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- 2011 Annual Meeting
- Environmental Division
- Fundamentals of Biomass Utilization
- (453d) Landfill Gas Utilization In Gas Turbines: Experimental Results for Combustion of Landfill Impurities In Premixed Flames
It was found that microcrystalline silica particles were generated during LFG combustion, leading to a rapid coverage of the surface of Ni/Cr sheets placed in the flame environment, and forming a light white layer of solid particles, whose surface was analyzed by atomic force microscopy (AFM). The size of these particles was then estimated using SEM/EDAX. The effect of L2 concentration on its conversion along the flame was found for a number of different feed concentrations. Volume fractions of particles within the flame were also measured via the laser extinction method indicating a linear relationship between the concentration in the fuel and the corresponding volume of particles in the flue-gas. The temperature profile has been measured experimentally in order to identify the kinetics of burning of the siloxane compounds. This fundamental insight is important in terms of being able to accurately determine the maximum allowable siloxane content for biogas that is safe to use without leading to deposits and microparticle formation.