LI Yuhang, TIAN Shuman, ZHANG Puxuan, et al. Combustion characteristics of mixed ammonia in coal-fired utility boiler and its influence on boiler: a review[J]. Thermal power generation, 2025, 54(5): 13-24.
LI Yuhang, TIAN Shuman, ZHANG Puxuan, et al. Combustion characteristics of mixed ammonia in coal-fired utility boiler and its influence on boiler: a review[J]. Thermal power generation, 2025, 54(5): 13-24. DOI: 10.19666/j.rlfd.202408217.
The combustion characteristics of coal-fired power plant boilers co-firing ammonia and its impact on the boilers are reviewed
aiming to provide theoretical and practical basis for large-scale application of ammonia as an alternative fuel to coal. By systematically reviewing existing literatures
the study examines the fundamental characteristics of ammonia combustion
flame propagation
flame morphology
and their effects on heat transfer
heat surface safety
boiler efficiency
and exergy efficiency of coal-fired boilers. The study also explores combustion enhancement methods such as oxygen-enriched combustion
preheated combustion
and hydrogen-assisted combustion. The results indicate that
co-firing ammonia can mitigate issues like ash deposition
slagging
wear
and high-temperature corrosion on heating surfaces
but it increases the acid dew point of flue gas
potentially exacerbating low-temperature corrosion. Co-firing ammonia increases the irreversibility of the combustion process
leading to higher furnace losses
although oxygen-enriched combustion can mitigate these losses. While there is substantial research on ammonia co-firing with small molecule gaseous fuels
there is limited study on its co-firing with large molecule solid hydrocarbons like coal. The effect of ammonia blending combustion on boiler heat transfer
heating surface safety
and boiler efficiency is significant. The decrease in flame temperature
reduction in flue gas soots
and changes in flue gas composition can affect heat transfer efficiency and heating surface conditions. Attention should be paid to low-temperature corrosion and unburned ammonia emissions. Ammonia blending combustion is an effective low-carbon combustion technology
but its application in large utility boilers still faces many challenges. It requires further in-depth research on combustion mechanisms and practical application effects to optimize combustion equipment and improve system efficiency.