Coal-Gasification
www.Coal-Gasification.com
Technology, Engineering, Products, Services and Information
We provide Coal-Gasification
project development services, as well as clean
coal technologies, coal liquefaction,
and integrated
gasification combined cycle project development. Unlike most companies,
we are
equipment supplier/vendor neutral. This means we help our clients
select the best equipment for their specific application. This approach
provides our customers with superior performance, decreased operating
expenses and increased return on investment.
Our company provides turn-key project solutions that include all or part
of the following:
-
Engineering and Economic
Feasibility Studies
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Project Design, Engineering
& Permitting
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Project Construction
-
Project Funding &
Financing Options
-
Shared/Guaranteed Savings
program with no capital requirements.
-
Project Commissioning
-
Operations & Maintenance
For more information: call us
at: 832-758-0027
What is
Coal-Gasification?
Coal
gasification offers one of the most versatile and cleanest ways to convert
the energy content of coal into electricity, hydrogen, and other energy
forms.
The
first pioneering coal gasification electric power plants are now operating
commercially in the United States and in other nations, and many experts
predict that coal gasification will be at the heart of the future
generations of clean coal technology plants for several decades into the
future. For example, at the core of the U.S. Department of Energy's FutureGen
power plant of the future will be an advanced coal gasifier.
Rather
than burning coal directly, gasification breaks down coal - or virtually
any carbon-based feedstock - into its basic chemical constituents. In a
modern gasifier, coal is typically exposed to hot steam and carefully
controlled amounts of air or oxygen under high temperatures and pressures.
Under these conditions, carbon molecules in coal break apart, setting into
motion chemical reactions that typically produce a mixture of carbon
monoxide, hydrogen and other gaseous compounds.
Gasification,
in fact, may be one of the best ways to produce clean-burning hydrogen for
tomorrow's automobiles and power-generating fuel cells. Hydrogen and other
coal gases can also be used to fuel power-generating turbines or as the
chemical "building blocks" for a wide range of commercial
products.
The
Energy Department's Office of Fossil Energy is working on coal gasifier
advances that enhance efficiency, environmental performance, and
reliability as well as expand the gasifier's flexibility to process a
variety of feedstocks (including biomass and municipal/industrial waste).
Environmental Benefits
The
environmental benefits stem from the capability to cleanse as much as 99
percent of the pollutant-forming impurities from coal-derived gases.
Sulfur in coal, for example, emerges as hydrogen sulfide and can be
captured by processes used today in the chemical industry. In some
methods, the sulfur can be extracted in a form that can be sold
commercially. Likewise, nitrogen typically exits as ammonia and can be
scrubbed from the coal gas by processes that produce fertilizers or other
ammonia-based chemicals.
The
Office of Fossil Energy is also exploring advanced syngas cleaning and
conditioning processes that are even more effective in eliminating
emissions from coal gasifiers. Multi-contaminant control processes are
being developed that reduce pollutants to parts-per-billion levels and are
effective in cleaning mercury and other trace metals in addition to other
impurities.
Coal
gasification may offer a further environmental advantage in addressing
concerns over the atmospheric buildup of greenhouse gases, such as carbon
dioxide.. If oxygen is used in a coal gasifier instead of air, carbon
dioxide is emitted as a concentrated gas stream. In this form, it can be
captured more easily and at lower costs for ultimate disposition in
various sequestration approaches. (By contrast, when coal burns or is
reacted in air, 80 percent of which is nitrogen, the resulting carbon
dioxide is much more diluted and more costly to separate from the much
larger mass of gases flowing from the combustor or gasifier.)
Efficiency Benefits
Efficiency
gains are another benefit of coal gasification. In a typical coal
combustion plant, heat from burning coal is used to boil water, making
steam that drives a steam turbine-generator. Only a third of the energy
value of coal is actually converted into electricity by most combustion
plants, the rest is lost as waste heat.
