Abstract:
First, nitrogen oxides are reduced by firing coal in substoichiometric air conditions in a first stage oxidation unit of a combustor to reduce NO x  from fuel bound nitrogen. Hydrated lime, Ca(OH) 2 , is introduced into the first stage oxidation unit to produce calcium sulfide. The calcium sulfide becomes tied up in a slag eutectic which is removed prior to entry of the fuel gas to a second stage oxidation unit at the entrance of a furnace where additional preheated air is added to the fuel gas.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Field of The Invention 
     This invention relates to a method for the desulfurization of carbonaceous fuels. More particularly, it refers to an improved method for removing sulfur through the use of alkali sorbents in a combustion process and for the reduction of nitrogen oxides and particulate emissions from the combustion of coal. 
     2. Description of The Prior Art 
     U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,395,975 and 4,423,702 describe methods for capturing sulfur in an alkaline molten slag produced from the partial oxidation of coal and reducing emissions of nitrogen oxides and particulate from the coal combustion process. These methods accomplish their intended purpose, but do not remove all the sulfur and nitrogen oxides. 
     Further research has continued on the development of processes to provide low capital and operating cost cleanup alternatives for utilities and industries currently burning coal. An improved process is needed that will accomplish these results. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     I have discovered a more economical process employing a coal combustor to reduce No x  and further remove sulfur and slag in the combustor itself to reduce the quantity of pollutants entering a coal fired furnace. 
     Alkali compounds, such as limestone, lime, hydrated lime, dolomite, trona, nacholite, potassium carbonate or combinations thereof are added with coal being fired in a first stage oxidation unit of a combustor, or are added separately into the first stage. 
     High levels of sulfur capture are achieved in an alkali molten slag produced from the partial oxidation of the coal by incorporating a combustor design insuring that all of the oxygen from the oxidizing media (air, oxygen or a combination thereof) is completely consumed prior to entering the alkaline molten slag sulfur capture zone. 
     Nitrogen oxides are reduced by firing the coal in sub-stoichiometric air conditions in the first stage to reduce NO x  produced from fuel bound nitrogen. Slight inter-cooling prior to the second stage of combustion reduces the second stage combustion temperature, thereby reducing thermal NO x  production. 
     In a second stage oxidation unit at an entrance to a furnace heated combustion air is mixed slowly with the fuel gases from the first stage. Slow mixing, in conjunction with flame radiation cooling in the furnace proper reduces localized oxidation zone temperatures. Thermal NO x  production is reduced because thermal NO x  production decreases with decreasing flame temperature. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     The invention may be best understood by those having ordinary skill in the art by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which: 
     FIG. 1 is process flow diagram describing the coal desulfurizing method of this invention. 
     FIG. 2 is a pictorial description of the combustor apparatus used for initial coal desulfurizing. 
     FIG. 3 is a graph comparing the increased ability of hydrated lime versus limestone of the prior art to remove sulfur from coal in the process of this invention. 
     FIG. 4 is a pictorial description of the coal-primary air nozzle within the combustor apparatus. 
     FIG. 5 shows the free energies of formation versus temperature for the important thermochemical reactions taking place in the first stage of combustion. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     Throughout the following detailed description, the same reference numerals refer to the same elements in all figures. 
     To achieve high sulfur capture, the combustor is designed to provide for 1) adequate residence time of the partial oxidation gases at temperature prior to entering an alkaline molten slag-fuel gas disengaging zone, and 2) intimate fuel/air mixing, done in such a way as to eliminate the formation of localized pockets of unreacted oxygen. If these two objectives are achieved, sulfur may be captured by the alkali, in accord with the following example reaction: 
     
         CaO+H.sub.2 S-&gt;CaS↓+H.sub.2 O↑vapor 
    
     (CaS in a molten eutectic with other slag compounds) 
     If all of the available oxygen is not consumed prior to the partial oxidation gases leaving the alkaline molten slag-fuel gas disengaging zone any sulfur captured by the alkali will be released as diatomic sulfur, S 2 . The way that S 2  forms in the first stage is primarily in accord with the following reaction: 
     
