United States
                          Environmental Protection
                          Agency
Air and Energy Engineering
Research Laboratory
Research Triangle Park NC 27711
                          Research and Development
EPA/600/S9-86/021 Nov. 1986
       v>EPA         Project  Summary

                          Proceedings:  1985 Joint
                          Symposium  on  Stationary
 RECEIVED  combustion  NCL Control
       NOV251986

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION A6ENCS. Peralo
       LIBRARY, REGION V
                           Together, the more than 60 presenta-
                         tions from this international gathering
                         constitute a comprehensive source of
                         information on nitrogen  oxide (NOX)
                         emissions  control technologies.  As
                         such, they make a unique contribution
                         toward the  development  of cost-
                         effective and reliable control systems
                         for fossil-fuel-fired power plants.
                           This Project Summary was devel-
                         oped by EPA's Air and Energy Engineer-
                         ing Research Laboratory, Research Tri-
                         angle Park, NC, to announce key
                         findings of the research project that is
                         fully documented in a separate report
                         of the same title (see Project Report or-
                         dering information at back).

                         Introduction
                           The 1985 Joint Symposium on Sta-
                         tionary Combustion  NOX  Control was
                         held May 6-9 in Boston, MA. This was
                         the third symposium on  NOX control
                         jointly sponsored by EPA and EPRI: the
                         first was in Denver in 1980; and the sec-
                         ond, in Dallas in 1982. The symposium
                         is a consolidation of EPRI's previous
                         NOX Control Technology Seminars and
                         EPA's Symposia on Stationary Source
                         Combustion. The objective of the sym-
                         posium is to give attendees the oppor-
                         tunity to exchange information on the
                         latest advances in combustion technol-
                         ogy and flue gas treatment processes
                         for stationary sources.  Such an  ex-
                         change of information contributes sig-
                         nificantly to the development of cost-
                         effective and reliable NOX  emission
                         control systems.
                           Over 60 papers were presented dur-
                         ing the 4-day meeting which was at-
                         tended by representatives of 13 nations.
Topics ranged from full-scale applica-
tions of combustion modifications and
flue gas treatment to fundamental com-
bustion research. The speakers repre-
sented a variety of international organi-
zations including  electric utility
companies, boiler and other related
equipment manufacturers, research
and development groups, and regula-
tory agencies.
  Cochairmen of the symposium were
David Eskinazi of EPRI and Michael C.
Osborne of EPA. The keynote address
was delivered by Robert C. Carr, Depart-
ment Director of Environmental Control
Systems of EPRI's Coal Combustion
Systems Division and EPA's Carl R.
Gerber, Director of the Office of Envi-
ronmental  Engineering and Technol-
ogy, Office  of  Research and Develop-
ment.  The  welcoming address was
given by C. Bruce Damrell, Vice Presi-
dent, Engineering and Distribution of
Boston Edison Company. The sympo-
sium proceedings are in two volumes:
  • Volume 1: Utility Boiler Applica-
            tions
   —Session 1: Introduction
   —Session 2: Manufacturer's Up-
             date of Commer-
             cially Available
             Technology
   —Session 3: Low-N0x Combus-
             tion Development
   —Session 4: Development and
             Application of Fuel
             Staging (Reburning)
   —Session 5:  Full-Scale Boiler
             Application
   —Session 7: Advanced Power
              Plants
   —Session 8a: Flue Gas Treatment

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Volume 2: Industrial Processes,
          Fundamental Studies,
          and Slagging Combus-
          tors
         6a: Externally Staged
             Combustors (Slag-
             ging Combustors)
             Fundamental Com-
             bustion Studies
             Stationary Engines
             and Industrial Proc-
             ess Systems
             Overview of Fur-
             nace Sorbent Injec-
             tion S02 Control
             Fuel and Combus-
             tion Modifications
             for Commercial/In-
             dustrial Boilers
6b
8b
9a
9b
    —Session


    —Session

    —Session


    —Session


    —Session




Session 1

Introduction

(Michael C. Osborne,
EPA/AEERL, Session Chairman)

1-1. "An Overview of
     International NOX Control
     Regulations," Peter W.
     Dacey, IEA Coal Research
  The pace of development of NOX
emission control regulations has in-
creased rapidly in the past 2 years. This
paper looks at  some of the factors
underlying this  acceleration and the
regulatory development in  different
countries. The experience in the Federal
Republic of Germany, Japan, and the
United States has been influential in de-
termining  the timing and the form of
regulations in other countries. Within a
national framework, local agencies can
significantly affect the stringency of reg-
ulations at individual sites.
  Using conversion factors for the dif-
ferent sets of units used allows inter-
country comparisons to be  made. In
general the variation between countries
in their treatment of emission from dif-
ferent fuels is less significant than the
absolute differences between emission
levels for a given fuel. Treatment of par-
ticular plant  sizes is generally  in  line
with the overall  stringency of a coun-
try's regulations. Potential future devel-
opments are reviewed.

1-2.  "Legal Instruments and
     the State of Technology
     for Reducing NOX
     Emissions in the Federal
     Republic  of  Germany,"
     Helmut Keinhorst, Federal
     Environmental Agency
  The air pollution situation of the
highly polluted Federal Republic of Ger-
many was presented. In this context, the
considerable damage to buildings and
materials was considered as well as the
extent of recent forest damage. The le-
gal basis for the Programme of the Fed-
eral Government to reduce NOX pollu-
tion was explained. In particular the
Ordinance on Large Furnaces and the
Technical Instructions on Air Pollution
Control (Tl Air) were  mentioned. The
measures being taken for the limitation
of NOX in Europe were dealt with briefly.
  The primary measures under consid-
eration for the achievement of the re-
duction target and NOX flue gas treat-
ment technologies were  presented.
Using plants being planned or under
construction as an example, it was
shown which rate of reduction can be
expected from the individual primary
and secondary measures. In conclusion,
a prognosis was made for the attainable
reduction potential through the intro-
duced measures. The result is that a
considerable decline in the pollution of
the environment may be counted on.

1-3.  "Utility Perspective on
     Low NOX Control,"
     Dominick J. Mormile,
     Consolidated  Edison
     Company of New York,
     Inc.
  The Empire State Electric Energy Re-
search Corporation has initiated a pro-
gram to provide the New  York Power
Pool  member utilities with  information
to assess the impacts  of implementing
alternative NOX controls on their boil-
ers. This paper discusses the need,
basis, and approach for conducting this
program.

1-4.  "Role of NOX Emissions in
     Acid  Rain,"  Julius Chang,
     National Center for
     Atmospheric Research
  This paper was not submitted for pub-
lication.
1-5.  "Boreal Montane
     Ecosystem Decline in
     Central Europe and the
     Eastern United States:
     Potential Role of
     Anthropogenic Pollution
     with  Emphasis on
     Nitrogen Compounds,"
      Robert I. Bruck, North
      Carolina State University
  A large scale decline of forests in the
 Federal Republic of Germany involving
 many tree species  has been observed
 and extensively studied since  1979. A
 more limited decline of high  altitude
 boreal montane ecosystems (spruce-fir)
 in the eastern United States has been in
 progress for perhaps 20 years.  The
 unique nature  of the observed symp-
 toms, the location of the affected forests
 in areas of high anthropogenic pollution
 deposition, and the synchronized  ap-
 pearance of symptoms make it plausi-
 ble that airborne pollutants coupled
 with secondary natural factors are re-
 sponsible for the forest decline. Of re-
 cent interest is the possible role of nitro-
 gen compounds in the  forest decline
 syndrome. Nitrogen (unlike sulfur) com-
 pounds are highly active in forest
 ecosystems. Foliar or root "fertilization"
 of high altitude trees exposed to often
 violent climatic conditions could  and
 probably do  have numerous detrimen-
 tal effects. These effects  include reduc-
 tion of frost hardiness,  cell wall  thin-
 ning,  and radical shifts in  rhizosphere
 and rhizoplane microorganism  popula
 tions. This could result in a "stress syn
 drome" predisposing  the affectec
 ecosystems  to secondary pathogens
 and climatic factors.

 Session 2

 Manufacturer's Update of
 Commercially Available
 Technology

 2-1. "Utility Steam Generator
     NOX Control Update -
     1985," P. L. Cioffi,
     A. D. Larue, M. A. Acree,
     Babcock & Wilcox
  Babcock & Wilcox continues to ex
 pand  its NOX control experience am
technology along  several  fronts. Th<
 Dual Register Burner/Compartmentei
Windbox system is successfully pei
forming on 35,200 MW of capacity in
wide range of coal  boiler applications
In addition, there are several new low
 NOX systems described  in this pape
The Enhanced-lgnition Dual-Registe
Burner and the Hitachi-NR burners off€
improvements for difficult-to-bum fuel
and for further NOX reduction,  respei
lively. In-furnace NOX reduction utilize
reburning technology to achieve e)
tremely low-NOx emissions for gas, oi
or PC and can be  applied in new c

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retrofit situations. Also, the Low NOX
Cell is being developed for direct retrofit
for the unique cell burner design. Circu-
lating fluidized beds with low-NOx emis-
sions are being sold for a variety of ap-
plications.  Finally, Furnace  Sorbent
Injection combined with Iow-N0x burn-
ers is providing a means of simulta-
neous NOX/SO2 reduction for PC units.

2-2.  "1985 Update of NOX
      Emission Control
      Technology at  Combustion
      Engineering,"
      R. J.  Collette, Combustion
      Engineering, Inc.
  Much discussion has transpired in the
past several years relating to the design
and development of technology associ-
ated with the control of nitrogen  oxides
(NOX) from  utility  and industrial steam
generators. As a major supplier of
steam generators and fuel burning
equipment for the utility and industrial
marketplace.  Combustion Engineering
is now in a position to report the  results
of actual field operating  data generated
in the past 2-1/2 years.
  The NOX  control techniques pre-
sented in this discussion are systems
which Combustion Engineering has de-
veloped internally or is licensed to build
by  Mitsubishi Heavy Industries,  Ltd.
(MHI) of Japan. This paper focuses pri-
marily on design application and recent
experience  with  NOX reduction tech-
niques referred to as the PM Burner
and, initially, the  Low-N0x Concentric
Firing System.

