| The Department of Energy (DOE) has
selected three organizations to develop "filter-failure
safeguard devices" that can protect future coal-powered energy
plants from costly equipment damage.
The three organizations - the
University of North Dakota's Energy and Environmental Research
Center, Siemens Westinghouse, and Southern Research Institute - will
develop systems suitable for 21st century power plant technologies
such as integrated gasification combined cycle and pressurized
fluidized bed combustion.
These advanced power generating
systems rely on a hot stream of high-pressure gas. Advanced filters
are being developed to trap the microscopic pieces of soot, unburned
carbon, or tiny dust particles in the gas stream before they can
damage turbines and other downstream components.
The most commercially ready barrier
filter systems today are based on "candle filter
technology." These devices are now offered by a variety of
vendors and have the flexibility to use a variety of commercial
available filter element types.
The contracts being awarded in this
project will develop a safeguard devices in the event the candle
filters fail. Such safeguard devices are necessary to ensure that an
unexpected filter breakage does not cause sufficient damage to put
future advanced power plants out of service for extended periods of
time.
The Federal Energy Technology Center
(FETC), a major DOE field organization, will manage these projects
once contracts are negotiated and the projects are in place:
-
Energy
and Environmental Research Center, University of North Dakota,
Grand Forks, North Dakota, will fabricate and test a
filter-failure safeguard device that uses a sticky yet
temperature-stable coating on a highly porous ceramic disk. The
disk will sit above the candle filter where it can trap dust and
plug pores in the event of a filter failure. Different coatings
will be applied to cover the typical range of conditions in
gasification and pressurized fluidized bed combustion
applications. The filter-failure safeguard device would minimize
the potential damage to downstream equipment, mitigate dust
emissions, and allow the power plant to continue operations
until a convenient or scheduled outage. Proposed DOE award:
$248,000.
Contact: Grant E. Dunham (701) 777-5159.
-
Siemens
Westinghouse, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, will design,
test and verify devices that minimize the risk of filter
failure, and protect downstream equipment and other filter
components in case of failure. Devices are to be installed in
the clean side of filters, and operate in extreme high-dust,
high-pressure conditions at temperatures reaching 1,600 degrees
F. Siemens Westinghouse will create a conceptual and prototype
design, fabricate a device, and conduct bench-scale testing in
simulation facilities at DOE's Federal Energy Technology Center
in Morgantown, WV. In addition, there are two optional phases
totaling nine months. The first permits optimization of the
device's design and performance. The second allows for
pilot-scale testing and evaluation at DOE's Power Systems
Development Facility in Wilsonville, Alabama. Proposed DOE
award: $387,000.
Contact: James Ciesar (412) 256-2564
-
Southern
Research Institute (SRI), Birmingham, Alabama, will
develop a device that shuts off the flow of particle-laden gas
immediately after a candle filter breaks. If a candle filter
breaks, a higher-than-normal gas flow will activate the
safeguard device. The Full-Flow Mechanical Safeguard Device
provides a positive seal against pressure encountered during the
periodic back-pulse of gas used for filter cleaning. Back-pulse
filter cleaning can compromise the effectiveness of other types
of safeguard devices that depend on passive plugging as the
approach to filter-failure sealing. The full-flow device does
not slide and does not have hinged pieces, which are not
reliable in hot-gas cleanup conditions. The proposed safeguard
device is easy and inexpensive to clean and maintain. Another
benefit is the device adds minimal resistance to the filter flow
and the back-pulse flow when it is not active and the filter is
intact. Proposed DOE award: $236,500.
Contact: Bruce Sizemore, (205) 581-2733
FETC manages and implements a broad
spectrum of energy and environmental programs for the Department of
Energy. It is the Department's primary research arm for advanced
fossil fuel technology development.
- End of TechLine -
For more information,
contact:
Otis Mills, Jr., DOE Federal Energy Technology Center, (412)
386-5890, e-mail: mills@fetc.doe.gov
Technical contact:
Rich Dennis, DOE Federal Energy Technology Center, 304/285-4515,
e-mail rdenni@fetc.doe.gov. |