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Smouldering combustion of sewage sludge: Volumetric scale-up, product characterization, and economic analysis
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Smouldering combustion of sewage sludge: Volumetric scale-up, product characterization, and economic analysis

C. Feng, J. Huang, C. Yang, C. Li, X. Luo, X. Gao and Y. Qiao
Fuel, Vol.305, Art. 121485
2021
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Abstract

This contribution reports volumetric scale-up, full product characterization, and the economic performance of sewage sludge (SS) treatment via self-sustaining smouldering combustion. Here, we firstly conducted laboratory-scale smouldering experiments, using a local SS supported by sawdust as an auxiliary fuel, to identify optimized operating conditions. Under a Darcy air flux of 3.5 cm/s, the highest wet SS destruction rate of 44.00 kg/(h·m2) is achieved when the mass ratio of sand/SS/sawdust is 18/5/1. These optimized conditions were then employed in a pilot-scale experiment, the result of which suggests a successful scale-up. Systematic characterization of the smouldering products from the laboratory-scale experiment under optimized conditions was then carried out. The results suggest that the content of total organic carbon in the ash residue is very low (3.81 wt%, dry basis), indicating effective destruction of the SS via smouldering. The condensed liquid is dominated by water (96.11 wt%), with organic carbon content of 0.33 wt%. These organic compounds are rich in N-/O-containing monocyclic aromatic and heterocyclic compounds. The non-condensable flue gas mainly consists of O2 (16.08 vol%), CO2 (3.72 vol%), CO (8964.69 mg/Nm3), CH4 (93.38 mg/Nm3), and non-methane hydrocarbon (298.26 mg/Nm3) rich in volatile organic compounds such as benzenes, aldehydes, furans, ketones, and alkanes/alkenes, necessitating a dedicated flue gas treatment facility. The economic analysis demonstrates that for the treatment of SS, the minimum charging price for running a typical smouldering project is 325.5 CNY/ton (wet basis), which is considerably competitive compared with conventional technologies.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
7 Engineering & Materials Science
7.139 Energy & Fuels
7.139.1964 Spontaneous Combustion
Web Of Science research areas
Energy & Fuels
Engineering, Chemical
ESI research areas
Engineering
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