2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(181a) Multiscale Modeling and Optimization of Wet Flue Gas Desulfurization
Authors
Due to fast cycling of power plants and variabilities in the sulfur content in the coal, it can be very difficult to satisfy SO2 emission standards at the outlet of FGD units. Furthermore, specifications of gypsum must also be satisfied during load following operation. In addition, efficiency of the FGD units should be maximized. A rigorous dynamic model of the FGD unit can be helpful in satisfying these challenging performance conditions. A number of rate-limiting mechanisms occur in the limestone droplets while the mechanisms at the scrubber bulk also play a critical role. For instance, the instantaneous reactions comprise of dissociation of species (e.g. SO2, sulfites, bisulfites, bicarbonates etc.) and finite rate processes involve limestone dissolution, sulfite oxidation and crystallization. These processes have to be coupled with the scrubber bulk hydrodynamics and considered simultaneously. Therefore, a multi-scale dynamic model is required to capture the large number of ions and complex thermodynamic and chemistry. Due to the fast ionic reactions in the limestone droplet and presence of many ionic and molecular species, the system of equations is stiff, highly nonlinear, and not well posed. Therefore, they can be challenging to solve reliably during dynamic simulation.
In this work, we present an implementation of FGD simulation for the limestone scrubbing unit. It is a multiscale model. At the slurry droplet scale, we solve a two-point boundary value problem (BVP) to characterize the absorption of SO2 in a slurry droplet. This is a Differential-Algebraic Equations (DAE) model based on penetration theory and, as such, requires rigorous analysis and reformulation to obtain and solve a so-called index-1 DAE model. At the scrubber bulk scale, the physical processes include complex factors such as velocity, size distribution, collision and coalescence between the slurry droplets which play a significant role in the SO2 absorption at the droplet scale.
We use Pyomo, an open source framework for modeling and optimization, to implement the spray scrubber model. We demonstrate the performance of this multiscale model for the limestone WFGD system. First, we show that the BVP associated with SO2 absorption is an ill-posed, high-index DAE model and present a systematic reformulation procedure to obtain a well-posed, index-1 DAE model that lends to a tractable numerical solution. Second, we simulate SO2 scrubbing operations for the base line loadings of a coal-fired power plant. Using multi-level spray flowrates as decision variables we also demonstrate the optimization of operating costs and efficiency. Finally, using the Pyomo framework with IPOPT, we demonstrate the dynamic optimization of the FGD operation, such as maximizing efficiency, under transient plant conditions such as ramping up and down in response to varying SO2 loadings.