TY - JOUR
T1 - CFD modeling investigation of oxy-fuel combustion application in an industrial-scale FCC regenerator
AU - Tang, Yuneng
AU - Liu, Cheng
AU - Kuang, Shibo
AU - Liu, Qianqian
AU - Chen, Zhenyu
AU - Song, Haitao
AU - Su, Bin
AU - Yu, Jianglong
AU - Zhang, Lian
AU - Dai, Baiqian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - The increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration and its consequential impact on climate change have elicited increased public concern. The refinery units including fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) generate substantial quantities of CO2. To mitigate the emission from the FCC process, oxy-fuel combustion has emerged as a prospective carbon capture and storage technology. This study presents the first trial for the modeling investigation of a 70 kt/a industrial FCC regenerator under the scenario of retrofitting it with oxy-fuel combustion technology. Employing the Eulerian-Eulerian model, a CFD model integrating heat transfer and coke combustion reactions has been established. The detailed hydrodynamics, temperature, and species concentration distribution inside the regenerator are obtained under both air-firing and oxy-firing conditions, which are further compared to exploit the possibility of oxy-fuel combustion retrofitting. As has been found, decreases in gas temperature and carbon conversion rate were observed for 21 % O2/79 % CO2 atmosphere in comparison to the air reference case due to the differences in gas properties between N2 and CO2. This discrepancy resulted in a drop of 17 K in dilute phase temperature and 2 K in dense phase temperature. The bed density also exhibited a large with the oxy-firing conditions, with notable observations revealing a lower bed density below a height of 4.2 m, transitioning to a higher density above said height. Sensitivity analysis was also conducted for three principal operating parameters, including superficial gas velocity, oxygen partial pressure, and catalyst circulation rate. An increase of oxygen partial pressure to 27 % or a decrease of the catalyst circulation rate to 20.7 kg/s proved effective in achieving the same temperature profile and even a slightly better carbon conversion in comparison to air-firing regeneration.
AB - The increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration and its consequential impact on climate change have elicited increased public concern. The refinery units including fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) generate substantial quantities of CO2. To mitigate the emission from the FCC process, oxy-fuel combustion has emerged as a prospective carbon capture and storage technology. This study presents the first trial for the modeling investigation of a 70 kt/a industrial FCC regenerator under the scenario of retrofitting it with oxy-fuel combustion technology. Employing the Eulerian-Eulerian model, a CFD model integrating heat transfer and coke combustion reactions has been established. The detailed hydrodynamics, temperature, and species concentration distribution inside the regenerator are obtained under both air-firing and oxy-firing conditions, which are further compared to exploit the possibility of oxy-fuel combustion retrofitting. As has been found, decreases in gas temperature and carbon conversion rate were observed for 21 % O2/79 % CO2 atmosphere in comparison to the air reference case due to the differences in gas properties between N2 and CO2. This discrepancy resulted in a drop of 17 K in dilute phase temperature and 2 K in dense phase temperature. The bed density also exhibited a large with the oxy-firing conditions, with notable observations revealing a lower bed density below a height of 4.2 m, transitioning to a higher density above said height. Sensitivity analysis was also conducted for three principal operating parameters, including superficial gas velocity, oxygen partial pressure, and catalyst circulation rate. An increase of oxygen partial pressure to 27 % or a decrease of the catalyst circulation rate to 20.7 kg/s proved effective in achieving the same temperature profile and even a slightly better carbon conversion in comparison to air-firing regeneration.
KW - CO capture
KW - Computational fluid dynamics
KW - Fluid catalytic cracking (FCC)
KW - Oxy-firing regeneration
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85201598855&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.joei.2024.101796
DO - 10.1016/j.joei.2024.101796
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85201598855
SN - 1746-0220
VL - 117
JO - Journal of the Energy Institute
JF - Journal of the Energy Institute
M1 - 101796
ER -