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Atmospheric lead emissions from coal-fired power plants with different boilers and APCDs in Guizhou, southwest China
Xinyu Li; Xiangyang Bi; Zhonggen Li; Leiming Zhang; Shan Li; Ji Chen; Xinbin Feng; Xuewu Fu
2019
发表期刊Energy Fuels
卷号33期号:11页码:10561–10569
摘要

Lead (Pb) emissions into the atmosphere from anthropogenic sources have attracted considerable attention due to lead’s high toxicity and associated human health and environmental impacts. Pb emission inventories need to be updated considering the development of modern industry as well as the transformation and upgrading of industrial equipment in recent years. Coal-fired power plants (CFPPs) have been an important source of atmospheric Pb emission in China since the late 1990s, while tremendous advantages have been achieved in the air-pollution control devices (APCDs) in the most recent two decades. In this study, Pb emissions from eight CFPPs, two of which have circulating fluidized bed boilers (CFB) and the others have pulverized coal fired boilers (PC), in Guizhou province, Southwest China were investigated. Solid samples including feed fuel (coal, gangue, and coal slime), limestone, bottom ash, fly ash, and gypsum, as well as stack flue gas samples were simultaneously collected for determining the internal partitioning behavior and the atmospheric emissions of Pb from these CFPPs. Pb concentrations of feed coal, limestone, bottom ash, fly ash, gypsum, and stack flue gas were in the range of 10.17–30.94, 0.36–3.08, 7.75–27.10, 33.56–73.16, 0.34–2.18 mg·kg–1, and 0.33–1.58 μg·Nm−3, respectively. The mass balance (output/input) ratio of Pb was in the range of 83.73–124.95%, with input dominated by the feed coal (95.89–99.96%) and output by fly ash (73.17–97.54%), followed by bottom ash (2.16–26.76%) and atmospheric emissions (0.01–0.08%). More Pb ended up in PC fly ash (88.89–97.54%) than CFB fly ash (73.17–81.19%), but an opposite trend was found in the bottom ash for different boilers. Pb emission factors (EMFs) could not be differentiated significantly between PC and CFB boilers, which were in the range of 2.32–10.67 mg·t–1 fuel, 1.28–6.51 μg·(kW·h)−1, or 0.12–0.51 g·TJ–1. Atmospheric Pb emissions from Guizhou’s CFPP were estimated to be 430 ± 163 kg·y–1 in 2017, much lower than previously reported values.

收录类别SCI
语种英语
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://ir.gyig.ac.cn/handle/42920512-1/10409
专题环境地球化学国家重点实验室
作者单位1.State Key Laboratory of Environmental Geochemistry, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guiyang 550081, China
2.University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
3.State Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology, School of Earth Sciences, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China
4.College of Resources and Environment, Zunyi Normal University, Zunyi 563006, China
5.Air Quality Research Division, Science and Technology Branch, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Toronto M3H 5T4, Canada
6.College of Chemical Engineering, Huaqiao University, Xiamen 361021, China
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Xinyu Li,Xiangyang Bi,Zhonggen Li,et al. Atmospheric lead emissions from coal-fired power plants with different boilers and APCDs in Guizhou, southwest China[J]. Energy Fuels,2019,33(11):10561–10569.
APA Xinyu Li.,Xiangyang Bi.,Zhonggen Li.,Leiming Zhang.,Shan Li.,...&Xuewu Fu.(2019).Atmospheric lead emissions from coal-fired power plants with different boilers and APCDs in Guizhou, southwest China.Energy Fuels,33(11),10561–10569.
MLA Xinyu Li,et al."Atmospheric lead emissions from coal-fired power plants with different boilers and APCDs in Guizhou, southwest China".Energy Fuels 33.11(2019):10561–10569.
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