2-3.  "Current Development in
     Low-NOx Combustion
     Systems," R. A. Lisauskas,
     C. E.  McHale, Riley Stoker
     Corp.
  The current status of Iow-N0x com-
bustion  controls  for wall- and  turbo-
fired furnaces is discussed. Pilot-scale
combustion tests have been conducted
on burner systems for both furnace con-
figurations. Second  generation com-
bustion controls have been installed on
two new industrial-size  front-wall and
Turbo-fired boilers. An advanced Turbo
furnace control system has been  devel-
oped which  integrates Iow-N0x burners
with air staging at multiple levels within
the  furnace. Preliminary field test re-
sults have demonstrated that NOX levels
significantly below currently  required
emission  limits can be  achieved with
this control system.
  Advanced in-furnace NOX and S02
control  techniques will require well
placed furnace overfire air, fuel, and
sorbent injection  systems which
achieve good penetration and rapid
mixing.
  An analytical flow simulation code is
being used to help establish design
criteria necessary to achieve effective
upper furnace overfire air, fuel, and sor-
bent injection systems which achieve
good penetration and rapid mixing. An
analytical flow simulation code is being
used to help establish design criteria
necessary to achieve effective upper
furnace mixing.

2-4. "Industrial and Utility
     Boiler IMOX Control,"
     E. S. Schindler, J. Vatsky,
     Foster Wheeler Energy
     Corp.
  This paper summarizes  Foster
Wheeler's commercial Flow/Split-Flame
Low NOX Coal Burner and field results.
Highlighted are up to 60% reduction in
NOX without changing the flame enve-
lope or increasing unburned carbon
loss; this combination makes the CF/SF
burner highly suitable for  new and
retrofit situations. Field results for new
and retrofit burners are presented. Fu-
ture low-NOx burner concepts which
have the potential to further decrease
NOX emissions are discussed.
  A summary is  presented  of Foster
Wheeler's SOz reduction work using
limestone injection into the furnace.
Prototype developments of this technol-
ogy along with field tests on an indus-
trial steam boiler are presented.
  Finally, Foster Wheeler's large scale
combustion and environmental test fa-
cility,  rated at a maximum of 75 x 106
Btu/hr heat input, is described.
Session 3
Low-NOx Combustion
Development

(Michael McElroy, EPRI,
Session Chairman)

3-1. "Experimental
     Investigation of Retrofit
     Low-NOx Combustion
     Systems," R. Lisauskas,
     R. J. Snodgrass, Riley
     Stoker Corp.;
     S. A. Johnson, Physical
     Sciences, Inc.; D. Eskinazi,
     EPRI
  Pilot-scale development tests have
been  conducted on advanced retrofit
Iow-N0x combustion controls. The tests
were  conducted in a 100 x 106 Btu/hr
test furnace designed to simulate the
combustion environment in utility coal-
fired  boilers. Several control options
were  integrated by  combining a low-
NOx burner with air and fuel combus-
tion staging within  the furnace. Each
combustion modification technique
was evaluated over  a range of design
and operating  parameters. NOX reduc-
tions  from 50 to 75% were achieved
with both advanced air- and fuel-staged
combustion. Test results are presented
along with a discussion of design con-
straints affecting the  retrofit of combus-
tion control systems to existing utility
wall-fired boilers.

3-2.  "Low-NOx Coal-Firing
      System Demonstration
      Results on a Tangentially
      Fired Boiler," A. Kokkinos,
      R. D. Lewis,  Combustion
      Engineering;
      D. G. Lachapelle,
      EPA/AEERL
  The Low-NOx Concentric Firing Sys-
tem (LNCFS)  was installed at  Utah
Power and Light's Hunter No. 2 station
for demonstration purposes. The
LNCFS was installed at the 420 MWe
station during September 1981, for the
purpose of examining its NOX emission
reduction characteristics and its effects
on long-term boiler operation  under
low-NOx firing conditions. The paper
presents the results of  this long-term
study.
  The data analysis shows that NOX
emissions can  be reduced  from base-
line emission levels to 460 (corrected to
3% 02) and 360 ppm without and with
overfire air, respectively, to levels of 240
to 260 ppm following the modification.
Long-term testing showed no effect of
the LNCFS on boiler operating parame-
ters. Thirty-day continuous NOX moni-
toring tests were also carried out aver-
aging  0.41 lb/106 Btu fired.

3-3.   "Air Flow Modeling of a
     750 MW Gas- and Oil-Fired
     Boiler," D. P. Teixeira,
     Pacific Gas and Electric
     Co.; G.  B. Gilbert,
     Dynatech R/D Co.
  Flow modeling of the air supply sys-
tem of Pacific Gas and Electric's Moss
Landing  Boiler 6-1 was performed. The

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purpose of these tests was to improve
the performance and NOX emission
characteristics of the fuel-oil/natural-
gas fired unit. Objectives of the model-
ing were to achieve reduced overall ex-
cess air and flue gas recirculation (FGR)
levels by providing uniform air and FGR
flows to each of 48 circular cell burners.
Target airflow balances to each  burner
were ±2% of average; flue gas recircu-
lation balance goals were ±1% absolute
(e.g., 14 to 16% FGR for 15% average).
  The modeling criteria and measure-
ment  techniques necessary to achieve
this level of flow and FGR balance are
described. Field test results to confirm
that the modeling criteria  in fact dupli-
cated  the full-scale boiler  behavior are
presented. Finally, results of a series of
modifications to  achieve the flow and
FGR balance targets are presented.

3-4.  "Laboratory Flow Model
      Studies to Improve
      Overfire Air Mixing,"
      R. Thompson, Fossil
      Energy  Research Corp.;
      D. Eskinazi, EPRI;
      R. Afonso, G. Gilbert,
      Dynatech R/D Co.; R. Yang,
      KVB, Inc.; C.  McHale,  Riley
      Stoker Corp.
  The installation of an overfire air sys-
tem on  coal-,  oil-, or gas-fired utility
boilers can be an effective means of re-
ducing NOX emissions without some of
the operational or retrofit limitations of
other  forms of staged combustion NOX
control. However the design of early
overfire air systems was not optimized
and their effectiveness was strongly de-
pendent on the degree of air penetra-
tion mixing and carbon burnout in the
upper furnace region. Current  design
practice suggests that an overfire air ve-
locity to bulk furnace velocity ratio of
about 6 is desirable  to achieve good
overfire air penetration. However, a re-
view of existing unit designs indicates a
number of overfire air systems were in-
stalled with low overfire air velocity be-
fore this design practice was accepted.
In addition, it has not been established
whether this design practice is  equally
effective or optimum  for all furnace fir-
ing configurations.
   The objective of this research project
is to develop specific design criteria for
retrofit and  new unit overfire air  sys-
tems  based on flow model test results.
A one-twelfth scale  model has been
constructed  with variable overfire air
port location and injection condition, fir-
ing configuration, and furnace aspect
ratio to study the  mixing  process. A
brief fundamental analysis based on jet
penetration theory was used to estab-
lish the model design criteria for simu-
lating the flowfield  in tangential, op-
posed, and single-wall-fired utility
boilers. Preliminary test results for the
single-wall-fired case are reported in-
cluding overfire air concentration  pro-
files in the mixing region above the in-
jection ports.  The overfire air injection
velocity, port  number, and location are
shown to be critical parameters in the
upper furnace mixing process.

3-5. "Status of EPDC's NOX
     Control Technology,"
     Kuniyoshi Fujiyama,
     Electric Power
     Development Co., Ltd.
  EPDC has a total generating capacity
of about 10,000 MW, and 3,000 MW of
the total is by coal thermal generation.
All  of the coal thermal power  stations
are located near cities, and gas recircu-
lation and/or an overfire air  system
(OFA) has been adopted these 10 years
for Iow-N0x operation. R&D work for
SCR De-N0x operation  was  started
about the same time, and commercial
operation was started 4 years ago, after
successful demonstration tests at Take-
hara Unit No. 1.
  The results  of our low-No,, operation
for 10 years and  of  SCR  operation for
4 years are described in the paper.
  In Takasago Thermal Power  Station,
we had an accident where the evaporat-
ing tube  below the OFA port burst 9
years after starting 15% OFA. Investiga-
tion revealed  that thinning of the tube
was concentrated in a specific region,
and the thinning was regarded as a re-
sult of corrosion by a reducing gas.
  In Isogo Power Station, where coal of
N = 1.1 to 1.3% is fired  and the NOX
value for 6 to 7 years after starting oper-
ation was 500 to 600 ppm, the NOX value
was lowered to 340 from 450 by installa-
tion of 15% OFA in 1974, to 250 from 300
ppm by that of a  Iow-N0x burner in
1977, and further to 150 from 160 ppm
by 30% deep stage combustion in 1980.
  The results on unburned carbon  vs
NOX, adoption of high performance pul-
verized coal distributor, curtain wall  by
air, etc. are explained.
  Operation  experience on Takehara
Generator No. 1  (250 MW) and No. 3
(700 MW) are shown as the newest data
of the SCR operation.
  AH plugging, the problems of IDF,
BUF vibration, and deterioration of ac-
tivity of catalysts are also referred to.

3-6. "Development of Low NOX
     Cell Burners for Retrofit
     Applications," Albert D.
     LaRue, Larry W. Rodgers,
     Babcock & Wilcox
  Continuing concern about  NOX emis-
sions from pre-NSPS  coal-fired  utility
boilers led EPRI and Babcock & Wilcox
to embark on a project to reduce NOX
emissions from cell burner combustion
equipment. Cell burners  were applied
extensively in  large coal-fired boilers
situated in the east-central U.S. These
boilers have generated NOX emissions
at two to three times the limit allowed
by present federal standards for new
sources. The unique design  of the cell
burners was incompatible with existing
Iow-N0x burner designs. Thus, the main
objective of the multiphase project was
to develop directly retrofitable, Iow-N0x
combustion equipment for use in these
units and to develop scaling techniques
to reduce risks and predict performance
at full scale.
  This paper  discusses pilot-scale
(6 x  106 Btu/hr) combustion tests and
related work performed  to  develop  a
low-NOx cell burner.  Screening tests
compared performance of standard eel
burners to low-NOx alternatives. The re-
sulting Low-NOx Cell Burner achievec
NOX reductions of 65% while maintain
ing high combustion efficiency. In add!
tion, field constraints and scaling tech
niques were evaluated in preparatior
for its commercialization.