A
coal gasification power plant, however, typically gets dual duty from the
gases it produces. First, the coal gases, cleaned of their impurities, are
fired in a gas turbine - much like natural gas - to generate one source of
electricity. The hot exhaust of the gas turbine is then used to generate
steam for a more conventional steam turbine-generator. This dual source of
electric power, called a "combined cycle," converts much more of
coal's inherent energy value into useable electricity. The fuel efficiency
of a coal gasification power plant can be boosted to 50 percent or more.
Future
concepts that incorporate a fuel cell or fuel cell-gas turbine hybrid
could achieve even higher efficiencies, perhaps in the 60 percent range,
or nearly twice today's typical coal combustion plants. And if any of the
remaining waste heat can be channeled into process steam or heat, perhaps
for nearby factories or district heating plants, the overall fuel use
efficiency of future gasification plants could reach 70 to 80 percent.
Higher
efficiencies translate into more economical electric power and potential
savings for ratepayers. A more efficient plant also uses less fuel to
generate power, meaning that less carbon dioxide is produced. In fact,
coal gasification power processes under development by the Energy
Department could cut the formation of carbon dioxide by 40 percent or more
compared to today's conventional coal-burning plant.
The
capability to produce electricity, hydrogen, chemicals, or various
combinations while virtually eliminating air pollutants and potentially
greenhouse gas emissions makes coal gasification one of the most promising
technologies for the energy plants of tomorrow.
Clean Coal
Technology &
The President's
Clean Coal Power Initiative
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During
his campaign for the Presidency, George W. Bush pledged to commit $2
billion over 10 years to advance clean coal technology - a pledge he
has subsequently carried out in the National Energy Policy and in
budget requests to Congress.
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"Clean
coal technology" describes a new generation of energy processes that
sharply reduce air emissions and other pollutants compared to older
coal-burning systems. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the U.S.
Department of Energy conducted a joint program with industry and State
agencies to demonstrate the best of these new technologies at scales large
enough for companies to make commercial decisions. More than 20 of the
technologies tested in the original program achieved commercial success.
The
early program, however, was focused on the environmental challenges of the
time - primarily concerns over the impact of acid rain on forests and
watersheds. In the 21st century, additional environmental concerns have
emerged - the potential health impacts of trace emissions of mercury, the
effects of microscopic particles on people with respiratory problems, and
the potential global climate-altering impact of greenhouse gases.
With
coal likely to remain one of the nation's lowest-cost electric power
suppliers for the foreseeable future, President Bush has pledged a new
commitment to even more advanced clean coal technologies. As the President
said in presenting his National Energy Policy to the American public on
May 17, 2001
, "More than half of the electricity generated in
America
today comes from coal. If we weren't blessed with this natural resource,
we would face even greater [energy] shortages and higher prices today.
Yet, coal presents an environmental challenge. So our plan funds research
into new, clean coal technologies."
Building
on the successes of the original program, the new clean coal initiative
encompasses a broad spectrum of research and large-scale projects that
target today's most pressing environmental challenges.
Initially,
the demonstration portion of the program, the Clean Coal Power Initiative,
is providing government co-financing for new coal technologies that can
help utilities meet the President's Clear Skies Initiative to cut sulfur,
nitrogen and mercury pollutants from power plants by nearly 70 percent by
the year 2018. Also, some of the early projects are showing ways to reduce
greenhouse gases from coal plants by boosting the efficiency at which they
convert coal to electricity or other energy forms.
Coal
gasification offers one of the most versatile and cleanest ways to convert
the energy content of coal into electricity, hydrogen, and other energy
forms.
The
first pioneering coal gasification electric power plants are now operating
commercially in the United States and in other nations, and many experts
predict that coal gasification will be at the heart of the future
generations of clean coal technology plants for several decades into the
future. For example, at the core of the U.S. Department of Energy's FutureGen
power plant of the future will be an advanced coal gasifier.
