60
Cost
Effective Improved Refractory Materials for Slagging Gasification Systems--Blasch
Precision Ceramics, Inc., 580 Broadway, Albany, NY
12204-2802; 518-436-1263, www.blaschceramics.com
Mr.
David A. Larsen, Principal Investigator, dlarsen@blaschceramics.com
Mr.
John R. Parrish, Business Official, jparrish@blaschceramics.com
DOE
Grant No. DE-FG02-03ER83612
Amount:
$748,234
Gasification is one of the most efficient methods of producing electricity
from coal and other solid fuels. However,
high temperature,
slagging gasifiers have refractory liners that deteriorate rapidly and have a
relatively short life, requiring considerable, costly maintenance.
Depending on operating temperature, unit size, and feedstock, refractory
liners typically last 6-18 months and replacement costs exceed $1 million,
including materials, manpower, and lost revenue due to downtime.
Additionally, these refractories contain chrome oxide, which causes
health and environmental concerns due to the potential of carcinogenic
hexavalent chrome formation during use. This
project will develop an advanced, improved refractory material for use in a
coal-fed gasifier. This material
will be free of chrome oxide, cost less than 50% of currently used chrome
oxide-bearing refractories, and provide an estimated life expectancy of at least
three years in a coal-fed gasifier application. In Phase I, an economical, advanced refractory ceramic
material for coal-fed slagging gasifiers was demonstrated.
Over 25 ceramic material compositions were formulated, formed into
specimens, and tested for strength, density, porosity, and static cup brick slag
corrosion. Three compositions met
all technical/ economical objectives: absence
of chrome/chrome oxide, good ceramic formability (at lab-scale), average
flexural strength over 2,000 psi, static cup brick slag corrosion/penetration
not greater than 2 mm, and a preliminary estimated cost that would be 50% less
than of current gasifier refractory materials.
In Phase II, test results from Phase I will be used for further ceramic
material development/optimization and a scaling-up of process techniques.
Full size ceramic shapes will be produced and tested in a full size
gasifier.
Commercial
Applications and Other Benefits as
described by awardee: Economical
refractory materials that contain no chrome oxide and provide excellent high
temperature corrosion resistance should find use as refractory linings in solid
feed gasifiers, molten metal (e.g., stainless steel) furnaces that yield slags,
and chemical reactors that produce corrosive chemicals.
The benefits of such a refractory material would include excellent
corrosion resistance, lower cost (i.e., more than
$500,000 potential average refractory savings per gasifier), longer life,
and environmental safety.