 3-7. "Development of the
      Low-N0x Burner for the
      Pulverized-Coal-Fired
      In-Furnace NOX Reduction
      System," Shigeki  Morita,
      Tsuneo Narita,  Yoshiziro
      Arikawa, Isuyoshi Nawata
      Fumio  Koda,  Tadahisa
      Masai, Keizo  Untsuka,
      Hitachi, Ltd.
   Babcock Hitachi K. K. (BHK) has deve
 oped a  new low-NOx burner special
 designed as the  "Main  Burner" to  I
 combined  with the P. C. firing  I
 Furnace NOX Reduction  (IFNR) systei
 We call this burner the Hitachi NOX R
 duction Burner (HT-NR Burner). Tr
 burner may be called an  "In-Flarm
 NOX Reduction Burner.

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3-8.  "Fire-Side Corrosion in
      Low-NOx Combustion
      Systems," S. F. Chou,
      P. L Daniels,
      L. W. Rodgers,
      G. J. Theus, Babcock &
      Wilcox Co.; D. Eskinazi,
      EPRI
  Flame impingement and reducing gas
are two major concerns regarding po-
tential fireside corrosion problems in
Iow-N0z combustion systems.  Flame
impingement can cause severe corro-
sion by unburned pyrites and liquid py-
rosulfate. In the reducing gas, sulfur is
released from coal as H2S, which will
sulfidize boiler tubes at furnace wall
temperatures. Laboratory test results
show that carbon steel and Type 304
stainless steel have reasonably good
corrosion  resistance  up  to 700 and
900°F, respectively. However, thermal
cycling degrades their corrosion resis-
tance. Types 309 and 310 stainless
steels, Inconel 671, and an Fe-Cr-AI alloy
have much better corrosion resistance.
Alternate oxidizing and reducing condi-
tions  are detrimental  to the corrosion
resistance  of the carbon steel but not
the stainless steels. Commercial
bimetallic  tubing clad with stainless
steel should be of practical use in low-
NOX combustion systems.
  In general, low-NOx combustion con-
ditions are more corrosive than conven-
tional  boiler combustion  conditions.
Careful control of operating conditions
is critical to the  corrosion problems.
Combustion test results indicate that
staged combustion conditions are more
corrosive  than  low-NOx  cell  burner
combustion conditions, and the corro-
sion in the low-IMOx cell burner combus-
tion system is expected to  be manage-
able.
3-9.  "Extrapolation of Burner
      Performance for Single
      Burner Test to Field
      Operation,"
      R. A. Lisauskas,
      D. C. Itse, Riley Stoker
      Corp.; C. C. Masser,
      EPA/AEERL
  The extrapolation of pilot scale
NOx burner test results to coal-fired
field boilers is discussed. Single burner
test results are presented for three pilot-
scale test furnaces and two burner
scales. Three burner designs are  evalu-
ated: a conventional pre-NSPS burner,
a commercial first generation Iow-N0x
burner, and a prototype second genera-
tion Iow-N0x burner. NOX emissions are
compared with field data from two util-
ity wall-fired boilers equipped with low-
NOx burners. A burner zone heat re-
lease parameter is used to account for
differences in thermal environment
between the test furnaces and field
boilers.

Session  4

Development and Application
of Fuel Staging (Reburning)

(R. Hall,  EPA/AEERL, Session
Chairman)

4-1.  "Pilot Scale Evaluation of
      NOX Control From
      Pulverized Coal
      Combustion By
      Reburning," W. R. Seeker,
      B. J. Overmoe,
      J. M. McCarthy, S. L. Chen,
      G. D. Silcox,
      D. W. Pershing, Energy
      and Environmental
      Research Corp.
  This paper described results from a
research project supported by the U.S.
EPA in which a 10 x 106 Btu/hr reburn-
ing tower was designed and con-
structed for the purpose of studying re-
burning processes on  a scale large
enough to involve realistic mixing phe-
nomena.  The facility, which was
4 x 4 x 26 ft overall,  was down-fired
with coal  or gas and was  refractory-
lined and water-jacketed. Multiple rows
of ports were included in the design to
allow the  study of injection location,
residence  time, thermal environment,
injection configuration, jet diameter and
velocity, and the important process
variables. The NOX reduction  levels
achieved over uncontrolled levels were
found to be between 40 and 70%, de-
pending on the process parameters.
The results of this study indicated that
many of the process variables identified
on earlier bench-scale studies could be
directly applied to larger scale units. In
particular, increasing rich-zone resi-
dence time and furnace temperature de-
creased NOX emissions, and about 15%
reburning fuel produced a minimum in
emissions. Increasing the  reburning
mixing rate was also found to decrease
NOX emissions in the exhaust. This
paper supplies general guidelines for the
application of reburning to pulverized-
coal-fired boiler furnaces.

4-2. "The Effect of Fuel
     Nitrogen in Reburning
     Application to a Firetube
     Package Boiler,"
     J.A. Mulholland, R. E. Hall,
     EPA/AEERL
  An experimental investigation of the
effect of volatile fule-bound nitrogen in
reburning application to a  pilot-scale
fire tube package boiler is described. It is
shown that the fixed nitrogen content of
the reburning fuel is a limiting factor in
applying reburning to boilers with base-
line NOX  levels of less than 250 ppm.
With reburning fuels containing more
than 0.1% nitrogen, 50% NOX reduction
was the maximum achievable when the
initial NOX level was less than 200 ppm.
For fuels containing more than 1% nitro-
gen, no reduction was possible from ini-
tial levels of less than 200 ppm. In tests
with ammonia-doped natural gas (up to
1% nitrogen), pyridine-doped distillate
fuel oil (0.5% nitrogen), and a residual
distillate fuel  oil mixture (0.14% nitro-
gen), minimum net fractional conver-
sion of reburning fuel  nitrogen to ex-
haust NOX was found to range from 30
to 50%. To minimize the conversion of
reburning fuel nitrogen to NOX, primary
flame excess air level is minimized and
fuel-rich reburning zone residence time
is maximized.

4-3. "Screening and
     Optimization of
     In-Furnace-N0x-Reduction
     Processes for Refinery
     Process Heater
     Applications," Fernando J.
     Garcia, Robert Yang,
     Skillman C. Hunter, KVB,
     Inc.
  The effectiveness and applicability of
In-Furnace-N0x-Reduction (IFNR, also
known as reburning or fuel staging)
process in controlling  NOX emissions
from refinery process heaters has been
studied.  A two-phase approach was
taken first to  screen the various  IFNR
firing arrangements in an idealized sub-
scale test furnace for their N0x-reducing
capabilities, followed by selecting the
most promising IFNR  firing arrange-
ment and evaluating its applicability in a
subscale process heater simulator. The
screening test results showed that,
while "conventional"  reburning (air-

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staging plus fuel injection to create a
fuel-rich zone between the main burner
and the staging air injection point) was
only as good but not better than air-
staging in reducing NOX, the firing  ar-
rangement that  achieved the greatest
NOX reduction is the one called "biased
firing" which was found to be capable
of reducing stack IMOX by greater than
90% from the unstaged baseline condi-
tions. Following the screening tests, the
applicability of biased firing as both a
retrofit and a new burner concept was
further studied in a  subscale process
heater simulator. The results  of these
tests showed that biased firing is a vi-
able concept to  be  implemented for
substantial reduction of NOX emissions
from refinery process heaters.

4-4. "Evaluation of In-Furnace
     NOX Reduction," H. Ikebe,
     S. Miyamae, K. Makino,
     K. Suzuki, J.  Mogi,
     Ishikawajima-Harima
     Heavy Industries Co., Ltd.
  Reburning by secondary fuel injected
after the  main firing zone produces a
NOX reducing region in which hydrocar-
bon radicals resolve  NOX into N2.
Bench-scale tests were conducted using
gas fuels  and gas-phase volatile matter
evolved from pulverized coal as second-
ary fuels. The results  indicated the
molar ratios (02)/(HC) and (HC)/(NO) as
well as gas temperature  residence time
in the reducing  region,  and  a kind of
secondary fuel to be the dominant vari-
ables controlling the reaction. Pilot-
scale tests using the 12 MWt furnace
were performed to see if in-furnace NOX
reduction could  be applied to gas, oil,
and pulverized coal firing. While main-
taining excess O2 in the first stage com-
bustion zone at 1 to 2%, NOX reduction
of more than 50% was possible by re-
burning. In the case of commercial boil-
ers firing  oil  and  pulverized coal, 15 to
20% NOX reduction was possible by
quasi-reburning  with a conventional
burner arrangement.

4-5. "Three-Stage Pulverized
     Coal Combustion System
     for In-Furnace NOX
     Reduction,"  Y.  Sekiguchi,
     N.  Okigami,  Y.  Miura,
     K. Sasaki, R. Tamaru,
     Hitachi Zosen Corp.
  A comprehensive effort was made to-
ward the development of Iow-N0x com-
bustion methods in pulverized coal
combustion,  and this effort led to the
development of a new NOX reducing
combustion system called  "Three-
Stage Combustion  System." In this
process,  pulverized  coal and air are
combusted in a conventional method in
the first stage, then  additional coal is
injected and  NOX formed previously is
reduced to nitrogen.
  Finally, more air is supplied to com-
plete combustion. The performance of
this method was tested using a small-
scale test furnace with a coal-burning
capacity of 200 kg/h at first, and then a
large-scale  test was conducted at
demonstration facilities with a coal-
burning capacity of 2 t/h. It was  clear
that the new combustion system pro-
vided an improved  NOX suppression
rate and good combustion characteris-
tics in  comparison with conventional
NOX reduction methods. This new low-
NOX combustion  system has been ap-
plied to actual coal firing plants.

