2010 Annual Meeting

Session: Oxycombustion of Coal - Need, Opportunities, and Challenges II

Oxycombustion (OC) of coal refers to using oxygen-enriched air as the oxidant. Compared to combustion with air, OC reduces NOx emissions and the elimination of nitrogen from the combustion air produces a CO2-rich sequestration-ready flue gas. This session will explore the science and engineering opportunities to deploy OC technology into the nation’s power production portfolio. Contributions are invited in the following: 1. recent results on OC of coal and other solid fuels; 2. burner redesign and retrofit options for OC; 3. ignition, devolatilization and pollutant formation mechanisms during OC; 4. kinetic and CFD modeling of OC processes; 5. engineering options for retrofitting; and, 6. new OC boiler design – materials and engineering challenges.

Chair

Eric G. Eddings, The University of Utah

Co-Chairs

William P. Linak, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, U.S. EPA
Jost O. L. Wendt, University of Utah

Presentations

12:30 PM

12:50 PM

S. Michael Daukoru, Lei Zhang, Sarah Torkamani, Wei-Ning Wang, Shuxiao Wang, Jiming Hao, Pratim Biswas

01:10 PM

01:30 PM

Dunxi Yu, William J. Morris, Jost O. L. Wendt, Andrew Fry, Constance L. Senior, Raphael Erickson

01:50 PM

William P. Linak, Myrrha Andersen, William L. Roberts Roberts, Chun Wai Lee, Jost O. L. Wendt

02:10 PM

02:30 PM