Rockford Combustion

Hydrogen Combustion: An Approaching Reality?

How long until heat treat operations use hydrogen for combustion? Considerations like cost and pipeline infrastructure are key in answering this question. For these industry experts, the consensus is clear: It is uncertain when, but hydrogen is coming. Doug Glenn, publisher of Heat Treat Today, moderated a panel of four industry experts in 2023 during which they addressed topics about advancements and challenges surrounding hydrogen combustion. Read an excerpt of their answers below. For the full interview go to www.heattreattoday.com/hydrogen2023.


What’s New for Hydrogen?

Dr.-Ing. Joachim G. Wuenning
President/Owner
WS Wärmeprozesstechnik GmbH

Joe Wuenning: In Europe, several steel companies are getting large funds to really go in on the hydrogen road to make green steel. If you have green steel, you will also convert the downstream processes. These places are large locations where the steel plants are running.

Automotive companies will ask for green steel. How long will it take until the heat treat shop will get to the point of using hydrogen for combustion is uncertain, but I’m sure it will be, in the end, coming also there.

Brian Kelly
Applications Engineering Manager
Honeywell Thermal Solutions

Brian Kelly: We have seen projects secured that have come to fruition firing on hydrogen. They’ve fired on hydrogen to prove it works and then moved back to natural gas since the H2 supply is not readily available.

What we’ve seen in the U.S. is a slowdown in some of the inquiries and questions about hydrogen. There may be a slowdown in the fervor of the talk about hydrogen, but it is certainly in the background and maybe a little bit more towards how do we be more green until hydrogen gets here?

Robert Sanderson
Director of Business Development
Rockford Combustion

Bob Sanderson: We’ve seen more inquiries, specifically from a lot of laboratory users who are trying to develop new engines, processes, and combustion products and looking for all the support and the technology to safely handle transport and bring that hydrogen into the lab under various test conditions.

A few users, too, want to understand: If they make the change to hydrogen, what’s going to happen with the rest of their systems?

Mark Hannum
Manager of Innovation and Combustion Laboratory
Fives North American Combustion

We have seen some early hydrogen requests going on which have tapered off a bit. I think it goes hand in hand with users becoming more familiar with the systems and having more of their questions answered. But I think some of it also depends a bit on the market pressures and the demands. The cost of natural gas has gone down dramatically. It’s going down faster than the cost of hydrogen is coming down. Hydrogen is going to keep coming down and keep becoming more and more affordable. Then it will reenter into the marketplace.

Mark Hannum: Probably the biggest thing is some of the regulatory and law changes that have happened. The Inflation Reduction Act certainly puts in place a lot of supports for hydrogen production and hydrogen-based systems for decarbonization.

Burgeoning Users of Hydrogen

Kelly: New inquiries have come from a lot of different places for us. We’ve had food and beverage, some heat treating, and plastics. Some of the inquiries have been waste to energy, sequestering CO2, and capturing the hydrogen. That’s how we’re going to produce it.

Wuenning: Our business is in the steel and heat treating industry. I’m not so much in touch with the other industries, but I think it would come from everywhere — everywhere the people are willing to pay for it. Of course, we have never beat natural gas on price, so far. Hydrogen is never going to come free out of the ground. But we all know the reasons why we want to get rid of the fossils.

In heat treat, we see another tendency, and that is the use of ammonia. We try to check out whether we can use ammonia because with hydrogen you need pipeline connections, and it will take quite some time until the pipelines will carry hydrogen to the last little heat treater somewhere in the countryside.

Hannum: One of the nice things about hydrogen is if you have a clean source of water and electricity, you might be able to make hydrogen in a remote location. You might not need to pipeline it; you could make the gas and use it on site.

The need for pipeline infrastructure is a key issue in the use of hydrogen.

In the steel industry in Europe, these major investments are being played out and committed to, but we’re years away from being adopted, for day-in and day-out use.

There are a lot of segments that are performing really meaningful tests at the industrial scale because they’re all trying to de-risk the switch from natural gas to hydrogen. Are there any process-side impacts that they need to understand that would impact product quality or product suitability or any of those things? All that stuff is going on now, and I think it’s going to take a couple of years for everyone to sort of work through and have a good understanding of whether there’s anything they need to be worried about beyond just the fuel switch itself, if there’s any process.

Sanderson: A lot of the push I’ve seen has come out of the aerospace and the automotive industries, not so much on the products that they make but more on the manufacturing side of it.

Advancements and Challenges with Hydrogen

Sanderson: We’re doing a lot more work now with stainless materials. There is quite a bit of involvement using stainless and other materials that have higher nickel contents and other materials to help work into the grain boundaries.