4-6. "Application of Reburning
     for NOX Control in
     Cogeneration," R. Brown,
     W. C.  Kuby,  Acurex Corp.
  This paper describes the results of a
design and experimental  program to
develop a post-combustion NOX control
technique for gas-fired 1C engines and
gas turbines as applied to cogeneration.
Emissions and performance data of
both rich- and lean-burn engines  were
used to develop a conceptual  reburner
design to be placed between the engine
and a waste neater boiler. This reburner
design was then modeled for testing in
a 100,000 Btu/hr subscale test facility.
Parametric testing achieved 50% reduc-
tion at a fuel fraction of 30% for rich-
burn and mid-O2 range engine ex-
hausts. Lean-burn NOX reductions were
limited to 35% at the  same fuel fraction.
It appears that increased temperatures
and overall fuel-rich conditions in the
reburn zone are necessary to achieve up
to 50% reduction. Other parameters ex-
plored  include  reburner stoichiometry,
NO input level, fuel fraction, and mixing
techniques.

Session 5

Full-Scale Boiler Application

(C. Allen, Arizona Public
Service Co.,  Session Chairman)

5-1. "Guidelines  for Retrofit
     Low NOX Combustion
     Control," Richard E.
     Thompson, Fossil Energy
     Research  Corp.;
     Michael W. McElroy, EPRI
  EPA has sponsored a study to deter-
mine the potential of applying retrofit
NOX controls to coal-fired utility boilers
and to develop guidelines for use by
utility boiler operators in identifying
cost-effective  control  options. This
paper summarizes: 1) boiler NOX emis-
sions by design  type, 2) current  and
emerging NOX control options, and 3) a
methodology for  determining the rela-
tive retrofit potential, performance, and
cost  of implementing NOX control on
boilers of various design.
  Total annual NOX emissions and unit
capacity by boiler type are compared on
a national basis to provide an apprecia-
tion for the dependence of NOX emis-
sions on boiler design. The design, per-
formance,  operational, and  cost
characteristics of three conventional
retrofit NOX control techniques are sum-
marized. A synopsis of emerging con-
trol techniques highlights current R&D
efforts. The screening methodology for
selecting NOX control options addresses
many of the  specific design and physi-
cal hardware constraints in selecting a
control method.

5-2.  "Evaluation of  Long-Term
      NOX Reduction on
      Pulverized Coal-Fired
      Steam Generators,"
      S. Hunter, V. P. Roman,
      KVB, Inc.
  Long-term NOX emission data from
eight pulverized-coal-fired steam gener-
ators were analyzed to quantify the ef-
fectiveness of various combustion mod-
ifications.  All of  these boilers, except
one, were modified specifically to re-
duce NOX emissions. These combustion
modifications included changes of both
a hardware and operational nature. All
of the boilers were subject to the NO,
provisions of the  1971 New Source Per-
formance Standard (NSPS).
  In  several  instances long-term emis-
sion data for the time period before the
modification were not available. Ir
these cases the  quantification of  the
NOX reduction was based  on the resul
of the performance test required by th<
1971  NSPS. NOX reductions ranginc
from 5.1 to 60% were determined with
out incurring significant  adverse  im
pacts on unit operation. NOX emissioi
levels as determined from the perform
ance tests, ranged from  146 to 473 ng/.

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(0.34 to 1.10 lb/106 Btu) before control
implementation and from 148 to 281 ng/
J (0.34 to 0.65 lb/106 Btu) after combus-
tion modifications were applied.

5-3.  "Application of a
      Pulverized-Coal-Fired
      Low-IMOx PM  Burner for
      Steam Generators,"
      T. Namiki, Mitsubishi
      Heavy Industries, Ltd.
  Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. has
engaged in research and development
of a new technology related to coal-fired
thermal powerplants  for many years,
and had developed coal-fired Iow-N0x
burners to meet the severe emissions
regulations that become more and
more  severe every year. This time, we
have  successfully developed  and put
into practical use a pulverized-coal-fired
super low-NOx PM burner (Mitsubishi
Pulverized Fired PM Burner).
  This paper introduces pulverized
coal-fired boilers with  capacities of 250
t/h equipped with this PM burner that
has been installed at Iwanuma Mills of
Daishow Paper Mfg. Co. and a 350 MW
reheat unit that has been installed at
Sakata Power Station of Sakata Joint
Power Generating Co., Ltd.

5-4.  "Field Evaluation of the
      Distributed Mixing
      Burner,"  B. Folsom,
      A. Abele, J. Reese, Energy
      and Environmental
      Research Corp.
  The Distributed Mixing Burner (DMB)
is a low-NOx pulverized coal burner for
wall-fired applications. It consists of a
circular burner with outboard air ports
to provide staged combustion. The cir-
cular  burner operates under reducing
conditions to minimize NOX emissions
while  an overall oxidizing environment
is maintained in the furnace to minimize
slagging and corrosion.
  The paper presents the results of a
field evaluation of the DMB funded by
the U.S. EPA on a 98 kg/hr (215 x 103
Ib/hr)  steam four-burner front-wall-fired
boiler. Prior to the DNB retrofit, field
tests were conducted on the pre-NSPS
burner originally installed in the boiler
to establish a baseline. Following  DMB
installation, the boiler was operated and
tested with the DMBs for 17  months.
Under routine operation, the DMBs re-
duced NOX emissions by about  50%.
Under optimum conditions, NOX emis-
sions  were reduced by about 70%.
5-5.  "Designs and
      Development of a Retrofit
      Low NOX Burner,"
      I. J. Stuart-Sheppard,
      W. K. Summons,
      J. A. Arnott, Ontario Hydro
  Initial tests, aimed at reducing the tur-
bulence of combustion, involved  re-
moving the impellers from a single row
of burners. Though it proved possible to
sustain combustion, severe roping of
the coal occurred.
  Subsequent installation of venturies
substantially improved combustion
while maintaining a significant reduc-
tion in NOX. However,  excessive pres-
sure drop in the primary air system was
experienced.
  In light of the experience gained, a
scaled-down version of the boiler man-
ufacturer's Low-NOx Burner, suitable
for retrofitting  into existing burner
openings was developed. Testing of a
single row of these burners enabled
problem areas to be identified and mod-
ifications made to bring their perform-
ance to a standard acceptable for a com-
plete retrofit. The results from the first
unit retrofitted proved the burners to be
highly effective in reducing NOX, and a
second unit was, therefore, retrofitted.
  Over a period of time, substandard PF
fineness contributed to  increases in un-
burned carbon  which  led to opacity
problems. A decision  was, therefore,
made to try and modify the burners in a
way which would compensate for such
adverse influences.
  Following model tests, small coal
spreaders were incorporated in the
burner of one unit. Substantial improve-
ment in flame stability was achieved en-
abling the NOX to be varied over a wide
range by adjusting burner settings. No
opacity  problems were  experienced,
and testing is continuing to establish
settings which  minimize NOX while
maintaining an acceptable level of un-
burned carbon.

5-6.  "Application of the MACT
      In-Furnace NOX  Removal
      Process Coupled with a
      Low-N0x SGR Burner,"
      N. Murakami,  Mitsubishi
      Heavy Industries (Japan)
  Mitsubishi  Heavy Industries, Ltd.
(MHI) of Japan  has developed the in-
furnace  NOX removal process, named
MACT. The application for a  new 600
MW coal/oil dual-fired supercritical unit
has been done. With the MACT, ex-
tremely Iow-N0x emissions were
achieved, coupled with a Iow-N0x firing
SGR burner, and the unit proved stable,
reliable, and easily operated.
5-7.  "Long Term Corrosion and
      Emission Studies of
      Combustion Modification
      Effects at Coal-Fired  Utility
      Boilers," P. S.  Natanson,
      R. M.  Vaccaro, Exxon
      Research and Engineering
      Co.; J. M.  Ferraro, Exxon
      Chemical Co.;  D. G.
      Lachapelle, EPA/AEERL
  Combustion  modifications (CMs)
(e.g.,  low excess air, staged combus-
tion) can decrease NOX emissions from
coal-fired utility boilers. However, these
modifications may create chemically re-
ducing environments within the boilers
and therefore affect the rate of fireside
corrosion of boiler tubewalls. To ad-
dress this issue, several utility boilers
were characterized to determine the ef-
fects  of various combustion  controls
and modifications on boiler operations
and emissions. Other aspects of the re-
search program  included the measure-
ment of furnace  tubewall corrosion
rates, and the performance of several
30-day continuous emission monitoring
(CEM) tests for NOX and other gaseous
pollutants.
  In the "as-found" (baseline) condi-
tion, all boilers were in compliance with
the applicable New Source Perform-
ance Standard (NSPS) for NOX. On the
average, the  typical NOX emission rate
was 256 ng/J  (0.6 lb/106 Btu or 435 vppm
at 3% O2, dry) as N02. By instituting ad-
ditional CMs, NOX emissions could  be
decreased by another 20 to 40% without
adverse side effects (excessive slag-
ging, loss of  control, etc.). EPA Level 1
environmental assessments (EAs), per-
formed on two of the boilers, showed
no unusual environmental hazards  re-
sulting from low-NOx operation. For all
boilers tested, tubewall corrosion rates
were comparable to rates in boilers not
using  CMs for NOX control, averaging
about 2 mils  per year.

Session 6a

Externally Staged Combustors
(Slagging Combustors)
(Concurrent Session)

(C.  Derbidge,  EPRI,  Session
Chairman)

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6a-1. "Development of a Low
      NOX/SOX Burner,"
      O. W. Dykema,
      Rocketdyne
      Division/Rockwell
      International
  For more than 5 years, Rockwell Inter-
national has been developing a unique
burner capable of simultaneous control
of S02 and NOX, and removal of suffi-
cient flyash to allow retrofit of gas- and
oil-fired boilers to coal with minimal de-
rating. Underlying  process theory was
largely verified in a 20 GJ/hr (17 x 106
Btu/hr) pulverized-coal-fired burner and
further development at  a utility pilot-
scale level (26 GJ/hr or 25 x 106 Btu/hr)
is nearing  completion. A full-scale
burner demonstration (106 GJ/hr or
100 x 106 Btu/hr) is scheduled to start in
late spring of 1985.

