• Title/Summary/Keyword: Cross-section micrography

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Cross-section micrography of burning pulverized coal particles (연소중 미분탄의 단면관측)

  • 한재현;최상민
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers
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    • v.13 no.4
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    • pp.717-725
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    • 1989
  • An experimental investigation on the combustion behavior of pulverized coal particles was performed using the cross-section micrography techniques while sample coal particles were collected in-situ from the flow reactor. The coal particles were representative of pulverized bituminous coal undergoing a raped pyrolysis and combustion, however, quenched at the time when the particles were deposited onto a sample plate. The internal structure of coal was observed to change as deposited. Upon injection into a flow reactor, bituminous coal particles showed many holes which represented internal pore formation during the pyrolysis. The relative portion of the remaining matrix of coal was decreasing as the residence time progressed. This direct observation of cross-section of burning particles enabled better understanding of the coal combustion behavior.

Experimental Investigation of Burning Pulverized Coal Particles: Emission Analysis and Observation of Particle Sample (연소중 미분탄의 발광 분석 및 입자 채집 관찰)

  • Kim, Dae-Hee;Choi, Sang-Min
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.19-26
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    • 2010
  • Combustion behavior of pulverized coal particles in a post-combustion gas reactor was investigated. Radiation emission from coal particles were analyzed by direct photograph and $CH^*$ radical chemiluminescence intensity. Coal particles were sampled during the combustion and were observed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and cross section micrograpy technique. Two coal types(one bituminous and one subbituminous coals typically used in the Korean power plants) were tested at typical combustion environment. Gas flow conditions were controlled to represent temperature and oxygen concentration. Experimental data were discussed along with conceptual descriptions of pulverized coal combustion, where particle heat-up, release and combustion of volatiles, and char combustion were sequentially progressed.