Working with hydrogen has some unique challenges compared to other fuels. It’s the smallest atomic molecule out there and it just wants to permeate into everything. With a lot of the higher, high-end pressures, there is a lot of chance of steel embrittlement, but if you can get away from those higher ends and try and get down to more usable, friendly working pressures, you don’t stand as much risk on the hydrogen embrittlement and dealing with leaks and permeability. So, just helping people understand that those are some of the changes that need to come into play for a safe, long-term solution in their applications.

Hannum: We have installed some hydrogen-firing capability in our lab; it was about a $400,000 investment. So, at this point, we can fire a substantial amount of input for longer durations than we could before. So, that’s really helpful when we’re looking at what the impacts are across our entire burner product range, when we look at a conversion from natural gas to hydrogen.

It also lets us perform some process-based studies where we can really simulate industrial processes and have a longer duration hydrogen firing. So, we’ve been able to support some customers by simulating some of their processes here and actually firing the materials that they
would normally fire at their plant to look at hydrogen impact on those materials.

We’ve also gone to a couple of our customer sites and participated in studies with them. One of those earlier this year, right after THERMPROCESS, was Hydro Aluminum in Spain; we melted aluminum with hydrogen without any natural gas. That was, I think, the first industrial scale melting of aluminum with hydrogen.

Wuenning: We have now put into place an electrolyzer for making our own hydrogen, and not relying on the bottles coming in or on ammonia supply. We installed a big ammonia tank so that we can run the ammonia tests on site, develop the crackers and account for them. And, of course, we are involved in several research projects together with universities and some sites that do all these things to try it out.

Kelly: The latest this year is an investment for one of our factories to have an electrolyzer-type system, so a full-blown, cradle-to-grave type of system to be able to produce the hydrogen. Muncie is investing in that whole substructure with the capability of increasing to tube tankers before the electrolyzer comes so there is significant investment on that end. And from the product end, we’ve just kept testing and looking at the whole product line, not just burners, but all the controls and things to be associated with hydrogen firing.

In addition to the controls behind the system, we must also think about the development of simpler and/or more complicated systems. These updated systems are necessary because of changes in air/fuel rations and all the concerns that pop up when using different fuels.

These systems need to take into account what the process is requiring, namely holding tighter air/fuel ratios and also being less dependent on low temperature air-heating applications, but also being able to use higher temperatures and higher oxygen rates with some excess air. We’ve been working on those types of systems and looking at that when the clients are in a situation where they can fire on either fuel. How critical it is to hold capacity and air/fuel ratio and things of that nature, and how can we make that as easy as possible for the client?

But, yes, a lot of activity on that basis. And even in product development looking at the future — lower NOx and lower emissions burners that go in conjunction with hydrogen. In the lower and high temperature range, we’ve got to look at a burner that can fi re via flex-fuel type burner. Maybe not just hydrogen and natural gas but something in biofuels or renewable-type fuels.

About the Experts

Joachim (Joe) Wuenning is the owner and CEO of WS Thermal Process Technology.

Brian Kelly is the applications engineering manager at Honeywell Thermal Solutions.

Robert Sanderson is the director of business development at Rockford Combustion.

Mark Hannum is the manager of the innovation and combustion laboratory at Fives North American Combustion.

For more information: Visit www.heattreattoday.com/hydrogen2023


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Strategies To Reduce Nitrogen Oxides (NOx)

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N2: It’s so harmless, it makes up the majority of the air we breathe. But, once bonded with oxygen, the resulting compound can be dangerous to the environment and public health; as heat treaters know, keeping nitrogen oxide production levels low is a key part of complying with government requirements. When it comes to reducing nitrogen oxide levels, what options do heat treaters have?

This Technical Tuesday article written by Robert Sanderson, director of Business Development at Rockford Combustion, first appeared in Heat Treat Today's August 2022 Automotive print edition.


Robert Sanderson
Director of Business Development
Rockford Combustion

Nitrogen oxides (NOx) are a collection of highly reactive chemical compounds formed during combustion processes, partly from nitrogen compounds in the fuel, but mostly by direct combination of atmospheric oxygen and nitrogen in flames. One chemical reactant of NOx is nitrogen gas (N2). Formed by two nitrogen atoms, N2 lacks smell, color, and taste. N2 is also non-flammable and inactive at room temperature. In fact, N2 makes up 78% of our atmosphere, underscoring how little danger the compound, by itself, represents in the environment.