6a-2. "NOX Control in an Air
      Cooled Cyclone Coal
      Combustor," B. Zauderer,
      Coal  Tech Corp.;
      K. S.  Fujimura, Southern
      California Edison  Co.
  This paper  reports on the analysis of
experiments  on  NOX control in a 106
Btu/hr, staged, air-cooled cyclone com-
bustor. The combustor exhausted into
two ceramic-lined vessels, which simu-
lated the radiant furnace section  of a
boiler. Final combustion  air was intro-
duced between the two vessels,  at a
point where  the cyclone combustion
gas exhaust  had cooled  from 3000 to
about 2200°F. The  stoichiometric  ratio
(SR) of the combustor was varied from
0.6 to 1.15. About a factor of 3 NOX re-
duction, to less than 100  ppm, was ob-
tained at a SR of 0.65, based on the coal
and air feedrates to the  cyclone com-
bustor. The NOX results are consistent
with other experiments in a water-
cooled cyclone combustor and in  con-
ventional pulverized coal flames, which
show that the minimum  emissions of
the three primary fuel bound nitrogen
compounds occur at about this SR. It is
shown that the placement of the tertiary
air injection  in the simulated furnace
was consistent with kinetic rate predic-
tions for optimum NOX  reduction in
staged combustion. The  application of
this NOX control technique to commer-
cial scale utility boilers is  briefly de-
scribed. Also, a brief description is
given of experiments in  which signifi-
cant reductions  in the SOX emissions
were observed, as a result of limestone
injection in this cooled combustor.

6a-3. "Coal-Fired
      Precombustors for
      Simutaneous NOX, SOX
      and Paniculate Control,"
      G. C. England, J. F. La
      Fond, R. Payne, Energy
      and Environmental
      Research Corp.
  A major obstacle to the conversion of
gas- and oil-fired equipment to coal is
the high cost of controlling emissions of
particulate matter and acid rain precur-
sors (NOX, SOX). The  presence of min-
eral matter in the coal and  relatively
long burning time required also compli-
cated conversion. The ash formed dur-
ing combustion of coal can deposit on
heat transfer  surfaces, reducing effi-
ciency and causing corrosion and ero-
sion. The volume of  gas- and oil-fired
furnaces typically does not provide suf-
ficient residence time at high tempera-
tures to completely burn the solid coal
particles. Substantial derating of unit
capacity may  be required in order to
minimize these potential drawbacks.
Coal-fired precombustor devices offer
the potential for simultaneous removal
of ash and reduction  of NOX/SOX emis-
sions at the burner prior to the boiler or
heater furnace. This could  reduce or
eliminate derating  and other ash-
related problems, as well as reduce re-
quirements for exhaust gas cleanup.
The successful development of such
devices would facilitate conversion to
coal in the U.S., easing the burden of
imported fuel supplies.
  This paper presents background in-
formation related to the control of ash,
SOX, and NOX in precombustors. In ad-
dition, this  paper describes results of
tests in a small pilot-scale precombus-
tor conducted under  EPA Contract 68-
02-3130. This program is intended to es-
tablish the potential  and  compatibility
of requirements for simultaneous con-
trol of all criteria pollutants.

Session 6b

Fundamental Combustion
Studies (Concurrent Session)

(J. Haebig, EPA/AEERL, Session
Chairman)

6b-1. "Mechanisms Governing
      the Destruction of
      Nitrogen Species During
       Staged Coal
       Combustion,"
       J. O. L. Wendt,
       K. M. Dannecker,
       University of Arizona
  Effects of coal composition on fuel ni-
trogen mechanism during  fuel-rich
combustion of pulverized coal were ex-
perimentally investigated in  a 2 kg/hr
downfired combustor. Although there is
some variation from coal to coal, the
data support the hypothesis that N2 for-
mation, NH3 formation and destruction
and NO destruction follow the Fenimore
mechanism  HCN destruction  is also
consistent  with Fenimore,  although
there  appears to be a  source causing
HCN formation.

6b-2.  "Oxidation and Pyrolysis
       of Fuel  Nitrogen in a
       Lignite-Both  as Received
       and After Ammonium
       Ion-Exchange,"
       A. F. Sarofim,
       L. D.Timothy,
       J. M. Beer,
       Massachusetts Institute
       of Technology
  The dependence of the conversion of
the organically bound nitrogen in coal
to NO on the volatility and amount of
fuel nitrogen was studied by the pyroly-
sis and oxidation of a low rank Montana
coal, both as-received and after ion-
exchange with ammonium acetate. The
nitrogen content of the coal was in-
creased on treatment from 1.11 to
2.34% by weight (dry).  Nitrogen reten-
tion by the chars obtained during pyrol-
ysis of both the raw and treated coals
was measured over a temperature
range of 550 to 1650 K. The added nitro-
gen was more volatile being released
completely by 1400  K, compared to 60%
release of the nitrogen in the untreated
coal at 1400 K. Conversion of the nitro-
gen to NO for combustion in different
oxygen concentrations was found to
vary from 35 to 55%, with the lower ni-
trogen content  untreated coal having
slightly higher conversion efficiencies
than the treated coal.

6b-3. "Reduction of NOX
       Emission  from Natural
       Gas Flames by Staged
       Fuel Injection,"
       J. M. Beer,
       W.  F. Farmayan,

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       M. Togan, Tae-U Yu,
       Massachusetts Institute
       of Technology
   One of the major thrusts of the exper-
 imental effort was to clearly differenti-
 ate between temperature and stoichio-
 metric effects on overall NOX emission.
   In considering the problem of differ-
 entiating temperature and stoichiomet-
 ric effects on NO emissions, particularly
 when  the various staging configura-
 tions are compared, it would of course
 be desirable to maintain as similar a
 temperature history in the furnace for
 each case as possible.  However, the
 temperature history for each case could
 not be identical. Two parameters were
 identified as having gross effects on the
 average temperature of the combustion
 mixture which merited close examina-
 tion and control when various staging
 strategies were  studied.

 6b-4.  "NOX Prediction for
       Practical  Pulverized Coal
       Reactors," L Douglas
       Smoot, Scott C.  Hill,
       Phillip J. Smith,  Brigham
       Young  University
  The model of nitrogen pollutant for-
 mation and destruction  in pulverized
 coal reactors is briefly outlined and then
 evaluated by comparisons of predic-
 tions with measurements. The model
 incorporates effects of turbulence on
 NO reactions, and subsequent  predic-
 tions show these  effects to be impor-
 tant. Model applications show effects of
 key parameters on NO emissions and
 illustrate the use of the NO model for
 interpreting experimental results. The
 model  predicts the observed initial de-
 crease followed by a gradual increase in
 NO emissions  with  increased swirl
 number.  The  model also predicts  the
 measured increase  in NO emissions
with increased stoichiometric ratio; but,
at higher SR values, the  model under-
 predicts NO concentrations, partly  be-
cause of increased thermal NO levels
which were not considered. The model
also predicts the observed increase in
NO with a decrease in particle size and
increase  in moisture percentage. Re-
sults suggest that nitrogen release dur-
ing devolatilization and gas-phase reac-
tions of HCN  and oxygen  control NO
formation, while fuel  nitrogen  conver-
sion to HCN may  be near quantitative
and rapid. According to the predictions,
NO reduction is dominated by HCN-NO
reactions and not by the char-NO reac-
tions. Practical application of the
method to pulverized  coal reactors is
discussed.

6b-5.  "Optimized Low-N0x
       Pulverized Coal
       Combustion  by Zone
       Control,"  Ken Okazaki,
       Kazutomo Ohtake,
       Toyohashi University of
       Technology
  Zone control is one of the most effec-
tive technologies to minimize NOX for-
mation in the pulverized coal combus-
tion  furnace. To get the fundamental
and  general concept for the optimiza-
tion  of low-NOx pulverized coal com-
bustion by zone control: (1) separated
influences of various basic factors af-
fecting NO formation  behaviors were
derived by use of a one-dimensional
combustion furnace; and (2) an optimal
condition  for zone control was  in-
vestigated by experiments of one-
dimensional multistage combustion.
  These  experimental investigations
have led to the following important re-
sults. The NO formation rate in the early
stage of combustion process increases
with the oxygen-fuel stoichiometric
ratio for large particles, decreases with
the particle size, and less effect by the
stoichiometric ratio appears for small
particles. The conversion ratio from fuel
N to NO decreases with  nitrogen con-
tent and increases with  the stoichiomet-
ric ratio, especially for  high  volatile
coals, and temperature has little effect
on it except for fuel-rich conditions for
high volatile coals. As for zone control,
most effective reduction of NO was at-
tained by setting the reduction zone just
after the initial NO formation zone, and
the oxygen-fuel stoichiometric ratio of
0.8 is preferable for the effective reduc-
tion  of NO without increases of un-
burned materials.

Session 7

Advanced Power Plants
(Concurrent Session)

(D. Teixeira, PG&E, Session
Chairman)

7-1. "NOX Control and
     Atmospheric Fluidized-Bed
     Combustors,"  E. Petrill,
     W. C. Howe,
     T. C. Derbidge, EPRI;
     R. J. Divilo, Pope
     Engineers
  One of several advantages of burning
coal in atmospheric fluidized-bed com-
bustion (AFBC) boilers for electric
power  generation is the inherent low
emission of NOX. Because of the many
advantages of AFBC, EPRI is actively
promoting development of both bub-
bling and circulating fluidized-bed com-
bustion technology for utility applica-
tions through involvement  in two rest
facilities and three utility-scale demon-
stration projects.
  Pilot-scale and industrial  AFBC units
have shown NOX emissions to fall well
below  those from  both conventional
and advanced pulverized-coal-fired
boilers, as well as easily meet the cur-
rent New Source Performance Stand-
ards (NSPS) for coal. It is expected that
utility-scale units will also meet NSPS.
  Further reduction of NOX emissions in
a bubbling bed by air staging was inves-
tigated in an EPRI project.  The study,
conducted  by Babcock & Wilcox  at
EPRI's 6 x 6 ft FBC facility at B&W's Al-
liance Research Center, indicated that
up to 50% reduction of NOX  is possible.
However, the project also identified per-
formance  and reliability issues that
must be solved before operation at min-
imum NOX conditions is feasible.

