Lecture 1
Lecture 1
Types of fuel
Solid Fuel (Coal) Liquid Fuel Gaseous Fuel
Coal classification
Coal is classified into three major types namely anthracite, bituminous,
and lignite. However, there is no clear demarcation between them. Coal is further classified as semi-anthracite, semi-bituminous, and subbituminous. Anthracite is the oldest coal from a geological perspective. It is a hard coal composed mainly of carbon with little volatile content and practically no moisture. Lignite is the youngest coal from a geological perspective. It is a soft coal composed mainly of volatile matter and moisture content with low fixed carbon. Fixed carbon refers to carbon in its free state, not combined with other elements. Volatile matter refers to those combustible constituents of coal that vaporize when coal is heated.
Liquid fuels
Liquid fuels: Fuels in liquid form are called liquid fuels. Liquid fuels are generally obtained from petroleum and its by-
products.
These liquid fuels are complex mixture of different hydrocarbons,
2 chain structure), Olefins (CnH2n chain structure), Napthalene (CnH2n ring structure), Benzene (CnH2n 6 ring structure), Nepthalene (CnH2n 12 ring structure) category.
Ultimate analysis
The ultimate analysis gives the accurate chemical analysis by mass
of important elements of fuel such as Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Sulphur etc. It is useful in determining the quantity of air required for combustion and the volume and composition of the gases. Following table show ultimate analysis of various coal.
Fuel Percentage by mass of dry fuel O2 N2 S Rank C H2 Mineral matter
Anthracite
Medium rank coal
101
401
88.2
81.8 75.0
2.7
4.9 4.6
1.7
4.4 10.7
1.0
1.8 1.6
1.2
1.9 2.1
5.2
5.2 6.0
Proximate analysis
The proximate analysis indicates the percentage by weight
of fixed carbon, volatiles, ash, and moisture content in coal. The amounts of fixed carbon and volatile combustible matter directly contribute to the heating value of coal. Fixed carbon acts as a main heat generator during burning. High volatile matter content indicates easy ignition of fuel.
Fixed carbon: Fixed carbon is the solid fuel left in the furnace after volatile matter is distilled off. It consists mostly of carbon but also contains some hydrogen, oxygen, sulphur and nitrogen not driven off with the gases. Fixed carbon gives a rough estimate of the heating value of coal. Volatile matter: Volatile matters are the methane, hydrocarbons, hydrogen and carbon monoxide, and incombustible gases like carbon dioxid e and nitrogen found in coal. Thus the volatile matter is an index of the gaseous fuels present. A typical range of volatile matter is 20 to 35%. Volatile matter: Proportionately increases flame length, and helps in easier ignition of coal Sets minimum limit on the furnace height and volume Influences secondary air requirement and distribution aspects Influences secondary oil support
Ash content: Ash is an impurity that will not burn. Typical range is 5% to 40%. Ash Reduces handling and burning capacity
replaces combustible matter, it decreases the heat content per kg of coal. Typical range is 0.5 to 10%. Moisture: Increases heat loss, due to evaporation and superheating of vapour Helps to a certain extent with binding fines Aids radiation heat transfer
Indonesia coal
30
47
14