Fossil fuel combustion flue gases

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Fossil fuel combustion flue gases refer to the emissions of combustion product gases resulting from the burning of fossil fuels such as coal, oil (Petroleum crude oil), and natural gas.[1]

Most fossil fuels are combusted with ambient air (Earth's atmospheric air) being the oxidant (as differentiated from combustion with pure oxygen) and this article is based on the use of ambient air as the combustion air.

Discussion of flue gas components

Since ambient air contains about 79 volume percent gaseous nitrogen (N2),[2] which is essentially non-combustible, the largest part of the flue gases from most fossil fuel combustion is uncombusted nitrogen. The next largest part of the flue gas is carbon dioxide (CO2) which can be as much as ten to fifteen volume percent or more of the flue gas. This is closely followed in volume by water vapor (H20) created by the combustion of the hydrogen in the fuel with atmospheric oxygen. Much of the smoke seen exiting from flue gas stacks is this water vapor forming a fog cloud as it contacts cool air and condenses into water. The above photograph is a good example of the white plumes formed by the condensation of water vapor in the emissions from some flue gas stacks (often referred to as chimneys or smokestacks).

Flue gas pollutants

A typical flue gas from the combustion of fossil fuels will also contain some small amounts of nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulfur dioxide (SO2) and particulate matter.[1] The nitrogen oxides are derived from the nitrogen in the ambient air as well as from any nitrogen-containing compounds in the fossil fuel. The sulfur dioxide is derived from any sulfur-containing compounds in the fuels. The particulate matter, sometimes termed black carbon, is composed of very small particles of solid materials and very small liquid droplets which give some flue gases their smoky appearance.

Calculated flue gas emissions from burning fossil fuels

The steam generators in large electric power plants and the process furnaces in large petroleum refineries, petrochemical and chemical plants, and municipal solid waste incinerators burn very considerable amounts of fossil fuels and therefore emit large amounts of flue gas to the ambient atmosphere. The table below presents the total amounts of flue gas typically generated by the burning of fossil fuels such as natural gas, fuel oil and coal. The data in the table were obtained by stoichiometric calculations.[3][4]

It is of interest to note that the total amount of wet flue gas generated by coal combustion is only ten percent higher than the flue gas generated by natural gas combustion, but the total amount of dry flue gas generated by coal combustion is about 22 percent higher than the flue gas generated by natural gas combustion. This is due to the fact that burning natural gas produces more water vapor than does the burning of coal since the hydrogen-to-carbon ratio of natural gas is higher than that of coal.

However, what may be of more interest is that the amount of CO2 emitted by coal combustion is about 1.7 times the amount emitted by natural gas combustion.

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References

Citation

Beychok, M. (2012). Fossil fuel combustion flue gases. Retrieved from http://editors.eol.org/eoearth/wiki/Fossil_fuel_combustion_flue_gases