7-2.  "The  Cool Water Project
     Clean Power from Coal,"
     R. H. Wolk, N. A. Holt,
     EPRI
  The Cool Water project is a 100 MW
(net electrical  output) integrated coal
gasifier combined  cycle project that
produces the cleanest power generated
from coal that the world has ever seen.
Design goals for gas turbine stack emis-
sions are 9 ppm SOX (0.033 lb/106 Btu
fuel), 27 ppm NOX (0.065 lb/106 Btu fuel),
and 0.01 Ib of  particulates/106 Btu fuel
for operations on low sulfur Utah coal.
All of these goals have been exceeded.
Other products from the plant are bright
yellow sulfur which  is sold commer-
cially and glassy nonleachable slag
which is disposed of in an  onsite clay-
lined pit.
  In late 1985 and early 1986, a series of
test runs are scheduled on  high-sulfur
Illinois and  Pittsburgh coals. Sulfur
emissions for those coals are designed
to be 175  Ib/hr which corresponds  to
97% sulfur removal.
  The plant is located at the Cool Water
station of  the Southern  California
Edison Company in Daggett, CA. Initial
commercial operation began in late
June 1984, about 6 weeks after the com-

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pletion of construction which required
28 months. The construction and start-
up cost was $263 million, which was
about 10% below budget.
  In this paper, the plant is described
with specific emphasis given to the ap-
proach to NOX control.

Session 8a

Flue Gas  Treatment
(Concurrent Session)

(E. Cichanowicz, EPRI, Session
Chairman)

8a-1.  "Operating Experiences
       of Southern California
       Edison's 107.5 MW
       Selective Catalytic
       Reduction DeNOx
       System," Harold A. Kerry,
       Alexander Weir, Jr.,
       Southern California
       Edison Co.
  The Southern California Edison Com-
pany's 107.5 MW Selective Catalytic
DeNOx System has been tested  to de-
velop  performance and operational
data on this post-combustion NOX re-
moval system. Tests have been con-
ducted for more than 2 years. This
paper reviews operational experiences
from the system.

8a-2.  "Reduction of
       NOx-Emissions for Brown
       Coal Combustion
       Systems in the Federal
       Republic of Germany,"
       K.R. G.  Hein, J. Konig,
       V.Hoppe,
       Rheinisch-Westfalisches
       Elektrizitatswerk
  Stringent environmental standards in
the Federal Republic of Germany re-
quire the application of NOx-control
techniques for both new and existing
powerplants with  a capacity of >50
MWt. Also it is  expected that all units
should be fully equipped with denitrifi-
cation installations before the end  of
this decade.
  Among the major sources of primary
energy, brown coal is of great  impor-
tance because almost 30% of the elec-
tricity production is based on this fuel.
Due to properties which differ  widely
from bituminous coals, also different
combustion systems have to be used.
As a consequence specific flue gas con-
ditions with regard to composition and
temperature prevail.
  Therefore, the direct application  of
N0x-removal techniques, which are op-
erating since some years abroad, is im-
possible at present, and further devel-
opment is needed.
  After a brief introduction  of fuel-
related problems with brown  coal for
utility operation,  the paper describes
the available method for NOx-reduction.
Particular emphasis is on the removal of
NOX from flue gases. Various technical
solutions for the application of the SCR-
technique, as well as the combination
with FGD systems, are introduced, and
first results from pilot studies are pre-
sented.

8a-3. "Introduction of
      IHI-Denitrification System
      for Coal  Fired Steam
      Generator," H. Aoki,
      T. Suzuki, R. Ishimoto,
      Ishikawajima-Harima
      Heavy Industries Co., Ltd.
  The application of a  dentrification
system is widely considered for coal-
fired  steam generators not only in
Japan but also in the world. For a coal-
fired steam generator, the erosion and
plugging of the catalyst are the major
problem for high ash flue gas; further-
more, NH4HS04,  which can be pro-
duced by reaction of the injected NH3
and S03 converted from S02 in the flue
gas, will be deposited on the surface of
the heating elements of GAH. As for the
countermeasures of the above  items,
proper  grid dimension of  7.5 mm,
proper linear gas velocity of 5 to about
6 m/s at the design point, and vertical
downward gas flow arrangements were
selected, and then three IHI denitrifica-
tion systems for coal-fired utility power-
plants have been continuously operat-
ing with excellent performance for 1 or
2 years. The sootblower could  be
omitted from the denitrification system.
Denitrification performance  of more
than 80% has been kept for more than
2 years.

8a-4.  "Thermal DeNOx
      Technology Update,"
       Boyd E. Hurst, Exxon
       Research and
       Engineering Co.
  The original thermal De-N0x installa-
tions involved positioning a gridwork of
pipes in the flue gas stream for injecting
a mixture  of NH3 and carrier air or
steam. In the most recent designs, the
injection grids have been replaced  by
wall injectors which offer many advan-
tages, such as  higher  performance,
lower costs, better load following, and
lower maintenance. Also, development
of a fundamental kinetic model of the
process chemistry and a three-
dimensional flow model  have provided
significant process optimization capa-
bility.
  One application of thermal De-NOx in-
corporating the most recent technology
involves a 440,000  Ib/hr boiler generat-
ing steam and power in a Japanese
chemical plant. In this installation, 70%
De-NOx was achieved through utiliza-
tion of the optimized design techniques
at a cost about  20% of  a comparable
selective catalytic reduction facility.
  Other advantages of the most recent
technology  include the ability to deal
more successfully with particulate-
laden flue gas streams and methods of
minimizing or eliminating effects of am-
monium salts in the exhaust flue gas. In
its present form, thermal De-N0x offers
a highly developed, practical means of
achieving deep  NOX  reduction in  all
types of stationary-fired equipment.

8a-5.  "Application of DeNOx
      Technologies  in the
      Federal Republic of
      Germany and  Europe,"
      O. Rentz,  W. Heer,
      University of Karlsruhe
      (Th)
   In view of the  present extent of dam
age, the state government of Bader
Wurttemberg felt compelled, in  agree
ment with operators of large  boile
installations, to  arrange programs fc
the far-reaching reduction of Emissions
whereby previous demands of the Go\
ernment Ordinance for Large Boiler Ir
stallations  (GFAVO) were  surpasse<
This concerned, first, all the polluai
S02 in the Electricity Supply Sectc
(EVU), a program which was complete
in 1983 and which finally led to a redu<
tion in SO2 emissions from about 86,OC
to about 20,000 t/a.  Subsequently, £
analogous program was agreed on fi
the pollutant NOX from coal-fired pow
stations. This was based on the fixe
target limit of 200 mg  N0x/m3 (=1(
vpm), which was agreed on in Janua
1984 between operators,  equipme
suppliers, and the state governmer
both  for dry- and wet-bottom  boilei
This emission level is to be observed f
                                10

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dry-bottom boilers until 1988, and for
wet-bottom boilers until 1990, in both
cases for new and existing plants. The
programs mentioned up to  now con-
cern only the Electricity Supply Sector
and here in the first instance coal-fired
installations. A further program for the
pollutants SO2 and NOX, with regard to
boilers outside the utility sector and
nonboiler applications, is being  pre-
pared and will probably be approved to-
ward the end of 1985.
  The Baden-Wurttemberg program
was thus, as a program covering a
whole area, the first of its kind; in  the
meantime, however, analogous pro-
grams from other federal states now
exist.

8a-6. "Operating Experience  on
      SCR System for Steam
      Generators," K. Suyama,
      Mitsubishi Heavy
      Industries, Ltd.
  Since the first commercial SCR sys-
tem was supplied in  1976, many SCR
systems for steam generators were sup-
plied  by  Mitsubishi Heavy Industries,
Ltd. (MHI), and successful operations
have been experienced.
  This paper describes experiences of
the existing SCR system for a coal-fired
steam generator and outlines an SCR
system for a combined cycle power-
plant.
  The SCR system for a coal-fired unit at
Chugoku Electric—Shimonoseki No. 1
unit (175 MW)—was  installed in 1980
and has been operating for more than
5 years (more than 35,000 hours from
initial operation).
  In addition to the above, SCR systems
on heat recovery steam generators cou-
pled with gas turbines have recently
started their commercial operation at
Tohoku  Electric's  Higashi-Niigata  unit
No. 3. The unit is a 1,090 MW combined
cycle plant composed of two 545  MW
trains. Operating  results  of the coal-
fired SCR system  and features of  the
combined cycle plant are  summarized
in this paper.

8a-7. "Economics of NOX, SO2,
      and Ash Control Systems
      for Coal-Fired Utility
      Powerplants,"
      J. D. Maxwell,
      L. R. Humphries,
      Tennessee Valley
      Authority
  An EPA-sponsored economic evalua-
tion was made of three processes to re-
duce NOX, SC>2, and ash emissions from
coal-fired utility powerplants: one is
based on a  3.5% sulfur eastern bitumi-
nous coal, and the other two, on 0.7%
sulfur western subbituminous coal. NOX
control is based on  an 80% reduction
from current new  source performance
standards (NSPS); and S02 and flyash
control are  based  on meeting current
NSPS. Selective  catalytic reduction (SR)
is used for NOX control with both coals.
Limestone  scrubbing and a cold-side
electrostatic percipitator (ESP) are used
with the  3.5% sulfur coal. Lime  spray
dryer flue gas desulfurization (FGD) and
a baghouse for particulate collection are
used with one 0.7% coal, and limestone
scrubbing and a hot-side ESP with the
other.
  The economics  consist of detailed
breakdowns of the capital  investments
and annual  revenue  requirements. For
systems  based  on a 500-MW power-
plant, capital investments range from
$167 to $187 million  (333 to 373 $/kW)
and first-year annual revenue require-
ments from $54  to  $60 million (29 to 33
mills/kWh).  The 3.5% sulfur coal case is
highest because of the higher S02 con-
trol costs. The case with the spray dryer
and baghouse is  marginally lower in
cost than  that with  limestone scrubbing
and hot-side ESP. Costs for NOX control
range from  25 to 50% of the total costs,
largely because of  the high catalyst
cost. The costs  of  the overall systems
and the relationship  of the component
costs are complexly interrelated be-
cause of  the interactions of the  three
processes.

