Technical Papers
Dec 22, 2015

Numerical Investigation of NOx Emissions for a Flexible Greek Lignite–Fired Power Plant

Publication: Journal of Energy Engineering
Volume 142, Issue 2

Abstract

This work simulates the Megalopolis IV power plant boiler operation in terms of NOx emissions for a wide range of thermal loads, and with different operational patterns of the firing system, i.e., different numbers and variation of the open burners’ positions. This work provides feedback on thermal loads that are lower than the current technical minimum (55%) using numerical tools (CFD software packages) for both 40 and 35% partial-loads. For the lowest investigated load, it also examines contemporary combusting systems, with the simultaneous firing of raw and stored dry lignite to achieve flame stability. The results of the current study primarily focus on the effect of lower than 100% boiler operation on the NOx emissions because the majority of works in literature investigates boiler NOx emissions only under full-load conditions. Furthermore, it focuses on the variation of the NOx emissions among different partial-load conditions and the influence of the firing system operational patterns on these. To reduce the required computational resources, the decoupled approach is adopted, which distinguishes the main combustion mechanisms from the NOx emission mechanisms themselves. The results indicate that the NOx emissions concentration reduced at 6% dry oxygen molar concentration at the main furnace outlet surface increases as the thermal load gets lower. The results also prove the direct relation between temperature values and NOx emissions because the highest NOx concentrations are tracked in the hot spot areas; primarily attributed to thermal NOx production mechanisms. Additionally, the firing system operational pattern for each specific thermal load affects the NOx emissions concentration, as the results regarding the 35% partial-load case imply. In particular, for the 35% partial-load case, the even distribution and injection of stored dry lignite from all six vapor burners result in lower NOx concentrations compared to the case for which the injection of the stored dry lignite happens through the inlets of the two open vapor burners. In conclusion, the results of this work can provide valuable information about the boiler performance in terms of its NOx emissions behavior under partial-load conditions, and provide potential measures that can be implemented for NOx emissions reduction, especially under low-thermal conditions.

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Acknowledgments

The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the General Secretariat for Research and Technology / Ministry of Education and Religious Affairs through the “Bilateral Research & Technology Cooperation Greece-Germany 2013-2015” Program/Grant Nr. ΓΓET GER_2597 (COALEEP Project—http://www.coaleep.com/). Additionally, the help of Mr. Papapavlou from PPC S.A. for the provision of important technical details is acknowledged.

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Go to Journal of Energy Engineering
Journal of Energy Engineering
Volume 142Issue 2June 2016

History

Received: Jun 16, 2015
Accepted: Sep 18, 2015
Published online: Dec 22, 2015
Discussion open until: May 22, 2016
Published in print: Jun 1, 2016

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Drosatos Panagiotis [email protected]
Ph.D. Candidate, Centre for Research and Technology Hellas/Chemical Process and Energy Resources Institute (CERTH/CPERI), 4th km. N.R. Ptolemais-Mpodosakeio, GR-50200 Ptolemais, Greece (corresponding author). E-mail: [email protected]
Nesiadis Athanasios
Ph.D. Candidate, Centre for Research and Technology Hellas/Chemical Process and Energy Resources Institute (CERTH/CPERI), 4th km. N.R. Ptolemais-Mpodosakeio, GR-50200 Ptolemais, Greece.
Nikolopoulos Nikolaos, Ph.D.
Senior Researcher, Centre for Research and Technology Hellas/Chemical Process and Energy Resources Institute (CERTH/CPERI), 4th km. N.R. Ptolemais-Mpodosakeio, GR-50200 Ptolemais, Greece.
Nikolopoulos Aristeidis, Ph.D.
Centre for Research and Technology Hellas/Chemical Process and Energy Resources Institute (CERTH/CPERI), 4th km. N.R. Ptolemais-Mpodosakeio, GR-50200 Ptolemais, Greece.
Rakopoulos Dimitrios, Ph.D.
Centre for Research and Technology Hellas/Chemical Process and Energy Resources Institute (CERTH/CPERI), 4th km. N.R. Ptolemais-Mpodosakeio, GR-50200 Ptolemais, Greece.
Kakaras Emmanouil
Professor, Centre for Research and Technology Hellas/Chemical Process and Energy Resources Institute (CERTH/CPERI), 4th km. N.R. Ptolemais-Mpodosakeio, GR-50200 Ptolemais, Greece.

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