Calcined coke is a competitive material for making carbon anodes for smelting of alumina to aluminum. Calcining is an energy intensive industry and a significant amount of heat is exhausted in the calcining process. Efficiently managing this energy resource is tied to the profit margin and survivability of a calcining plant. To help improve the energy efficiency and reduce natural gas consumption of the calcining process, a 3-D computational model is developed to gain insight of the thermal-flow and combustion behavior in the calciner. Comprehensive models are employed to simulate the moving petcoke bed with a uniform distribution of moisture evaporation, devolatilization, and coke fines entrainment rate with a conjugate radiation-convection-conduction calculation. The following parametric studies are conducted: rotation angles, tertiary air injection angles, devolatilization zone length, discharge end gas extractions without injecting natural gas, variations of coke bed properties (thermal conductivity and heat capacity), and coke bed sliding speed. A total of 19 cases have been simulated. The results of studying the effect of tertiary air injection angles show that employing 15° tertiary air injection angle provides the best calcining condition than using 30° and 45° injection angles by achieving a higher coke bed temperature and less coke fines entrainment and attrition rate. In an attempt to reduce natural gas consumption, employing gas extraction at the discharge end successfully draws the hot combustion gas from the tertiary air zone towards the discharge end without burning natural gas. The coke bed temperature between 6 and 21 m from the discharge end is successfully raised from 10 to 100 K, but discharge end temperature is reduced 150 K without burning natural gas. The extracted gas at 1,000 K is too low to be returned to the kiln, but it could be used to preheat the tertiary air.
Skip Nav Destination
ASME 2011 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition
November 11–17, 2011
Denver, Colorado, USA
Conference Sponsors:
- ASME
ISBN:
978-0-7918-5490-7
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Investigation of Combustion and Thermal-Flow Inside a Petroleum Coke Rotary Calcining Kiln With Potential Energy Saving Considerations Available to Purchase
Zexuan Zhang,
Zexuan Zhang
University of New Orleans, New Orleans, LA
Search for other works by this author on:
Ting Wang
Ting Wang
University of New Orleans, New Orleans, LA
Search for other works by this author on:
Zexuan Zhang
University of New Orleans, New Orleans, LA
Ting Wang
University of New Orleans, New Orleans, LA
Paper No:
IMECE2011-64643, pp. 1477-1489; 13 pages
Published Online:
August 1, 2012
Citation
Zhang, Z, & Wang, T. "Investigation of Combustion and Thermal-Flow Inside a Petroleum Coke Rotary Calcining Kiln With Potential Energy Saving Considerations." Proceedings of the ASME 2011 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. Volume 4: Energy Systems Analysis, Thermodynamics and Sustainability; Combustion Science and Engineering; Nanoengineering for Energy, Parts A and B. Denver, Colorado, USA. November 11–17, 2011. pp. 1477-1489. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/IMECE2011-64643
Download citation file:
17
Views
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Articles
Simulation of Combustion and Thermal-Flow Inside a Petroleum Coke Rotary Calcining Kiln—Part I: Process Review and Modeling
J. Thermal Sci. Eng. Appl (June,2010)
Simulation of Combustion and Thermal-Flow Inside a Petroleum Coke Rotary Calcining Kiln—Part II: Analysis of Effects of Tertiary Airflow and Rotation
J. Thermal Sci. Eng. Appl (June,2010)
Investigation of Potential Benefits of Using Bricks of High Thermal Capacity and Conductivity in a Rotating Calcining Kiln
J. Thermal Sci. Eng. Appl (March,2009)
Related Chapters
Energy Balance for a Swimming Pool
Electromagnetic Waves and Heat Transfer: Sensitivites to Governing Variables in Everyday Life
Combined Cycle Power Plant
Energy and Power Generation Handbook: Established and Emerging Technologies
When Is a Heat Sink Not a Heat Sink?
Hot Air Rises and Heat Sinks: Everything You Know about Cooling Electronics Is Wrong