Rather
than burning coal directly, gasification breaks down coal - or virtually
any carbon-based feedstock - into its basic chemical constituents. In a
modern gasifier, coal is typically exposed to hot steam and carefully
controlled amounts of air or oxygen under high temperatures and pressures.
Under these conditions, carbon molecules in coal break apart, setting into
motion chemical reactions that typically produce a mixture of carbon
monoxide, hydrogen and other gaseous compounds.
Gasification,
in fact, may be one of the best ways to produce clean-burning hydrogen for
tomorrow's automobiles and power-generating fuel cells. Hydrogen and other
coal gases can also be used to fuel power-generating turbines or as the
chemical "building blocks" for a wide range of commercial
products.
The
Energy Department's Office of Fossil Energy is working on coal gasifier
advances that enhance efficiency, environmental performance, and
reliability as well as expand the gasifier's flexibility to process a
variety of feedstocks (including biomass and municipal/industrial waste).
Environmental
Benefits
The
environmental benefits stem from the capability to cleanse as much as 99
percent of the pollutant-forming impurities from coal-derived gases.
Sulfur in coal, for example, emerges as hydrogen sulfide and can be
captured by processes used today in the chemical industry. In some
methods, the sulfur can be extracted in a form that can be sold
commercially. Likewise, nitrogen typically exits as ammonia and can be
scrubbed from the coal gas by processes that produce fertilizers or other
ammonia-based chemicals.
The
Office of Fossil Energy is also exploring advanced syngas cleaning and
conditioning processes that are even more effective in eliminating
emissions from coal gasifiers. Multi-contaminant control processes are
being developed that reduce pollutants to parts-per-billion levels and are
effective in cleaning mercury and other trace metals in addition to other
impurities.
Coal
gasification may offer a further environmental advantage in addressing
concerns over the atmospheric buildup of greenhouse gases, such as carbon
dioxide.. If oxygen is used in a coal gasifier instead of air, carbon
dioxide is emitted as a concentrated gas stream. In this form, it can be
captured more easily and at lower costs for ultimate disposition in
various sequestration approaches. (By contrast, when coal burns or is
reacted in air, 80 percent of which is nitrogen, the resulting carbon
dioxide is much more diluted and more costly to separate from the much
larger mass of gases flowing from the combustor or gasifier.)
Efficiency Benefits
Efficiency
gains are another benefit of coal gasification. In a typical coal
combustion plant, heat from burning coal is used to boil water, making
steam that drives a steam turbine-generator. Only a third of the energy
value of coal is actually converted into electricity by most combustion
plants, the rest is lost as waste heat.
A
coal gasification power plant, however, typically gets dual duty from the
gases it produces. First, the coal gases, cleaned of their impurities, are
fired in a gas turbine - much like natural gas - to generate one source of
electricity. The hot exhaust of the gas turbine is then used to generate
steam for a more conventional steam turbine-generator. This dual source of
electric power, called a "combined cycle," converts much more of
coal's inherent energy value into useable electricity. The fuel efficiency
of a coal gasification power plant can be boosted to 50 percent or more.
Future
concepts that incorporate a fuel cell or fuel cell-gas turbine hybrid
could achieve even higher efficiencies, perhaps in the 60 percent range,
or nearly twice today's typical coal combustion plants. And if any of the
remaining waste heat can be channeled into process steam or heat, perhaps
for nearby factories or district heating plants, the overall fuel use
efficiency of future gasification plants could reach 70 to 80 percent.
Higher
efficiencies translate into more economical electric power and potential
savings for ratepayers. A more efficient plant also uses less fuel to
generate power, meaning that less carbon dioxide is produced. In fact,
coal gasification power processes under development by the Energy
Department could cut the formation of carbon dioxide by 40 percent or more
compared to today's conventional coal-burning plant.
