Thermal conversion of waste-derived fuels is gaining a clear role in the general frame of the circular economy as one pathway to close the recycle loop when a material or chemical recycle is impossible or economically unfeasible. Sewage sludge derived from the treatment of urban wastewaters is currently facing rapidly increasing production volumes and severe restrictions of the conventional disposal options: thermal conversion stems out as the most viable strategy, entailing large reduction of the sludge volume and thermal destruction of the toxic organic constituents. In the frame of thermochemical processing of waste-derived fuels, pyrolysis/gasification presents several advantages over the direct waste-to-energy combustion path, mostly related to the generation of syngas and condensable species which can be easily transported, burned or even exploited in gas-to-liquid fuel or chemical processes. The present study addresses the development of a process for oxy-pyrolysis of sewage sludge in a rotary kiln converter. The aim of the process is the production of syngas from devolatilization of a waste-derived fuel, with oxygen playing the role of promoting autothermal operation of the pyrolyzer by controlled oxidation of volatile compounds. The specific concern of the study is the assessment of the effectiveness of staged oxygen feeding, as opposed to localized feeding at the reactor inlet, as a tool to selectively promote desired secondary reactions occurring in gas phase, like partial oxidation of tars. The converter consists of a rotary kiln in which the oxidizer is fed at multiple coordinates along the reactor axis, so as to obtain a reactant contacting pattern resembling that of a Zwietering reactor. The reactor is modelled at steady state using a 1.5D frame. Material and energy balances are set up considering a semi-lumped kinetic mechanism that was purposely developed to represent the complex chemical pathways of the solid fuel, of the gaseous compounds, of different tar components and of soot. Model results are analyzed with a focus on the effect of axial staging of the oxidizer on the quality of the produced gas and on the performance of the reactor.
Modeling gasification of waste-derived fuels in a rotary kiln converter operated with oxygen staging
Tregambi Claudio
;
2017-01-01
Abstract
Thermal conversion of waste-derived fuels is gaining a clear role in the general frame of the circular economy as one pathway to close the recycle loop when a material or chemical recycle is impossible or economically unfeasible. Sewage sludge derived from the treatment of urban wastewaters is currently facing rapidly increasing production volumes and severe restrictions of the conventional disposal options: thermal conversion stems out as the most viable strategy, entailing large reduction of the sludge volume and thermal destruction of the toxic organic constituents. In the frame of thermochemical processing of waste-derived fuels, pyrolysis/gasification presents several advantages over the direct waste-to-energy combustion path, mostly related to the generation of syngas and condensable species which can be easily transported, burned or even exploited in gas-to-liquid fuel or chemical processes. The present study addresses the development of a process for oxy-pyrolysis of sewage sludge in a rotary kiln converter. The aim of the process is the production of syngas from devolatilization of a waste-derived fuel, with oxygen playing the role of promoting autothermal operation of the pyrolyzer by controlled oxidation of volatile compounds. The specific concern of the study is the assessment of the effectiveness of staged oxygen feeding, as opposed to localized feeding at the reactor inlet, as a tool to selectively promote desired secondary reactions occurring in gas phase, like partial oxidation of tars. The converter consists of a rotary kiln in which the oxidizer is fed at multiple coordinates along the reactor axis, so as to obtain a reactant contacting pattern resembling that of a Zwietering reactor. The reactor is modelled at steady state using a 1.5D frame. Material and energy balances are set up considering a semi-lumped kinetic mechanism that was purposely developed to represent the complex chemical pathways of the solid fuel, of the gaseous compounds, of different tar components and of soot. Model results are analyzed with a focus on the effect of axial staging of the oxidizer on the quality of the produced gas and on the performance of the reactor.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.