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contributor authorJ. D. Stephenson
contributor authorG. M. Reistad
date accessioned2017-05-08T23:28:12Z
date available2017-05-08T23:28:12Z
date copyrightMay, 1988
date issued1988
identifier issn0199-6231
identifier otherJSEEDO-28205#82_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/104437
description abstractThis paper investigates the use of wood to fuel a trimburner incorporated in a combined-cycle, wood-fired power plant. The trimburner is designed to boost the temperature of the air stream entering the gas turbine. Wood conversion processes capable of producing a clean synthetic fuel were investigated since direct wood combustion products are too “dirty” to be allowed to pass through the turbine blading. Of the three wood conversion processes considered (pyrolysis, gasification, methanol production), gasification was selected as the most applicable process for the trimburner concept. Three wood-fired trimburner systems employing an up-draft gasifier design were developed and simulated. These subsystems differ in the way the producer gas, formed in the gasifier, was compressed to the trimburner operating pressure. The effects of changing system variables, such as wood moisture content and gasifier air/fuel equivalence ratio, on the performance of the subsystems and the overall system were evaluated. It was determined that the most efficient operation of all the trimburner subsystems occurred at the lowest allowable operating gasifier equivalence ratio, about 0.275. Increasing the wood moisture content from 15 percent to 50 percent decreased the efficiency of the overall system about 3 percentage points, regardless of the specific trimburner system. At the usual wood moisture content of 50 percent, the best trimburner system, operating at the optimum equivalence ratio, increased the overall system performance about 8 percent (1.7 percentage points) relative to the equivalent metallic heat exchanger based system with no trimburner. The system that used air from the gas turbine compressor in a pressurized gasifier exhibited slightly superior performance (approximately 0.5 percentage points) relative to the system using the other trimburner designs. However, this performance superiority must be tempered since the pressurized gasifier system is more sensitive to the efficiency of the heat exchanger used to recover energy from the dirty producer gas.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleAnalysis of a Wood-Fueled Trimburner System for Use in a Combined-Cycle, Wood-Fired Power Plant
typeJournal Paper
journal volume110
journal issue2
journal titleJournal of Solar Energy Engineering
identifier doi10.1115/1.3268249
journal fristpage82
journal lastpage89
identifier eissn1528-8986
keywordsWood products
keywordsCycles
keywordsPower stations
keywordsFuel gasification
keywordsGas turbines
keywordsHeat exchangers
keywordsFuels
keywordsCompressors
keywordsSynthetic fuels
keywordsPressure
keywordsTemperature
keywordsCombustion
keywordsDesign
keywordsPyrolysis
keywordsMethanol AND Turbines
treeJournal of Solar Energy Engineering:;1988:;volume( 110 ):;issue: 002
contenttypeFulltext


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