The
capability to produce electricity, hydrogen, chemicals, or various
combinations while virtually eliminating air pollutants and potentially
greenhouse gas emissions makes coal gasification one of the most promising
technologies for the energy plants of tomorrow.
COAL
is our most abundant fossil fuel. The
United States
has more coal than the rest of the world has oil. There is still enough
coal underground in this country to provide energy for the next 200 to 300
years.
But
coal is not a perfect fuel.
Trapped
inside coal are traces of impurities like sulfur and nitrogen. When coal
burns, these impurities are released into the air.
While
floating in the air, these substances can combine with water vapor (for
example, in clouds) and form droplets that fall to earth as weak forms of
sulfuric and nitric acid – scientists call it "acid rain."
There
are also tiny specks of minerals – including common dirt – mixed in
coal. These tiny particles don't burn and make up the ash left behind in a
coal combustor. Some of the tiny particles also get caught up in the
swirling combustion gases and, along with water vapor, form the smoke that
comes out of a coal plant's smokestack. Some of these particles are so
small that 30 of them laid side-by-side would barely equal the width of a
human hair!
Also,
coal like all fossil fuels is formed out of carbon. All living things -
even people - are made up of carbon. (Remember - coal started out as
living plants.) But when coal burns, its carbon combines with oxygen in
the air and forms carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is a colorless, odorless
gas, but in the atmosphere, it is one of several gases that can trap the
earth's heat. Many scientists believe this is causing the earth's
temperature to rise, and this warming could be altering the earth's
climate (read more about the "greenhouse effect").
Sounds
like coal is a dirty fuel to burn. Many years ago, it was. But things have
changed. Especially in the last 20 years, scientists have developed ways
to capture the pollutants trapped in coal before the impurities can escape
into the atmosphere. Today, we have technology that can filter out 99
percent of the tiny particles and remove more than 95 percent of the acid
rain pollutants in coal.
We
also have new technologies that cut back on the release of carbon dioxide
by burning coal more efficiently.
Many
of these technologies belong to a family of energy systems called
"clean coal technologies." Since the mid-1980s, the U.S.
Government has invested more than $2 billion in developing and testing
these processes in power plants and factories around the country. Private
companies and State governments have been part of this program. In fact,
they have contributed more than $4 billion to these projects.
How
do you make coal cleaner?
Actually
there are several ways.
Take
sulfur, for example. Sulfur is a yellowish substance that exists in tiny
amounts in coal. In some coals found in
Ohio
,
Pennsylvania
,
West Virginia
and other eastern states, sulfur makes up from 3 to 10 percent of the
weight of coal.
For
some coals found in
Wyoming
,
Montana
and other western states (as well as some places in the East), the sulfur
can be only 1/100ths (or less than 1 percent) of the weight of the coal.
Still, it is important that most of this sulfur be removed before it goes
up a power plant's smokestack.
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Although coal is primarily a mixture of carbon (black) and hydrogen
(red) atoms, sulfur atoms (yellow) are also trapped in coal,
primarily in two forms. In one form, the sulfur is a separate
particle often linked with iron (green) with no connection to the
carbon atoms, as in the center of the drawing. In the second form,
sulfur is chemically bound to the carbon atoms, such as in the upper
left.
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One
way is to clean the coal before it arrives at the power plant. One of the
ways this is done is by simply crushing the coal into small chunks and
washing it. Some of the sulfur that exists in tiny specks in coal (called
"pyritic sulfur " because it is combined with iron to form iron
pyrite, otherwise known as "fool's gold) can be washed out of the
coal in this manner. Typically, in one washing process, the coal chunks
are fed into a large water-filled tank. The coal floats to the surface
while the sulfur impurities sink. There are facilities around the country
called "coal preparation plants" that clean coal this way.