         2CaS+O.sub.2 -&gt;2CaO↓+S.sub.2 ↑vapor 
    
     (CaO in a molten eutectic with other slag compounds) 
     Molten alkali will capture sulfur under reducing conditions, but if localized oxygen pockets, in the reducing fuel gas from the coal combustion zone, come into intimate contact with the alkali sulfides, the sulfur will be released from the alkali in the form of diatomic sulfur. See the free energies of formation for these reactions in FIG. 5. The more negative the free energy of formation of a reaction, the more likely the reaction will occur. 
     With the more reactive alkali, calcium hydroxide (hydrated lime), sulfur is captured at a faster rate than that when using calcium carbonate (limestone). See FIG. 3. From a design standpoint, this means that residence time under reducing conditions is a critical design parameter. Also a critical parameter is the design of the fuel/air nozzles. They must be designed in such a manner as to provide intimate contact of fuel and air, but yield no oxygen pockets within the reducing gases produced at the point of contact in the sulfur capture alkali molten slag zone. The combustor design that takes into account these critical design parameters is discussed below. 
     In the example shown in the FIG. 1 schematic, combustor 10 is located in front of the entry 12 into the furnace 14. An opening 16 into the combustor receives pulverized coal. A pulverized coal bin 18 supplies coal via a conveyor belt 20 to a pulverizer 22. Air from a transport air blower 24 is mixed with the coal in a venturi eductor 23 and pneumatically conveyed to a solids mixer/splitter 30. Alkali, such as hydrated lime [Ca(OH) 2  ] is supplied from bin 26 via conveyor 28 to a transport line 29 where air from the transport air blower 24 is mixed with the hydrated lime in a venturi eductor 31. Other alkali that can be employed are lime, limestone, dolomite, nacholite, potassium carbonate and trona. The pulverized coal and hydrated lime are thoroughly mixed in the mixer/splitter 30 and then are delivered to opening 16 in the combustor 10. Controlled partial oxidation of the coal takes place in the combustor 10 by regulation of the preheated air flow 67 from air blower 76 through the air preheater device 40. 
     Optionally the hydrated lime could be separately admitted into the combustor 10 at point 56. In another option, the injection of steam 68 into the combustor 10 is used to enhance sulfur capture. The steam is added at a 0.1 to 0.3 steam to fuel weight ratio. 
     The products of partial combustion and the molten slag from the ash portion of the coal plus the inorganic alkali compounds are separated in a cyclone chamber 60, and a molten slag eutectic 34 containing calcium sulfide and other alkali sulfides from reaction with alkali compounds in the coal ash are collected at the bottom opening 36 of the combustor 10. The molten slag is quenched in a water quench sluice system 42 and the ash is sluiced to a settling pond. 
     The combustor 10 has a water jacket 38 surrounding the combustion zone or first stage oxidation unit 48 where a jet mixing at about 2200 to 2600 degrees F. provides intimate contact between the coal partial oxidation gases with the hydrated lime and coal ash. The hot gaseous products leave the combustor 10 at exit 12 into the boiler furnace 14. The water jacket 38 designed as a jacket or as waterwall tube construction cools the gases slightly so that upon combustion with secondary air 44, the flame temperature is reduced, bringing with it a reduction in thermal NO x  production. Secondary air 44, from air blower 76, through air preheater 40 is admitted into the furnace entrance 12 to yield slow mixing of fuel gas with hot air. The preheated air is introduced into the furnace entrance 12 to achieve an overall air to fuel stoichiometric ratio of 1.05 to 1.25. With slow mixing less localized hot zones occur which would produce higher levels of NO x  emissions from the furnace 14. Through the use of combustor 10, a high percentage (75-80%) of the molten slag produced during partial oxidation of the coal is removed from the gas prior to entry into the furnace 14, and prior to second stage combustion at entry 12. 
     Flue gas from the combustor rises up through the radiant section of the furnace 14, passes through steam superheaters 70 and 71, through an economizer 72, through an air heater 40 and into a particulate removal device 74 such as a bag house or electrostatic precipitator. Any oxidized alkali sulfur compounds which formed in the furnace will be removed in the particulate removal device stream 75. Flue gas from the particulate removal device 74 is drawn from the system by an induced draft fan 78 and is exhausted into an atmospheric stack 80. 
     The combustor 10, shown in FIG. 2, has a gasification section 54, a hydrated lime injection point 56, a gas-slag mix section 58, and a slag separation section 60. The molten slag from the combustor is quenched and sliced away via the water quench/slice system 42. The first stage oxidation unit 48 of the combustor is internally refractory lined 46 with an outer water jacket 38 or with water wall tubes to keep outer metal walls cool. 
     The residence time required to consume all of the oxygen from an air media fired staged combustor, with a proper fuel/air nozzle design is 0.05 to 0.4 seconds, and preferably 0.1 to 0.25 seconds. This is accomplished by designing a combustor partial oxidation chamber of sufficient volume that the residence time requirement is met prior to entry into the gas-slag mix section. 
     The coal/primary air nozzle shown in FIG. 4 is designed to eliminate air swirl during partial oxidation of the carbonaceous fuel. With air swirl, there is a greater chance of creating localized oxygen pockets within the reducing gases produced from the partial oxidation of the coal. 
     Preheated primary air 67, with or without steam 68 addition to the air, enters the combustor 10 preheat air chamber 50 and is directed around an outer annulus with a 30 degree angle cone 66 that forces the air 67 into the concentrically fired coal stream 64. The coal pipe 16 has a 30 degree angle cone 65 at the exit 52 that is controlled by vertical positioning of the coal pipe through a top guide 82 plus packing arrangement 84 to maintain set air velocities through the annulus with changing coal feed/preheat air flow rates. The air to fuel stoichiometric ratio in the first stage oxidation unit 48 is 0.55 to 0.8 and preferably 0.6 to 0.7. 
     The coal pipe 16 outlet nozzle can be designed with or without internal swirl vanes but with no swirl vanes in the outer annulus air entry. The converging cones 65 on the coal pipe 16 and outer annulus air pipe that forces the air 67 into the fuel stream could have angles of 15 degrees to 60 degrees from the vertical, but preferably has angles of about 25 degrees to 45 degrees. The coal partial oxidation takes place in a water jacketed 38 and refractory lined 46 combustor 10 located at the exit 52 of the coal/air nozzles seen in FIG. 4. 
     The difference and substantial improvement between employing the present process incorporating the hydrated lime as the alkali over limestone is shown in FIG. 3. 
     The following examples show the improvement results when hydrated lime is employed: 
     