Session 8b

Stationary Engines and
Industrial Process Systems
(Concurrent Session)

(J. McSorley, EPA/AEERL,
Session Chairman)

8b-1.  "Utilization of Methanol
      as Fuel  for  a Gas Turbine
      Cogeneration Plant,"
       Dale E.  Shore, Gary H.
      Shiomoto,  KVB, Inc.;
      Gerald  R. Bemis,
      California Energy
      Commission
  A field test demonstration of the use
of methanol in  an industrial-sized gas
turbine cogeneration unit  was con-
ducted in 1984  at  the  Central Heating
Plant of the University of California at
Davis. This program, sponsored by the
California Energy Commission, was one
of four full-scale demonstrations of the
use of clean fuels in mobile and station-
ary engine applications. These  demon-
stration programs were directed toward
the evaluation of clean fuels potentially
derived from coal, for meeting Califor-
nia's future energy needs.
  A 3,250  kW Allison 501-KB gas tur-
bine, designed originally for either natu-
ral gas or distillate fuel oil operation,
was converted to methanol and oper-
ated for 1036 hrs. A methanol  storage
and handling facility for fueling the en-
gine was designed and built onsite. En-
gine modifications specific to the utiliza-
tion of methanol and preliminary test
work of the specialized components
were performed by the turbine manu-
factuer. The components were then in-
stalled on the engine, and the unit was
operated on  methanol. Emissions and
performance data were monitored
throughout the test. The relatively low-
NOX emissions expected from methanol
operation were further reduced by the
implementation of water injection  via
mixing with the methanol before being
supplied to the engine. Engine operat-
ing  problems attributable to methanol
were  not encountered during the
demonstration testing;  therefore, en-
gine performance was judged satisfac-
tory. However, difficulties of methanol
pumping compatibility with the engine-
driven, high-pressure fuel pump neces-
sitated the use of an off-board centrifu-
gal pump to complete the program.
8b-2.  "Development and
       Field-Demonstration of a
       Low-NOx Burner for
       TEOR Steamers,"
       G.  England,  Y. Kwan,
       R. Payne, Energy and
       Environmental Research
  This  paper describes the results ob-
tained in a program to demonstrate in
the field a full-scale 16 MWt prototype
Iow-N0x burner for thermally enhanced
oil recovery  (TEOR) steam  generators
which  burn high-nitrogen crude oils.
NOX emissions from these TEOR
"steamers" have been linked with dete-
riorating air quality in  Kern County, CA,
and stringent  local  regulations have
been promulgated limiting these emis-
sions to preserve ambient  air  quality.
These regulations can  potentially re-
strict oil production in Kern County.
  The burner described in this paper is
                                                                           11

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designed based on a two-stage com-
bustion concept developed from earlier
bench- and pilot-scale work. The con-
cept comprises  physically separate
zones in  which conditions have been
optimized to minimize  both fuel and
thermal NO formation.
  The full-scale 16 MWt  commercial
prototype burner has been evaluated in
a laboratory test furnace and was suc-
cessfully  retrofitted to a  field-operating
steam generator  in Kern  County. Re-
sults of field test firing heavy crude oil
(0.83%N) showed  that NOX emissions
below 70  ppm (at 3% excess 02 with low
CO and  smoke emissions) could be
achieved  with acceptable flame condi-
tions in the steamer radiant section. De-
tailed emissions  characterization also
showed that emissions  of particulates
and organic compounds were well be-
low allowable levels. The burner is cur-
rently still operating in the Kern Front
oilfield.

8b-3.  "Heavy Oil Low-NOx
       Burner Application to an
      Oil  Field
      Steamer-Emissions
       Measurements,"
       H. Mason, C. Castaldini,
      L Waterland,
       R. DeRosier, Acurex
      Corporation.
  Comprehensive emission measure-
ments and  30-day flue gas monitoring
were performed on a  16 MW (55 x 106
Btu/hr) enhanced oil recovery  steam
generator equipped with the EPA low-
NOX burner firing  high-nitrogen crude.
The 1-day comprehensive measure-
ments included  source assessment
sampling system  (SASS) quantification
of semivolatile organics and 73 trace el-
ements; volatile organic sampling train
(VOST) quantitation of volatile organic
priority pollutants; EPA  Method 5/8 for
paniculate and  SOX; controlled conden-
sation system (CCS) for  SOX; Andersen
impactors for particle size distribution;
grab samples for  N20; and continuous
flue gas  monitoring. NOX emissions
during the  comprehensive tests aver-
aged 70 ppm at 3% 02, well below the
target level of  85 ppm. CO emissions
were below 30  ppm, and SO2 averaged
about 550 ppm. Solid  particulates were
emitted at about 27 ng/J (96 mg/dscm);
condensible particulates  were about
half that  level. Volatile  organics (ben-
zene, toluene, and ethylbenzene) were
measured in the  0.4 to  20 ppb range.
Semivolatile organics (naphthalene and
phenol) were  detected in the 0.3  ppb
range. Subsequent continuous monitor-
ing of flue gas criteria emissions
showed NOX blow 80 ppm at 3% 02 with
an average 70  ppm.  CO emissions were
generally less  than 30 ppm.

8b-4. "Reduction of Nitric
      Oxide Emissions on a
      Full-Scale  Cement Kiln
      Using Primary Air
      Vitiation,"  R. C. Benson,
      S. C. Hunter, KVB, Inc.
  KVB has been funded by the U. S. EPA
to conduct research  for emission reduc-
tion  from industrial  processes.  One
phase of this  research effort concerns
reduction from cement kilns. Tests were
conducted on  a 1100 ton/day long, dry
process cement kiln to evaluate the ef-
fect of primary air vitiation on NO emis-
sions. Primary vitiation was  accom-
plished by injecting nitrogen gas  into
the primary air. As-found test results (17
days, 89.75 hr) prior to the nitrogen in-
jection test were used to assess the in-
herent variability of the cement-making
process.  The  NO emissions average
about 8 Ib NO2/ton of clfrrker^and varied
approximately 30%  during the as-found
test series. Lowering kiln  exit  oxygen
from 1.8 to 0.7%  reduced NO by  15 to
20%. Three days of nitrogen injection
tests for primary air vitiation were also
performed at the test site. Although the
testing demonstrated that nitrogen in-
jection will reduce NO, the extent of re-
duction is extremely viable and  is based
on the operations and kiln  feed at the
time. NO mass emissions did decrease
20 to 30%, based on  altering the  burning
zone temperature profile (2550 to
2490°F), lowering the primary air O2
from 21 to 13% and maintaining a  con-
stant kiln exit oxygen of 1.5%. No deteri-
oration of clinker quality was observed.

8b-5.  "IMOX Control for
      Glass-Melting Tanks,"
      F. Richard Kurzynske, Gas
      Research  Institute;
      Donald K.  Fleming,
      Institute of Gas
      Technology
  The Gas Research  Institute  (GRI) is
undertaking a program to evaluate fac-
tors  that influence the production of
NOX  in glass-melting tanks. This discus-
sion  presents  the results to date of the
ongoing program, as developed under
contract by the Institute of Gas Technol-
ogy (IGT).
  Glass melting is a high-temperature
operation,  generally employing regen-
erative furnaces with preheat tempera-
ture for the combustion air of 2000 to
2300°F. Consequently, an uncontrolled
glass-melting tank  may produce NOX
concentrations of 3000 ppm. Tech-
niques for reducing these emissions are
being evaluated in this program. Work
has advanced through pilot-scale test-
ing, and the results from that effort have
been correlated to indicate the effects of
temperature, excess air utilization, and
combustion geometry  factors. Staged
combustion (both air and fuel and flue
gas recirculation) also have been evalu-
ated. Testing is now underway in a com-
mercial  furnace  to determine scale-up
factors for  the control parameters.

8b-6.  "Diesel Engine NOX
       Control with  SCR,"
       J. Wasser, R. B. Perry,
       U.  S. EPA/AEERL
  EPA's Air and Energy Engineering Re-
search Laboratory is conducting a long-
term test evaluation of a selective cata-
lytic reduction (SCR) system  on a
stationary  diesel engine.  The overall
goal  of  this project is to establish the
NOX reduction performance of a diesel
SCR  unit over a 4000-hr period.  This
paper reports the interim results  ob-
tained during the first 2300 hr of opera-
tion. For most of the first half of the test
program, NOX reductions of over 90%
were obtained. However, as the 2000-hr
point  was  approached, a drop in NO,
reduction  (below  80%) was  experi-
enced. Cleaning restored part of the cat-
alyst's original activity, and the test pro-
gram continued.

8b-7.  "Environmental
       Assessment of Catalytic
       Reduction of
       Natural-Gas-Fired
       Engines,"  C.  Castaldini,
       L. R. Waterland,
       H.  B. Mason,  Acurex
       Corp.
  Field tests were  performed on tw<
large-bore  natural-gas-fired reciprocat
ing internal combustion engines, om
rich-burn and one lean-burn, equippei
with catalytic gas treatment systems fo
NOX control. The rich-burn engine wa
equipped with a nonselective catalyti
reduction (NSCR) system in which re
ducing gases (CO and unburned hydrc
                                 12

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carbon)  reduce NO and N2. The lean-
burn engine was equipped  with a
selective catalytic reduction (SCR) sys-
tem in which NHs injected in the engine
exhaust gas acts as the reducing agent
for IMOX control. The test program  for
each engine consisted of comprehen-
sive emission measurements for NOX,
CO, unburned hydrocarbon (HC), C02,
and 02 by continuous monitors; partic-
ulate, cyanide,  NH3, volatile and
semivolatile organics; and trace metals
at catalyst inlet and outlet. In addition,
15-day continuous emission monitoring
was performed to record catalyst per-
formance under  extended typical  en-
gine operation:  NOX reduction by  the
NSCR system ranged between 54 and
81% during the comprehensive engine
tests, but degraded to below 40% dur-
ing the  extended monitoring, because
of changes in engine air/fuel (A/F) ratio.
The test engine was not equipped with
an A/F controller. HC, CO, and total  or-
ganic levels decreased across the cata-
lyst, while both cyanide and NH3 emis-
sions increased, SCR NOX reduction
performance for  the lean engine was
constant at about 80%. NH3 concentra-
tion at the SCR  outlet averaged about
90 ppm.

