NOx reactant. - Conventional oxy-fuel combustion leads to high
efficiency combustion but high temperatures and
high NOx levels. - Higher efficiency combustion leads to lower fuel
requirements and corresponding reduction in CO2
emissions. - Does this work with dilute oxygen combustion???
31NOx emissions as a function of oxygen enrichment
32Firing rate as a function of oxygen-enrichment
level required to maintain 1100oC furnace
temperature
33Is oxygen-enrichment a NOx reduction strategy?
- NOx emissions are reduced at high
oxygen-enrichment levels but - Only at quite significant enrichment levels, and
- With no air infiltration (a source of N2).
34NOx emissions as a function of furnace N2
concentration
35Capabilities of oxygen-enriched combustion
- Dilute oxygen combustion systems can work with
oxygen-enriched combustion. - NOx emissions are comparable to air-oxidant
operation and NOx reductions are limited by air
infiltration. - NOx emissions also limited by N2 content of the
fuel. - Primary benefit is energy conservation (reduced
fuel consumption) and associated CO2 reduction.
36Limitations of oxygen-enrichment
- This is not a totally new technology !!!
- Cost of oxygen high purity O2 is expensive,
lower purity is more feasible in some situations. - Infrastructure costs oxygen supply and
handling. - Furnace modifications burners, gas handling,
etc.
37Final Examination
- CHEE 481 Tutorial Session
- Saturday, April 19, 0900h
- Dupuis Hall 217
- Tuesday, April 22, 1900h
- 3rd Floor Ellis Hall
- Open book, open notes
- Red or gold calculator