         ______________________________________            EXAMPLE 1                     EXAMPLE 2______________________________________COAL:Feed Rate, Lb/hr   834        856Feed Rate, MM Btu/hr*              10.4       10.8Sulfur (as fed), wt %              2.47       2.69ALKALI:Type               CaCO3      Ca(OH)2Feed Rate, lb/hr   64         47Ca/S Molar Ratio   0.97       1.1AIR:1st State Stoichiometry, Vol. %              66.5       62.81st + 2nd Stage Stoichiometry,              120.8      118.0Vol %STEAM:lb Steam/lb coal   0-0.25     0.25COMBUSTION:Carbon Conversion, wt %              96.9       96.8PARTICULATE:1st State Removal, wt %              37.4       22.6Cyclone Removal, wt %              34.3       23.6Left in Flue Gas, wt %              28.3       53.8SULFUR CAPTURE:Molten Slag, wt %  1.34       2.61Cyclone Particulate, wt %              15.13      11.15Fine Particulate**, wt %              14.53      30.94Overall, wt %      31.00      44.701st STAGE FUEL GAS***:H2S, ppmv          750-1700   0SO2, ppmv          1000-1500  0CS2, ppmv          16         0NO.sub.x           100-700    100NH3, ppmv          0NO.sub.x as (NO2) from 2nd Stage.              0.34       0.36lb/MM Btu______________________________________ *Based on dry coal **By Difference ***Measured with Draeger Tubes