Session 9a

Overview of Furnace Sorbent
Injection SO2 Control
(Concurrent Session)

(R. Hangebrauck, EPA/AEERL,
Session Chairman)

9a-1.  "Review of International
       Development  Activities
       for Furnace Sorbent
       Injection," Dan V.
       Giovanni, Electric Power
       Technologies, Inc.
  At the 1982 Joint Symposium on Sta-
tionary Combustion NOX Control in Dal-
las, TX, an entire session was devoted
to discussing emission control  proc-
esses based on dry injection of calcium
sorbents to meet SO2 regulations  for
coal-fired powerplants. In  November
1984, EPRI and EPA sponsored the  1st
Joint  Symposium on  Dry SO2 and
Simultaneous S02/NOX  Control Tech-
nologies in San  Diego, CA. Forty-six
papers were presented, addressing  the
latest advances in fundamental  re-
search and process design, powerplant
integration and economic issues, and
results from field applications. The
scope  of technical  information dis-
cussed at the symposium was a reflec-
tion of the significant and widespread
developmental activities currently in
progress, which  involve furnace sor-
bent injection (FSI) for SO2 control. This
paper attempts to summarize that infor-
mation by defining the current status of
FSI process developments, acknowl-
edging advances in process under-
standing and design, and identifying yet
unresolved technical issues.

9a-2.  "Technical Status of
       EPA's LIMB  Program,"
       G. Blair Martin, James H.
       Abbott, U. S. EPA/AEERL
  SOxand NOX, two pollutants resulting
from the combustion of coal,  are be-
lieved to be major precursors of acid
rain. Limestone  Injection Multistage
Burners (LIMB) is a potentially low-cost
technology for control of SOX and NOX
from existing utility and industrial boil-
ers. The LIMB R&D program has pro-
vided a detailed  understanding of the
key processes governing sulfur capture
with sorbents. While it appears that
limestone alone will  not achieve pro-
gram goals, several  other promising
sorbents have been identified. Based on
the R&D results and cost estimates for
use of these sorbents, LIMB shows sub-
stantial promise as a SOX and NOX con-
trol technology for retrofit applications.
The ongoing R&D program should re-
solve the remaining technical questions
and provide a basis for widespread pri-
vate sector  commercialization. This
paper summarizes the technical status
of LIMB-related R&D.

9a-3.  "EPRI's Research
       Program on Furnace
       Sorbent  Injection,"
       M. McElroy, EPRI
  The  concept of injecting calcium-
based  alkaline sorbent materials di-
rectly into the furnace of coal-fired util-
ity boilers to reduce S02 emissions is
the subject of major research and devel-
opment programs  in the  U.S. and
abroad. EPRI is contributing to these ef-
forts by sponsoring  an experimental
test program to develop an understand-
ing of fundamental process  chemistry
and optimizing the process  for maxi-
mum SO2 removal and calcium utiliza-
tion. Complementary  EPRI projects are
addressing engineering system design,
economic, and powerplant integration
issues.  These projects will provide the
technical basis for designing and oper-
ating prototype furnace sorbent injec-
tion systems at 50 to  150  MW utility
boilers, which is the next logical step
toward commercializing the process.

Session 9b

Fuel and Combustion
Modifications for
Commercial/Industrial Boilers
(Concurrent Session)

(J. Wasser,  EPA/AEERL,
Session Chairman)

9b-1.  "Combustion
       Modification  Techniques
       for Coal-Fired Stoker
       Boilers," G. C. Quartucy,
       H. J. Buening, R. J. Yang,
       KVB, Inc.
  Combustion modification techniques
were applied to full-scale coal-fired
stoker boilers for the purposes of opti-
mizing boiler  operation and reducing
emissions. Five full-scale stoker boilers
of different designs were  evaluated.
Three of these (two spreader stoker and
one vibrating grate stoker) boilers were
fitted with flue gas recirculation for the
purposes of reducing  NOX emissions
and improving boiler efficiency. Test re-
sults snowed that boiler efficiency im-
provement and NOX reduction can be
achieved with flue gas  recirculation for
spreader stoker boilers with intermedi-
ate or  high minimum  excess oxygen
levels. Its application to mass-fed stoker
boilers (which typically have very short
combustion zones) and spreader stoker
boilers with very low  baseline excess
oxygen  levels (5%  or  lower)  was not
successful. NOX emissions were found
to decrease with decreasing excess oxy-
gen levels for spreader stoker boilers,
but were relatively  independent of ex-
cess oxygen levels for  mass-fed stoker
boilers.  Overfire air system modifica-
tions to enhance jet penetration re-
sulted in significant stack opacity reduc-
tion. Particulate emissions were found
to be correctable to the third power of
bulk combustion  product gas velocity
(volumetric throughput rate divided by
boiler cross-sectional area). This indi-
cates that reductions in excess air level
will result  in efficiency improvement,
NOX reduction, and  significant particu-
late emissions reduction.

9b-2.  "Emissions Assessment
      of Coal/Water-Slurry-
       Fired Industrial Boilers,"

-------
       L. R. Waterland,
       R. DeRosier, D. Van
       Buren, and H. B. Mason,
       Acurex Corporation
  This paper describes emission results
obtained from field testing of two indus-
trial boilers test-fired with coal/water
slurries (CWS).  Emission measure-
ments performed included continuous
monitoring of  flue gas  emissions;
source assessment sampling system
(SASS) sampling of flue gas emissions,
with subsequent laboratory analysis of
samples to  obtain total flue gas organ-
ics  in two  boiling point ranges, com-
pound category information within
these ranges, specific  quantitation of
the semivolatile organic priority pollu-
tants, and flue gas concentrations of 73
trace elements; EPA Method 5 sampling
for particulate; EPA Method 8 sampling
for SO2 and SOj emissions; volatile or-
ganic sampling train (VOST) testing for
volatile organic priority pollutant emis-
sions; gas grab sampling for onsite (^
to C6 hydrocarbon  emission measure-
ments; gas  grab sampling  for N2 emis-
sion measurements; and grab sampling
of the CWS  fuel and ash streams for in-
organic composition determination.
Complete emissions measurement re-
sults for the two units are presented.

9b-3.  "Development of
      Low-IMG* Combustion for
      Industrial Application,"
      Tomio Suzuki, Kotaro
      Morimoto, Keiichi Ohtani,
      Ryuichi  Odawara, Tatsuo
      Kohno, Yuichi Matsuda,
      Mamore Suyari, Kobe
      Steel, Ltd.
  Low-NOx  emission combustion has
been developed for industrial furnaces,
boilers, palletizing kilns, cement plants,
and gas turbines. More than 350 low-
NOX burners of the slow-combustion
type for industrial furnaces  have shown
a reduction  of 30 to 70% in NOX value
and 5 to 10% in fuel consumption. INOX
emission reduction of low-NOx burners
for boilers has attained 30 to 60% in the
17 boilers of 2 to 15 t/h evaporation. The
boiler efficiency  of Iow-N0x burners
was higher than  that of conventional
burners by  2%. The NOX value of low-
NOx burners for pelletizing kilns has de-
creased with an increase in multifuel-fir-
ing percentage of coal in coke-oven gas
and coal firing. Low-N0x combustion of
the  Dual Combustion and Denitration
 (DD) process for a 3600 t/d cement plant
 has decreased to 110 ppm (10% O2) in
 NOX value and 735 kcal/kg-cl in fuel con-
 sumption. A new low-NOx combustor of
 a premixed, prevaporized, and fuel-lean
 type for gas turbines has resulted in an
 NOX reduction of about 90%.

 9b-4.  "Emissions Assessment
       of Cofiring Coal and
       Waste Plastic  in a
       Commercial Boiler,"
       L. R. Waterland,
       R. DeRosier,
       H. I. Lips,  H. B. Mason,
       Acurex Corporation
  This paper describes emission results
 from field testing a stoker-fired  com-
 mercial boiler firing a coal/waste plastic
 mixture. The two tests were performed;
 one with the unit firing  its typical coal
 fuel  (test 1),  and  one with shredded
 waste polyethylene terphthalate  (PET)
 beverage bottles added to the coal to
 about 16% by weight in  the mixed fuel
 (test 2). NOX, total unburned hydrocar-
 bon (TUHC), and solid particulate emis-
 sions were relatively unchanged for the
 two tests as was the emitted particle
size  distribution.  SOX  emission de-
creased with the coal/PET fuel in keep-
ing with its lowered sulfur content; av-
erage CO emissions were also
decreased. Flue gas emissions of most
trace elements were comparable for
both tests, as were the  trace element
compositions of corresponding ash
streams. However, lead emissions were
significantly increased for  test 2. This
increase reflects the increased lead con-
tent of the mixed coal/PET fuel. The cy-
clone hopper ash for the coal/PET test
had consistently lowered teachable
trace element and anion content  than
that for the coal fuel test. Total flue gas
organic emissions were comparable for
both tests, although levels of several
semivolatile priority pollutants were
higher for test 2.

9b-5. "A Low-NOx Burner for
      Gas-Fired Firetube
      Boilers," John P.
      Kesslring,  Wayne V. Krill,
      Alzeta Corporation.
  A field evaluation has been  con-
ducted, sponsored by the Gas Research
Institute, to evaluate the durability  of
the fiber burner in gas-fired firetube
boilers. The fiber burner is a radiant sur-
face burner that typically operates with
NOX  emissions of 15 ppm, CO emis-
sions of 20 ppm, and essentially no hy-
drocarbons. Under this  program,  four
firetube boilers ranging in size from 245
to 980  kW (25 to 100 hp) were retrofit
with the fiber burner and operated for
up to 24 months. Tests  of the burners
installed  at these sites show a  1 to
2 percentage point  increase  in  effi-
ciency, 80% reduction in  NOX, and up to
80% reduction  in CO. In addition, the
ability of the burner to allow increased
boiler loads  has been demonstrated,
and flame noise has been virtually elim-
inated.
                                14

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S. Peralo is with Acurex Corporation, Mountain View, CA 94039.
Michael C. Osborne is the EPA Project Officer (see below).
The complete report consists of two volumes, entitled "Proceedings: 1985 Joint
  Symposium on Stationary Combustion /VO» Control:"
  "Volume 1. Utility Boiler Applications," (Order No. PB 86-225 042/AS; Cost:
  $52.95,  subject to change)
  "Volume 2. Industrial Processes, Fundamental Studies, and Slagging
  Combustors, "(Order No. PB 86-225 059'/AS; Cost: $34.95. subject to change)
The above reports will be available only from:
       National Technical Information Service
       5285 Port Royal Road
       Springfield, VA 22161
        Telephone: 703-487-4650
The EPA Project Officer can be contacted at:
       Air and Energy Engineering Research Laboratory
       U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency
       Research Triangle Park, NC 27711
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