This invention relates to a reactor for gasifying granular fuels, where the fuel in the reactor forms a fixed bed in whose lower portion oxygen-containing gasifying medium is introduced, which moves upwards in the fixed bed, and where product gas containing hydrogen and carbon oxides is discharged from the reactor through a discharge duct above the fixed bed.
Reactors of this kind have long since been known and are described for instance in the U.S. Pat. No. 5,094,669, the EP patent 0,078,100 and the GB patent 2,003,589. The gasification is effected by means of a rotary grate in the reactor and the discharge of solid ash, or without rotary grate with discharge of liquid slag.
As fuel, all kinds of coal are used including lignite and peat, to which various waste substances may be added. When the fuel added to the fixed bed from the top is too fine-grained, a disturbingly large amount thereof is withdrawn from the reactor by the product gas and transported into the subsequent apparatuses. This may lead to operating failures which require the shut-down of the reactor. By increasing the maximum performance of a reactor and thus increasing the generation of product gas, it may also happen that the product gas stream withdraws too much fine-grained fuel from the reactor.
It is the object underlying the invention to design the above-mentioned reactor such that even with a strong product gas stream no disturbing amounts of fine-grained fuel are withdrawing from the reactor. In accordance with the invention this is achieved in that in the reactor at least one centrifugal separator is disposed for separating solids from the product gas, which centrifugal separator has an inlet opening for dust-laden product gas coming from the fixed bed, an outlet line for product gas, and a solids discharge line leading into the fixed bed, where the outlet line is connected with the discharge duct of the reactor.
Advantageously, several centrifugal separators are disposed in the reactor, where the outlet lines of the separators open into an annular chamber disposed in the upper portion of the reactor, which annular chamber communicates with the discharge duct.
An expedient embodiment of the invention consists in that in the upper portion of the reactor a vertical annular wall is provided, and that the inlet opening of the separator is disposed outside the portion of the reactor enclosed by the annular wall. The annular wall ensures that the inlet opening of the separator is disposed above the fixed bed.
Ideally, the cyclone is used as centrifugal separator, but other centrifugal separators may be used as well. The reactors usually operate at pressures of 1 to 80 bar.
Embodiments of the reactor are illustrated with reference to the drawing, wherein:
The reactor shown in
The energy required in the endothermal gasification reactions is provided by partial oxidation. The crude product gas leaves the reactor through the discharge duct 9 and is supplied to a cooling and cleaning. At its upper end, a vertical annular wall 10 is connected with the reactor casing 1 in a gastight manner and serves as boundary for an annular chamber 11 which communicates with the discharge duct 9. A horizontal partition 12 in the form of an annular disk is disposed between the casing 1 and the annular wall 10 as lower boundary of the annular chamber 11.
In
The product gas leaving the cyclones 13 flows through the outlet lines 14 first into the annular chamber 11 and then to the discharge duct 9. The dust content of this product gas is limited in this way, so that operating failures are avoided.
In accordance with
The schematically illustrated reactor shown in
A gasification reactor with rotary grate 5, as it is represented in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
198 41 586 | Sep 1998 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP99/06584 | 9/7/1999 | WO | 00 | 7/27/2000 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO00/15738 | 3/23/2000 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2958298 | Mayers | Nov 1960 | A |
4021184 | Priestley | May 1977 | A |
4146369 | Flesch et al. | Mar 1979 | A |
4441892 | Schuster | Apr 1984 | A |