TY - JOUR
T1 - Low-temperature corrosion in a BFB boiler firing biomass and waste streams – Online measurement technique for monitoring deposit corrosivity
AU - Vainio, Emil
AU - Ruozzi, Alessandro
AU - Kinnunen, Hanna
AU - Laurén, Tor
AU - Hupa, Leena
PY - 2024/9/1
Y1 - 2024/9/1
N2 - The cause of low-temperature corrosion was studied in a full-scale bubbling fluidized bed boiler burning waste streams and biomass. A measurement campaign was conducted at the boiler air preheaters. Samples of corroded air preheater tubes were collected and analyzed. Deposits were sampled with an air-cooled probe with material temperatures of 70–130 °C and analyzed with SEM-EDX and XRD. The initial corrosion rates were determined for carbon steel. Additionally, a novel probe that monitors deposit properties online was developed and tested. Analyses of corroded air preheaters revealed that the corrosion was chlorine-induced. The corrosion layer on the air preheater tube was rich in Fe, Ca, and Cl and contained iron chloride as a corrosion product. The corrosion probe measurements at the air preheaters showed that some corrosion occurred with a material temperature of 120 °C and increased significantly with the lowering of the material temperature. The deposits were rich in Ca and Cl, and the share of Cl increased with a decrease in material temperature, indicating the formation of highly hygroscopic calcium chloride. The online deposit monitoring probe showed the deposit corrosivity and deposit build-up tendency in situ. At the lowest material temperature of 80 °C, the current reading was the highest, indicating a wet and corrosive deposit. As the temperature was gradually increased, the current reading decreased, and the deposit fully dried when the temperature was increased above 120 °C. The online deposit monitoring probe can be used to find optimal material temperatures in the cold-end and determine how changes in the combustion conditions, fuel composition, or additives affect the deposit corrosivity and stickiness in situ.
AB - The cause of low-temperature corrosion was studied in a full-scale bubbling fluidized bed boiler burning waste streams and biomass. A measurement campaign was conducted at the boiler air preheaters. Samples of corroded air preheater tubes were collected and analyzed. Deposits were sampled with an air-cooled probe with material temperatures of 70–130 °C and analyzed with SEM-EDX and XRD. The initial corrosion rates were determined for carbon steel. Additionally, a novel probe that monitors deposit properties online was developed and tested. Analyses of corroded air preheaters revealed that the corrosion was chlorine-induced. The corrosion layer on the air preheater tube was rich in Fe, Ca, and Cl and contained iron chloride as a corrosion product. The corrosion probe measurements at the air preheaters showed that some corrosion occurred with a material temperature of 120 °C and increased significantly with the lowering of the material temperature. The deposits were rich in Ca and Cl, and the share of Cl increased with a decrease in material temperature, indicating the formation of highly hygroscopic calcium chloride. The online deposit monitoring probe showed the deposit corrosivity and deposit build-up tendency in situ. At the lowest material temperature of 80 °C, the current reading was the highest, indicating a wet and corrosive deposit. As the temperature was gradually increased, the current reading decreased, and the deposit fully dried when the temperature was increased above 120 °C. The online deposit monitoring probe can be used to find optimal material temperatures in the cold-end and determine how changes in the combustion conditions, fuel composition, or additives affect the deposit corrosivity and stickiness in situ.
U2 - 10.1016/j.fuel.2024.131864
DO - 10.1016/j.fuel.2024.131864
M3 - Article
SN - 0016-2361
VL - 371
SP - 131864
JO - Fuel
JF - Fuel
ER -