A rapid quantitative estimation of carbon dioxide by infrared spectrophotometry provided a rapid and reliable technique for a semi-quantitative comparison of the reactivity of carbon samples to oxidative gases, since the previously demonstrated inverse relation between ease of wet oxidation of carbo
Enhancement of char reactivity by rapid heating of precursor coal
β Scribed by James T. Ashu; Nsakala Ya Nsakala; Om P. Mahajan; Philip L. Walker Jr
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1978
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 265 KB
- Volume
- 57
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0016-2361
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Char reactivity is generally higher the (a) lower the rank of the precursor coal'3*, (b) lower the temperature to which the char has been taken prior to reaction133, (c) shorter the soak time at maximum heat treatment temperature (HTT)3, and (d) smaller the char particle size', We have now found another variable which can affect subsequent char reactivity, that is the heating rate to maximum HTT.
Chars were produced from a 70 x 100 U.S. mesh North Dakota lignite having the following ASTM analysis: ash (dry), 7.3%; VM (daf), 47.1%; and fixed carbon (daf), 52.%. Chars were prepared by heating the lignite in nitrogen to maximum temperature either in a fluidized bed at 10" C/min or in a laminar-flow unit at about 8 x 103"C/s 4. In both cases, soak time at maximum temperature was under 1 s.
Subsequently, char reactivity in 0.1 MPa of air was measured at 500Β°C in a TGA apparatus as previously described'. The char sample was heated in the TGA unit at lO"C/min to 500Β°C in N2 and soaked for 15 min prior to studying reactivity. Reactivity was expressed as
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Chars produced from lignites typically have much higher reactivities to gasification than those produced from bituminous coals. This has been attributed previously to the presence of carboxylate salts of inorganic constituents on the Iignites. Upon charring of the Iignites, the carboxylate salts dec
Closely size graded lignite particles were pyrolysed at 808Β°C in a laminar flow furnace for times up to 1 s following heating up at 8 x 103'C/s. Following pyrolysis, the chars were rapidly cooled -at about 3 x 104"C/s. Weight losses were measured as a function of pyrolysis time. The following meas
## Abstract In this study, a very sensitive and economical highβthroughput methodology has been developed for the analysis of small carbonyl compounds using rapid derivatization with 4βdimethylaminoβ6β(4βmethoxyβ1βnaphthyl)β1,3,5βtriazineβ2βhydrazine (DMNTH), a derivatizing agent developed by the K