Not
all of coal's sulfur can be removed like this, however. Some of the sulfur
in coal is actually chemically connected to coal's carbon molecules
instead of existing as separate particles. This type of sulfur is called
"organic sulfur," and washing won't remove it. Several process
have been tested to mix the coal with chemicals that break the sulfur away
from the coal molecules, but most of these processes have proven too
expensive. Scientists are still working to reduce the cost of these
chemical cleaning processes.
Most
modern power plants — and all plants built after 1978 — are required
to have special devices installed that clean the sulfur from the coal's
combustion gases before the gases go up the smokestack. The technical name
for these devices is "flue gas desulfurization units," but most
people just call them "scrubbers" — because they
"scrub" the sulfur out of the smoke released by coal-burning
boilers.
How
do scrubbers work?
Most
scrubbers rely on a very common substance found in nature called
"limestone." We literally have mountains of limestone throughout
this country. When crushed and processed, limestone can be made into a
white powder. Limestone can be made to absorb sulfur gases under the right
conditions — much like a sponge absorbs water.
In
most scrubbers, limestone (or another similar material called lime) is
mixed with water and sprayed into the coal combustion gases (called
"flue gases"). The limestone captures the sulfur and
"pulls" it out of the gases. The limestone and sulfur combine
with each other to form either a wet paste (it looks like toothpaste!), or
in some newer scrubbers, a dry powder. In either case, the sulfur is
trapped and prevented from escaping into the air.
The
Clean Coal Technology Program tested several new types of scrubbers that
proved to be more effective, lower cost, and more reliable than older
scrubbers. The program also tested other types of devices that sprayed
limestone inside the tubing (or "ductwork') of a power plant to
absorb sulfur pollutants.
But
what about nitrogen pollutants? That's another part of the Clean Coal
story.
Knocking
the Nitrogen Oxides Out of Coal
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How
Nitrogen Oxides Form
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Air
is mostly nitrogen molecules (green in the above diagram) and oxygen
molecules (purple). When heated hot enough (around 3000 degrees F),
the molecules break apart and oxygen atoms link with the nitrogen
atoms to form NOx, an air pollutant.
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Nitrogen
is the most common part of the air we breathe. In fact, about 80% of the
air is nitrogen. Normally, nitrogen atoms float around joined to each
other like chemical couples. But when air is heated — in a coal boiler's
flame, for example — these nitrogen atoms break apart and join with
oxygen. This forms "nitrogen oxides" — or, as it is sometimes
called, "NOx" (rhymes with "socks"). NOx can also be
formed from the atoms of nitrogen that are trapped inside coal.
In the
air, NOx is a pollutant. It can cause smog, the brown haze you sometimes
see around big cities. It is also one of the pollutants that forms
"acid rain." And it can help form something called "groundlevel
ozone," another type of pollutant that can make the air dingy.
NOx
can be produced by any fuel that burns hot enough. Automobiles, for
example, produce NOx when they burn gasoline. But a lot of NOx comes from
coal-burning power plants, so the Clean Coal Technology Program developed
new ways to reduce this pollutant.
One of
the best ways to reduce NOx is to prevent it from forming in the first
place. Scientists have found ways to burn coal (and other fuels) in
burners where there is more fuel than air in the hottest combustion
chambers. Under these conditions, most of the oxygen in air combines with
the fuel, rather than with the nitrogen. The burning mixture is then sent
into a second combustion chamber where a similar process is repeated until
all the fuel is burned.
This
concept is called "staged combustion" because coal is burned in
stages. A new family of coal burners called "low-NOx burners"
has been developed using this way of burning coal. These burners can
reduce the amount of NOx released into the air by more than half. Today,
because of research and the Clean Coal Technology Program, more than half
of all the large coal-burning boilers in the
United States
will be using these types of burners. By the year 2000, more than 3 out of
every four boilers will have been outfitted with these new clean coal
technologies.
There
is also a family of new technologies that work like "scubbers"
by cleaning NOx from the flue gases (the smoke) of coal burners. Some of
these devices use special chemicals called "catalysts" that
break apart the NOx into non-polluting gases. Although these devices are
more expensive than "low-NOx burners," they can remove up to 90
percent of NOx pollutants.
