
doi: 10.4095/301995
A pilot-scale experimental project to establish the flame stability and combustion characteristics of reject coal fines in a swirl-stabilized flame is described. The coal fines were found to require 25% of the thermal input to the flame as either distillate oil or gas to produce an adequately stable flame. When this level of support was used combustion efficiencies were found to be above 90% and the heat transfer distribution from the flame differed marginally from that due to a No. 2 oil flame.
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