RI 6908 Experimental Studies Of Incineration In A Cylindrical Combustion Chamber

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Murray Weintraub
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
43
File Size:
5678 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1967

Abstract

In an investigation of the incineration of combustible wastes, the Bureau of Mines studied the effect of dimensional parameters, process variables, and fuel properties on the operation of an incinerator that consisted of a single cylindrical combustion chamber in which all combustion air was supplied tangentially above the fuel. Construction and operation of three designs of such a device proved that the tangential overfire air design is effective in providing efficient combustion and low concentration of particulate matter in the effluent gas. A correlation was found that related burning rate with air rate, chamber diameter, and inlet port diameter. In one of the incinerator models, ignition was by radiation from a preheated surface. The temperature of this surface was required to be 1,400° to 1,600° F to insure ignition of moist refuse; however, this had little effect on combustion rates. In the combustion of moist refuse, evaporation of the water proceeded through the fuel bed as a wave, with an ignition wave following the evaporation.
Citation

APA: Murray Weintraub  (1967)  RI 6908 Experimental Studies Of Incineration In A Cylindrical Combustion Chamber

MLA: Murray Weintraub RI 6908 Experimental Studies Of Incineration In A Cylindrical Combustion Chamber. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1967.

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