Sharon Sjostrom
Electric Power Research Institute
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Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2002
Sharon Sjostrom; Timothy George Ebner; Trevor Ley; Richard Slye; Carl Richardson; Tom Machalek; Mandi Richardson; Ramsay Chang
Abstract Sorbent injection for Hg control is one of the most promising technologies for reducing Hg emissions from power-generation facilities, particularly units that do not require wet scrubbers for SO2 control. Since 1992, EPRI has been assessing the performance of Hg sorbents in pilot-scale systems installed at full-scale facilities. The initial tests were conducted on a 5000-acfm (142-m3/min) pilot baghouse. Screening potential sorbents at this scale required substantial resources for installation and operation and did not provide an opportunity to characterize sor-bents over a wide temperature range. Data collected in the laboratory and in field tests indicate that sorbents are affected by flue gas composition and temperature. Tests carried out in actual flue gas at a number of power plants also have shown that sorbent performance can be site-specific. In addition, data collected at a field site often are different from data collected in the laboratory, with simulated flue gas mixed to match the major components in the site’s gas. To effectively estimate the costs of Hg sorbent systems at different plants, a measure of sorbent performance in the respective flue gases must be obtained. However, injection testing at multiple facilities with large pilot systems is not practical. Over the past five years, fixed-bed characterization testing, modeling studies, and bench-scale injection testing have been undertaken to develop a low-cost technique to characterize sorbent performance in actual flue gas and subsequently to project normalized costs for Hg removal prior to full-scale demonstration. This article describes the techniques used and summarizes field-testing results from two plants burning Powder River Basin (PRB) coal for commercial activated carbon and several other sorbent types. Full-scale projections based on the results and data collected on larger-scale systems also are included.
Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2002
C. Jean Bustard; Michael D. Durham; Charles Lindsey; Travis Starns; Ken Baldrey; Cameron Martin; Richard Schlager; Sharon Sjostrom; Rick Slye; Scott Renninger; Larry Monroe; Richard Miller; Ramsay Chang
Abstract The overall objective of this project was to determine the cost and impacts of Hg control using sorbent injection into a Compact Hybrid Particulate Collector (COHPAC) at Alabama Power’s Gaston Unit 3. This test is part of a program funded by the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) to obtain the necessary information to assess the costs of controlling Hg from coal-fired utility plants that do not have scrubbers for SO2 control. The economics will be developed based on various levels of Hg control. Gaston Unit 3 was chosen for testing because COHPAC represents a cost-effective retrofit option for utilities with existing electrostatic precipitators (ESPs). COHPAC is an EPRI-patented concept that places a high air-to-cloth ratio baghouse downstream of an existing ESP to improve overall particulate collection efficiency. Activated carbons were injected upstream of COHPAC and downstream of the ESP to obtain performance and operational data. Results were very encouraging, with up to 90% removal of Hg for short operating periods using powdered activated carbon (PAC). During the long-term tests, an average Hg removal efficiency of 78% was measured. The PAC injection rate for the long-term tests was chosen to maintain COHPAC cleaning frequency at less than 1.5 pulses/bag/hr.
Archive | 2009
Sharon Sjostrom; Jerry Amrhein
The digital full text of this document is divided into parts. This part contains part of one of the documents six appendices.
Fuel | 2010
Sharon Sjostrom; Michael D. Durham; C. Jean Bustard; Cameron Martin
Archive | 2001
Ramsay Chang; Massoud Rostam-Abadi; Sharon Sjostrom
Archive | 2002
Ramsay Chang; Sharon Sjostrom
Archive | 1998
Sharon Sjostrom; Ramsay Chang
Energy Procedia | 2011
Sharon Sjostrom; Holly Krutka; Travis Starns; Tom Campbell
Archive | 2006
Kenneth E. Baldrey; Sharon Sjostrom; Nina Bergan French; Michael D. Durham
Archive | 2002
Ramsay Chang; Sharon Sjostrom