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However, when N2 reacts with oxygen (O), an assortment of nitrogen oxides such as nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) can be formed. All forms of the nitrogen oxides taken together are referred to as NOx, with the measurements reported as equivalent to NO2. NOx formation can happen naturally such as during a lightning strike, biogenetically in agricultural fertilizer, or from fossil fuel powered cars (mobile) and industrial combustion systems (stationary). Combustion processes that form NOx by-products predominately create them as both NO and NO2.

In this article we will look at NOx formed from combustion processes, why NOx is dangerous both to the environment and public health, and what options operators of industrial combustion systems have to reduce NOx emissions in equipment fi red by natural gas, oil, or coal. We will also show how reducing NOx in certain combustion systems can increase energy efficiency to bolster return on investment.

NOx

As a pollutant, NOx represents a serious threat to human health and the environment. When NOx is mixed with organic compounds under UV light it will create reddish-brown smog (ozone). Smog that envelops cities during the summer often degrades air quality and can irritate lung tissue. Additionally, NOx has been linked to acid rain and high levels of NOx have been shown to damage ecosystems by making vegetation more susceptible to disease and frost damage.

During the 1990s, the use of natural gas in industrial combustion processes displaced coal and oil. This has led to a significant reduction in NOx emissions. At the same time, local and federal requirements grew increasingly stringent, including the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 that required major stationary sources of NOx to install and operate reasonably available control technology (RACT). Current regulations in some parts of the country are focused on NOx levels of 9 ppm (parts per million) or lower. Manufacturers have responded to these challenges by introducing ever-lower NOx capable burners and NOx control schemes.

What Are the Types of NOx 

As mentioned, whenever fossil fuel is burned, NOx can be formed. For that reason, motor vehicles by their sheer numbers are major contributors to NOx pollution. However, for the purpose of this article, we are narrowing the focus exclusively on NOx emitted by fuel-fired industrial combustion systems, such as boilers, furnaces, heaters, ovens, kilns, and dryers. NOx formed in high-temperature industrial systems can be broken down into three types: Fuel NOx, Thermal NOx, and Prompt NOx.

Fuel NOx

Although natural gas is typically free of fuel-bound nitrogen, nitrogen is often found in liquid and solid fuels. When nitrogen that is chemically bonded into fuel molecules is combusted, it directly converts to Fuel NOx. In fact, untreated fuel oil can contain as much as 1,000 ppm of fuel-bound nitrogen resulting in over 40 ppm NOx in exhaust. Ammonia (NH3) combustion is particularly difficult as it is essentially all fuel-bonded nitrogen, and fully converts to Fuel NOx. Hydrogen (H2) fuel combustion has no fuel-bound nitrogen and produces no Fuel NOx.

Thermal NOx

Sometimes called Zeldovich NOx, after the Russian physicist, Thermal NOx forms when airborne nitrogen and oxygen merge in high temperature zones. Thermal NOx constitutes most of the NOx formed during the combustion of gases and light oils. The formation of Thermal NOx is highly temperature dependent — basically the hotter the combustion the more Thermal NOx is formed. Thermal NOx generally begins to occur at about 1600°F, with formation rates escalating as the temperatures increase above this. But the formation of Thermal NOx is also dependent on pressure and residence time. Decreasing any of these three factors reduces Thermal NOx levels. Here, it is important to note that while natural gas is a cleaner burning hydrocarbon, all flames (including those of pure hydrogen) release heat. And any high temperature heat release has the potential to produce Thermal NOx. Many common Thermal NOx treatments utilize various methods to minimize temperatures in the hottest areas of the flame.

Prompt NOx

In 1971, Charles Fenimore proposed the concept of Prompt NOx. Prompt NOx occurs when N2 fuses with partially combusted fuel products early in a combustion process. Basically, Prompt NOx is the “leftover” NOx when both Thermal and Fuel NOx are accounted for. Although Prompt NOx represents a miniscule fraction of overall NOx in a combustion system, that fraction becomes in ever-greater proportion as other NOx control mechanisms are introduced. Prompt NOx is not thermally dependent which makes it difficult to design for. As such, it is often perceived as a source that cannot be easily controlled, hence suppression eff orts focus on reducing Thermal and Fuel NOx.

Why Is NOx Controlled?

