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This book addresses the behavior of inorganic material in
combustion systems. The past decade has seen unprecedented
improvements in understanding the rates and mecha nisms of
inorganic transformations and in developing analytical tools to
predict them. These tools range from improved fuel analysis
procedures to predictive computer codes. While this progress has
been met with great enthusiasm within the research community, the
practices of the industrial community remain largely unchanged. The
papers in this book were selected from those presented at an
Engineering Foundation Conference of the same title. All have been
peer reviewed. The intent of the conference was to illustrate the
application of advanced technology to ash-related problems in
boilers and, by so doing, engage the research and industrial
communities in more productive dialog. Those attending the
conference generally felt that we were successful on these counts.
We also engaged the industrial community to a greater extent than
ever before in the conference discussion and presentation. We hope
these proceedings will facilitate a continued and improved
interaction between industrial and research communities. Behavior
of inorganic material has long been recognized as one of the major
considerations affecting the design and operation of boilers that
burn ash-producing fuels. The practical problems associated with
the behavior are sometimes catastrophic and spec tacular, ranging
from major slag falls that damage the bottom of furnaces to
complete plugging of convection passes."
This book contains papers presented at the Engineering Foundation
Conference on mineral matter in fuels held on November 2-7, 1997 in
Kona, Hawaii. The conference is one of a continuing series that was
initiated by the CEGB Mar- wood Engineering Laboratories in 1963.
The conference was to be eventually organised by the Engineering
Foundation as the need for multi-disciplinary work related to c-
trolling ash effects in combustors became apparent. The conference
covers both the science and the applications. The papers also
present case histories, particularly for current fuel technologies,
developments in advanced technologies for power generation and
mathematical modelling of these processes. Developments since 1963
have been slow, but steady, due to the complexity of the chemical
and physical processes involved. However, the research presented
here displays great improvement in our understanding of the
mechanisms by which mineral matter will influence fuel use. Steve
Benson from EERC presented a review and current status of issues
related to ash deposition in coal combustion and gasification. The
application of new analytical tools, which have been detailed in
the previous conferences, is presented. These include CCSEM, as
well as new techniques for char- terising sintering of ash, such as
TMA, image analysis, X-ray diffraction crystallography and thermal
analysis. The new analytical techniques were extended to encompass
widely differing fuels such as biomass. Ole H Larsen from ELSAM
Denmark presented a review of these advanced techniques.
This book addresses the behavior of inorganic material in
combustion systems. The past decade has seen unprecedented
improvements in understanding the rates and mecha nisms of
inorganic transformations and in developing analytical tools to
predict them. These tools range from improved fuel analysis
procedures to predictive computer codes. While this progress has
been met with great enthusiasm within the research community, the
practices of the industrial community remain largely unchanged. The
papers in this book were selected from those presented at an
Engineering Foundation Conference of the same title. All have been
peer reviewed. The intent of the conference was to illustrate the
application of advanced technology to ash-related problems in
boilers and, by so doing, engage the research and industrial
communities in more productive dialog. Those attending the
conference generally felt that we were successful on these counts.
We also engaged the industrial community to a greater extent than
ever before in the conference discussion and presentation. We hope
these proceedings will facilitate a continued and improved
interaction between industrial and research communities. Behavior
of inorganic material has long been recognized as one of the major
considerations affecting the design and operation of boilers that
burn ash-producing fuels. The practical problems associated with
the behavior are sometimes catastrophic and spec tacular, ranging
from major slag falls that damage the bottom of furnaces to
complete plugging of convection passes."
This book contains papers presented at the Engineering Foundation
Conference on mineral matter in fuels held on November 2-7, 1997 in
Kona, Hawaii. The conference is one of a continuing series that was
initiated by the CEGB Mar- wood Engineering Laboratories in 1963.
The conference was to be eventually organised by the Engineering
Foundation as the need for multi-disciplinary work related to c-
trolling ash effects in combustors became apparent. The conference
covers both the science and the applications. The papers also
present case histories, particularly for current fuel technologies,
developments in advanced technologies for power generation and
mathematical modelling of these processes. Developments since 1963
have been slow, but steady, due to the complexity of the chemical
and physical processes involved. However, the research presented
here displays great improvement in our understanding of the
mechanisms by which mineral matter will influence fuel use. Steve
Benson from EERC presented a review and current status of issues
related to ash deposition in coal combustion and gasification. The
application of new analytical tools, which have been detailed in
the previous conferences, is presented. These include CCSEM, as
well as new techniques for char- terising sintering of ash, such as
TMA, image analysis, X-ray diffraction crystallography and thermal
analysis. The new analytical techniques were extended to encompass
widely differing fuels such as biomass. Ole H Larsen from ELSAM
Denmark presented a review of these advanced techniques.
Adam is having a miserable day. First, he causes his team to lose
the soccer game, and then he gets teased for being the shortest boy
in the fifth grade. Just when Adam thinks nothing else can possibly
go wrong, Mrs. Gold, his rather peculiar science teacher, makes him
stay behind after class. Adam's day goes from bad to just plain
weird when Mrs. Gold shares with him a startling secret: she's much
more than a science teacher-Mrs. Gold is a powerful alchemist who's
counting on Adam's help to save the world
Mrs. Gold has chosen Adam, one of her best students, for a
critical task. She plans to shrink Adam down to the microscopic
size of a single atom and send him to the Periodic School for the
Elements to search for Ollie, a missing atom of oxygen. Without
Ollie, the planet's supply of oxygen will vanish. As Mrs. Gold
produces the philosopher's stone, the secret magical tool of
alchemists, Adam is suddenly thrust into the bizarre and
treacherous realm of chemical elements. He must take advantage of
his scientific knowledge to find Ollie before it's too late.
Join Adam on a fascinating journey filled with fun and fantasy
as he fights to defend the world from elemental disaster in "Adam's
Atomic Adventures."
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