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Combustion of Thermally Thick Wood Particles: A Study on the Influence of Wood Particle Size on the Combustion Behavior

Abstract

A one-dimensional (1D) comprehensive combustion model for thermally thick wet wood particles, which is also applicable for studying large wood logs, is developed. The model describes drying, devolatilization, and char gasification as well as char oxidation. Furthermore, CO oxidation is modeled, in order to account for the fact that exiting gas products can be oxidized and therefore limit the oxygen transportation to the active sites. The challenges for model validation are outlined. Model validation was done against experimental data for combustion of near-spherical wood particles. Furthermore, the validated model was up-scaled and the effect of wood log diameter on the thermal conversion time, the extent as well as the position of drying, devolatilization, and char conversion zones were studied. The upscaling was done for cylindrical wood logs with an aspect ratio of 4. The thermal conversion time significantly increased with the size. It was also found that the relative extent of the drying, devolatilization, and char conversion zones decreased as wood log size increased. The paper concludes with recommendations for future work.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Energy Research / Termisk energi
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Year

2018

Published in

Energy & Fuels

ISSN

0887-0624

Volume

32

Issue

6

Page(s)

6847 - 6862

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository