Nuclear Generating Capacity In The United Kingdom

nuclear united kingdom
Following the recent completion of three nuclear power plants, there is now some 9.6 GW of nuclear capacity in the United Kingdom. The nuclear share of electrical output, which has stood at around 13% for many years, should rise to around 20% when this capacity is in full operation. A further two reactors are currently under construction which will increase the British nuclear capacity to more than 12 GW by the late 1980s, which could bring the nuclear share of electrical output to around 25%. (more…)

Coal Fly Ash and Coal Dust as Emissions from Coal Combustion

air pollution problems created by coal combustion. Meanwhile, coal-fired power plants and industrial boilers spewed out tons of gaseous and particulate pollutants into the atmo- sphere. During combustion, the small amounts of sulfur and nitrogen in coal combine with oxygen to form sulfur dioxide (SO2), sulfur trioxide (SO3), and the oxides of nitrogen (NOx). (more…)

Coal Combustion Emissions Generated from Coal and Waste Material Fuel

A combination of legislation and technology has helped clean up many of the world’s coal-burning plants. Both developed and developing countries have adopted increasingly stringent environmental regulations to govern emissions from coal-fired power plants. In the United States, all coal-fired power plants built after 1978 must be equipped with postcombustion cleanup devices to capture pollutants before they escape into the atmosphere. Cyclones, baghouses, and electrostatic precipitators filter out nearly 99% of the particulates. Flue gas scrubbers use a slurry of crushed limestone and water to absorb sulfur oxides from flue gas. The limestone reacts with the sulfur dioxide to form calcium sulfate, which may be used to produce wallboard. Staged combustion and low-NOx burners are used to burn coal to minimize NOx formation. Another strategy, selective catalytic reduction, reacts ammonia with NOx over a catalyst to produce nonpolluting nitrogen and water vapor.

Conventional coal-fired power plants capture pollutants from the flue gas after it leaves the boiler. Circulating fluidized bed (CFB) combustors capture most of the pollutants before they leave the furnace. Crushed coal particles and limestone circulate inside the CFB combustor, suspended by an upward flow of hot air. Sulfur oxides released during combustion are absorbed by the limestone, forming calcium sulfate, which drops to the bottom of the boiler. The CFB combustor operates at a lower temperature (14001F) compared to pulverized coal (PC) boilers (27001F), which also helps reduce the formation of NO x .

Precombustion coal cleaning is another strategy to reduce sulfur emissions by cleaning the coal before it arrives at the power plant. Sulfur in coal is present as pyrite (FeS2 ), which is physically bound to the coal as tiny mineral inclusions, and as ‘‘organic sulfur,’’ which is chemically bound to the carbon and other atoms in coal. Pyrite is removed in a coal preparation plant, where coal is crushed into particles less than 2 inches in size and is washed in a variety of devices that perform gravity-based separations. Clean coal floats to the surface, whereas pyrite and other mineral impurities sink. Additional cleaning may be performed with flotation cells, which separate coal dust from its impurities based on differences in surface properties. Precombustion removal of organic sulfur can be accomplished only by chemical cleaning. So far, coal combustion emissions and chemical cleaning has proved to be too costly, thus flue gas scrubbers are often required to achieve near-complete removal of sulfur pollutants.

The tightening of environmental regulations is likely to continue throughout the world. In the United States, for example, by December 2008, it is anticipated that coal-fired power plants will have to comply with maximum emission levels for mercury. Emissions of mercury and other trace metals, such as selenium, are under increasing scrutiny of coal combustion emissions because of suspected adverse effects on public health.

Coal is sometimes combusted with waste material as a combined waste reduction/electricity production strategy. The disposal of waste from agriculture and forestry (biomass), municipalities, and hospitals becomes costly when landfill space is limited. Some wastes, particularly biomass feedstock, are combustible, but their low energy density (compared with coal) limits their use as an electricity production fuel. Blending coal with these fuels provides an economical method to produce electric power, reduce waste, and decrease coal plant emissions. Most wood wastes, compared to coal, contain less fuel nitrogen and burn at lower temperatures. These characteristics lead to lower NO x formation. In addition, wood contains minimal sulfur ( o 0.1% by weight) and thus reduces the load on scrubbers and decreases scrubber waste biomass.

Numerous electric utilities have demonstrated that 1–8% of woody drying biomass can be blended with coal with no operational problems. Higher blends may also be used, but require burner and feed intake modifications as well as a separate feed system for the waste fuel. Cofiring in fluidized bed boilers may avoid some of these drawbacks, but the economics of co-firing are not yet sufficiently attractive to make it a widespread practice.

Coal Mine Water Treatment: Water Remediation & Iron-Oxidizing Bacteria

Before the passage of regulations dictating mined land reclamation and mine water discharge standards, streams and rivers down-gradient of mine sites were often contaminated with high levels of suspended and dissolved solids. In the eastern United States, Acid Mine Drainage was also a major problem. Nowadays, streams and rivers near active mine sites have much less of an impact. Sediment ponds are constructed to collect suspended solids and if the mine water does not meet regulations, chemicals [typically lime, Ca(OH) 3 ] are added to neutralize acidity and precipitate dissolved metals. (more…)

Modern Coal Plants – Efficient & Lower Emissions Power Plants

Coal Power Plants
Coal use today is no longer evocative of dirty power plants with polluting black smoke billowing from their smokestacks. Many of these plants have been transformed through technology to operate more efficiently and with significantly lower emissions. Some fire coal with other waste materials and others produce both electric power and heat transmission. Cases of plant retrofits and their new performance statistics are documented by various institutions, including the Energy Information Administration (http:// www.eia.doe.gov) and the World Coal Institute (http://www.wci-coal.com). The following examples highlight clean coal use throughout the world: (more…)

Solar Tower: Wind and Solar Combination

The solar technology is not only in the flat solar collector or photovoltaic panel. I follow the process ID and proof of this is the prototype plant to produce solar electricity. (more…)

The Future Of Renewable Fuels And Hybrids

Do we have the resources? Rudolf Diesel developed the diesel engine which ran on biodiesel vegetable oil in the late 1800s. At the time, he speculated that his discovery seemed insignificant, but later could prove to be as important as mankind’s uncovering of future energy uses for petroleum and coal tar. Given the U.S.’ rapid expansion into biofuels, it would appear his vision was correct due to the drawbacks of biofuels. But widespread adoption of biomass-based fuels is not a foregone conclusion. Two questions haunt its progress. First, will it truly reduce U.S. reliance on fossil fuels? And second, is there enough farmland to accommodate widespread production, without jeopardizing food supplies? (more…)

Modernizing Bioenergy – Biomass as Energy Source

modernizing bioenergy biomass
Estimation of the future technical potential of biomass as an energy source is dependent on assumptions with respect to land availability and productivity as well as conversion technologies. With the emergence of energy crops as the major source of biomass fuel, land use conflicts, especially in relation to food production, may arise. However, with efficient agricultural practices, plantations and crops could supply a large proportion of energy needs, with residues playing a smaller role without compromising food production or further intensifying agricultural practices. (more…)

Alternative Energy Forward to the Future

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Some forms of alternative energy sources are really new; while most of the energy forms are really come form in development and scientists have been investigated for several hundred years. One of the energy forms is biomass and bioenergy. Bioenergy refers to the burning of organic materials that would otherwise be simply discarded or not being considered at all. (more…)

Some Major Alternative Energy Sources

alternative energy sources
Some of alternative fuel sources are by no means new. For centuries people have harnessed the power of running water for a variety of needs, particularly for agriculture or farming. Water wheels were constructed in the Middle East, Greece, and China thousands of years ago, and they were common fixtures on the farms of Europe by the Middle Ages. In the early 21st century hydroelectric dam, which generate electricity from the power of rivers, provide about 9 % of the electricity in the United States. Worldwide, there are about 40,000 such dams. (more…)

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