But in
the future, there may be an even cleaner way to burn coal in a power
plant. Or maybe, there may be a way that doesn't burn the coal at all.
Fluidized
Bed Boilers
A
"Bed" for Burning Coal?
It was
a wet, chilly day in
Washington
DC
in 1979 when a few scientists and engineers joined with government and
college officials on the campus of
Georgetown
University
to celebrate the completion of one of the world's most advanced coal
combustors.
It was
a small coal burner by today's standards, but large enough to provide heat
and steam for much of the university campus. But the new boiler built
beside the campus tennis courts was unlike most other boilers in the
world.
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A
Fluidized Bed Boiler
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In
a fluidized bed boiler, upward blowing jets of air suspend burning
coal, allowing it to mix with limestone that absorbs sulfur
pollutants.
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It was
called a "fluidized bed boiler." In a typical coal boiler, coal
would be crushed into very fine particles, blown into the boiler, and
ignited to form a long, lazy flame. Or in other types of boilers, the
burning coal would rest on grates. But in a "fluidized bed boiler," crushed coal particles float inside the boiler, suspended on
upward-blowing jets of air. The red-hot mass of floating coal — called
the "bed" — would bubble and tumble around like boiling lava
inside a volcano. Scientists call this being "fluidized." That's
how the name "fluidized bed boiler" came about.
Why
does a "fluidized bed boiler" burn coal cleaner?
There
are two major reasons. One, the tumbling action allows limestone to be
mixed in with the coal. Remember limestone from a couple of pages ago?
Limestone is a sulfur sponge — it absorbs sulfur pollutants. As coal
burns in a fluidized bed boiler, it releases sulfur. But just as rapidly,
the limestone tumbling around beside the coal captures the sulfur. A
chemical reaction occurs, and the sulfur gases are changed into a dry
powder that can be removed from the boiler. (This dry powder — called calcium
sulfate — can be processed into the wallboard we use for building
walls inside our houses.)
The
second reason a fluidized bed boiler burns cleaner is that it burns
"cooler." Now, cooler in this sense is still pretty hot —
about 1400 degrees F. But older coal boilers operate at temperatures
nearly twice that (almost 3000 degrees F). Remember NOx from the page
before (go
back)? NOx forms when a fuel burns hot enough to break apart nitrogen
molecules in the air and cause the nitrogen atoms to join with oxygen
atoms. But 1400 degrees isn't hot enough for that to happen, so very
little NOx forms in a fluidized bed boiler.
The
result is that a fluidized bed boiler can burn very dirty coal and remove
90% or more of the sulfur and nitrogen pollutants while the coal is
burning. Fluidized bed boilers can also burn just about anything else —
wood, ground-up railroad ties, even soggy coffee grounds.
Today,
fluidized bed boilers are operating or being built that are 10 to 20 times
larger than the small unit built almost 20 years ago at Georgetown
University. There are more than 300 of these boilers around this country
and the world. The Clean Coal Technology Program helped test these boilers
in
Colorado
, in
Ohio
and most recently, in
Florida
.
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The
Ohio Power Company built this advanced pressurized
fluidized bed boiler near the town of
Brilliant
, OH, as part of a joint project with
the U.S. Department of Energy.
(Click on photo for larger
version.)
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A new
type of fluidized bed boiler makes a major improvement in the basic
system. It encases the entire boiler inside a large pressure vessel, much
like the pressure cooker used in homes for canning fruits and vegetables
— except the ones used in power plants are the size of a small house!
Burning coal in a "pressurized fluidized bed boiler" produces a
high-pressure stream of combustion gases that can spin a gas turbine to
make electricity, then boil water for a steam turbine — two sources of
electricity from the same fuel!
