Affiliation:
1. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Abstract
The combustion chamber of slagging coal gasifiers is lined with refractories to protect
the steel shell of the gasifier from elevated temperatures and corrosive attack of the coal slag.
Refractories composed primarily of Cr2O3 have been found most resistant to slag corrosion, but
they continue to fail performance requirements. Post-mortem analysis of high-chromia refractory
bricks collected from commercial gasifiers suggests that slag penetration and subsequent spalling of
refractory are the cause of the short service life of gasifier refractories [1]. Laboratory tests were
conducted to determine the penetration depth of three slags representative of a wide variety of coals
in the United States into chromia-alumina and two high-chromia refractories. Variables tested were
refractory-slag combinations and two partial pressures of O2. Slag penetration depths were
measured from spliced images of each refractory. Samples heated to 1470°C for 2 hrs had
maximum penetration depths ranging from 1.99±0.15 mm to at least 21.6 mm. Aurex 95P, a highchromia
refractory containing 3.3% phosphorous pentoxide (P2O5), showed the least slag
penetration of all refractories tested. P2O5 likely reacts with CaO and MgO in the slag, forming an
immiscible Ca-Mg phosphate phase. The extraction of basic components from slag causes an
increase in slag viscosity restricting the molten slag penetration into the refractory.
Publisher
Trans Tech Publications, Ltd.
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science
Cited by
18 articles.
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