The present invention deals with the use of ground or unground rice husk waste as an alternative to the use of Natural Gas and LPP oils 1 A . . . 9 A, in stationary or rotary silicate kilns.
Rice husk is collected in dump trucks and unloaded into a suitable silo, specifically built for this purpose. It is then transferred to a Dryer Feed Silo, where it is dried. If it is ground, it goes through a grinding and classification system before being atomized in the combustion chamber of the Furnace.
Currently, there is a significant production of Methane Gas in the fields where Rice Husk is disposed of, and since it is a hardly degradable residue (nature takes approximately ten years to incorporate it into the soil), the use of Rice Husk as an alternative fuel becomes highly feasible for addressing this waste issue.
The Rice Husk Residue is ground or unground and dried, atomized in the Combustion Chamber of a Furnace, where combustion takes place, and when introduced into the Chamber at 1,300° C., it releases heat to the environment, thus maintaining the Chamber temperature.
To atomize it, we use a high pressure, low air flow fan, and all the air required for Combustion (Secondary air is supplied by a Low-Pressure Secondary Fan placed into the already preheated Chamber) can also be used in Oxy-Combustion furnaces.
All Gas resulting from Combustion is cooled, normally by mixing Cold Air (Room) with Incandescent Gas, coming from the Furnace, and collected and passed through a sleeve filter to be properly filtered.
What currently exists, publicly known, is the use of residue in Biomass Boilers, which are equipment used for the generation of saturated or superheated steam.
This use is limited because rice husk, being rich in SiO2, quickly forms deposits in the ducts and tubes of the Equipment, and therefore it should be used in small quantities.
Ground Rice Husk performs better than natural Rice Husk.
The environmental benefit of this process is very significant, as instead of having a waste generating methane gas in the fields where it is disposed, and due to its slow degradation (it takes approximately ten years for Nature to incorporate it into the soil), which has been accumulating in alarming proportions, this process of using it as an alternative source to fossil fuels effectively accelerates the incorporation of the waste into the soil. What remains are inert ashes, rich in silicon and potassium, which enrich the soil. And the best part is that we are replacing fossil fuels in these casting processes.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102022015773-1 | Aug 2022 | BR | national |