A
"pressurized fluidized bed boiler" is a more efficient way to
burn coal. In fact, future boilers using this system will be able to
generate 50% more electricity from coal than a regular power plant from
the same amount of coal. That's like getting 3 units of power when you
used to get only 2.
Because
it uses less fuel to produce the same amount of power, a more efficient
"pressurized fluidized bed boiler" will reduce the amount of
carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas) released from coal-burning power plants.
"Pressurized
fluidized bed boilers" are one of the newest ways to burn coal
cleanly. But there is another new way that doesn't actually burn the coal
at all.
Don't
think of coal as a solid black rock. Think of it as a mass of atoms. Most
of the atoms are carbon. A few are hydrogen. And there are some others,
like sulfur and nitrogen, mixed in. Chemists can take this mass of atoms,
break it apart, and make new substances — like gas!
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One
of the most advanced - and cleanest - coal power plants in the world
is Tampa Electric's Polk Power Station in
Florida
. Rather than burning coal, it turns
coal into a gas that can be cleaned of almost all pollutants.
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How do
you break apart the atoms of coal? You may think it would take a
sledgehammer, but actually all it takes is water and heat. Heat coal hot
enough inside a big metal vessel, blast it with steam (the water), and it
breaks apart. Into what?
The
carbon atoms join with oxygen that is in the air (or pure oxygen can be
injected into the vessel). The hydrogen atoms join with each other. The
result is a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen — a gas.
Now,
what do you do with the gas?
You
can burn it and uses the hot combustion gases to spin a gas turbine to
generate electricity. The exhaust gases coming out of the gas turbine are
hot enough to boil water to make steam that can spin another type of
turbine to generate even more electricity. But why go to all the trouble
to turn the coal into gas if all you are going to do is burn it?
A
major reason is that the impurities in coal — like sulfur, nitrogen and
many other trace elements — can be almost entirely filtered out when
coal is changed into a gas (a process called gasification). In
fact, scientists have ways to remove 99.9% of the sulfur and small dirt
particles from the coal gas. Gasifying coal is one of the best ways to
clean pollutants out of coal.
Another
reason is that the coal gases — carbon monoxide and hydrogen — don't
have to be burned. They can also be used as valuable chemicals. Scientists
have developed chemical reactions that turn carbon monoxide and hydrogen
into everything from liquid fuels for cars and trucks to plastic
toothbrushes!
Today,
in
Tampa
,
Florida
, and
West Terre Haute
,
Indiana
, there are power plants generating electricity by gasifying coal, rather
than burning it. At a plant in
Kingsport
,
Tennessee
, coal gas is being used to make plastic for photographic film and to make
methanol (a fuel that can be burned in automobile engines).
Coal
gasification could be one of the most promising ways to use coal in the
future to generate electricity and other valuable products. Yet, it is
only one of an entirely new family of energy processes called "Clean
Coal Technologies" — technologies that can make fossil fuels future
fuels.
What is a Circulating Fluidized
Bed?
A Circulating Fluidized Bed is a relatively new and evolving technology that has become a very efficient method of generating low-cost electricity
while generating electricity with very low emissions and environmental impacts.
In a Circulating Fluidized Bed
combustion process, crushed coal is mixed with limestone and fired in a process resembling a boiling fluid. The limestone removes the sulfur and converts it into an environmentally-benign powder that is removed with the ash.
Fluidized bed boilers are
capable of burning a wide range of fuels cleanly, including biomass fuels
such as wood waste.
Coal-Gasification
www.Coal-Gasification.com
Fluidized
Bed Boiler
www.FluidizedBedBoiler.com
Fluidized
Bed Boilers
www.FluidizedBedBoilers.com
Clean
Coal Technology
www.CleanCoalTechnology.com
Zero
Emission Energy
www.ZeroEmissionEnergy.com
Zero
Emission Power
www.ZeroEmissionPower.com
* From the Department of Energy
website with permission
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