Hi James,

Sorry for slow response but have been a bit ill these last ten days.

The bad news is that ESP isn't going to work either with wet carbon soot. It shorts out all the anodes causing arcing and explosions. The European guys had several "incidents" so not sure they are even legal to use, other than for dry boiler fly ash, etc. I'm sure Bjorn has more to add, but save your $$ and time.

Regards,

Doug Williams,

Fluidyne.


On 02/11/17 12:16, James Joyce wrote:
Thanks for the advice Doug, Bjorn and Leland. Hopefully you can prevent others from 
exploring again some of the many dead ends that gasification presents to us "starry 
eyed" technologists !

I am certainly more nervous that I was before. The flue gas application might 
go ok, as long as we keep the start-up emissions out of it ... but the 
pyrolysis gas application looks like trouble. I will have to follow up on ESP 
for that, however the last time I looked that the cost of the electrical items 
was more than twice the cost of the rest of the plant combined.

I had considered burn-off as the option for tar fouling in the flue gas 
application. We will be running at 350 deg C with 30-40% excess air, so it 
might not need much encouragement to burn off any tars once it gets to 
temperature.

We were going to use a flooded auger for dust removal, recognising that a 
smouldering hopper fire is all but inevitable, because we can get ember 
carryover from our thermal oxidiser. Will have to look at how to manage the 
hold-up of the soot/ash. I have considered a sonic horn for that. They are used 
for soot/ash release in large coal fired furnaces ... not cheap and may present 
some risk to the candles.

Sounds like cyclones ahead are a bad idea ... just as well as I had no intention of doing 
that figuring the cake needed the larger particles to give it some "body".

Great to get some actual numbers on pressure drop. Unifrax were suggesting to keep 
it below 10" to avoid stressing the candles. In the flue gas application, we 
can use compressed air for the back-pulse, so we don't have to be as conservative as 
you would be with inert gas. For the pyrolysis gas application I can see this being 
another reason to have a good look at the electrostatic precips again ...or perhaps 
batch filtering with deep bed sand filters that are water washed once the pressure 
drop is too high ?

regards,

James





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