Nitrogen oxides emitted into our atmosphere lead to increased air pollutants that irritate airways in the human respiratory system, among other health problems. Of course, air pollution impacts everyone but some of us are more susceptible: young children and seniors, those with asthma, and people working outdoors, for example. Even brief exposures to NOx can aggravate respiratory diseases, particularly asthma, emphysema, or bronchitis, leading to coughing, wheezing, difficulty breathing, and hospital admissions. Long-term exposure to elevated concentrations of NOx may contribute to the development of asthma and potentially increase susceptibility to respiratory infections.1 A 2012 United Kingdom study concluded that air pollution related deaths were more than double those of traffic accidents.2 A related study in the United States came to similar conclusions.3

The key problem is ozone. When exposed to UV rays in sunlight, NOx molecules interact with volatile organic compounds (VOC) to form ground-level or “tropospheric” ozone (O3), also known as smog. Smog can damage lung tissue, and it is especially dangerous to people with respiratory illnesses that may experience more intense attacks. Ozone is also hard on plants and animals, damaging ecosystems and leading to reduced crop and forest yields. In the United States, ozone accounts for an estimated $9 billion in reduced corn and soybean production annually.4 It also kills many seedlings and damages foliage, making trees more susceptible to diseases, pests, and harsh weather. Finally, ozone acts as a powerful greenhouse gas, albeit much shorter lived than carbon dioxide.

In the presence of water droplets, nitrogen oxides form nitric acid, contributing to the problem of acid rain. Additionally, NOx deposition in the oceans provides phytoplankton with nutrients, worsening the issue of red tides and other harmful algal blooms. A closely related molecule can be created, nitrous oxide (N2O), another greenhouse gas that plays a role in climate change.

Abating NOx Emissions

In response to stringent environmental regulations, the combustion industry has made important strides in reducing combustion associated NOx, while simultaneously furthering energy efficiency. These steps include a host of new and emerging technologies and practical, proven operational tactics, like the following:

Fuel Switching

One simple method to reduce Fuel NOx emissions is to switch from a high nitrogen-bound content fuel to a fuel with reduced nitrogen content such as another distillate oil, or natural or hydrogen gas — which are essentially nitrogen free fuels. Changing fuels may necessitate changes to burners, fuel trains, and burner management systems as the alternate fuel will likely have different combustion characteristics and chemical properties.

Natural Gas Reburning (NGR)

NGR has proven to yield NOx reduction up to 75% from standard burners. NGR involves building a “gas-reburning zone” on top of the primary combustion zone where natural gas is injected. A fuel-rich region is created where NOx reacts to hydrocarbon radicals and molecular nitrogen is formed. This technique can be built into some burner designs as an integral operating property. Burners that use this NOx reduction method must be carefully sized and examined for operating inputs as their performance ranges are often restricted.

Low NOx Burners

Low NOx and Ultra-Low NOx burners have been shown to reduce emissions by up to 50% compared to standard burners. Greater reduction efficiencies can be achieved by combining the burner with flue gas recirculation (FGR, see below). Low NOx burners reduce peak flame temperature by combinations of induced recirculation zones, staged or delayed combustion zones, and reduced local oxygen concentrations. Downsides of these mechanisms are that these designs are typically more expensive than conventional burners, often require a larger footprint, and they may necessitate extensive furnace modifications. These solutions are popular with volumetric air heating and low temperature combustion processes.

Reduced Oxygen Concentration

Under certain conditions NOx emissions will diminish in a near linear fashion with decreasing excess air. Decreasing the extraneous available oxygen in the combustion zone lengthens the flame, resulting in a slower heat release rate per unit flame volume. Keep in mind that if excess air falls below a threshold value, combustion efficiency may decrease due to incomplete mixing. This is a popular method of NOx control on tube fired burners, reducing furnaces, and other applications where combustion air is fully isolated from the process, allowing for precise management of oxygen levels.

Steam/Water Injection

As we discussed earlier, lowering the local oxygen concentration will slow combustion and reduce developed flame temperature, therefore decreasing the formation of Thermal NOx. One method to achieve this result is to inject a small amount of water or steam into the vicinity of the flame. The water will absorb heat as steam is formed, which lowers the flame temperature. Additionally, the steam displaces the available oxygen, which slows the rate of combustion and further lowers the flame temperature. This method is effective, but generally lowers the combustion efficiency by 2% as the water molecules absorb some of the thermal energy. The effects of trace minerals in the water should also be considered.

Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR)

Ultra-Low NOx emissions (sub-5 ppm NOx requirement) are achieved with the use of selective catalytic reduction (SCR) technology. SCR is a post-combustion method that involves injecting an ammoniacal reagent such as ammonia, aqueous ammonia, or urea in the presence of a catalyst to convert NOx to harmless nitrogen and oxygen in the exhaust gasses. Ammonia-free solutions utilizing urea are an option for users averse to handling and storing ammonia. It is not unusual for an SCR unit to reduce incoming flue NOx levels from 30 ppm to below 5 ppm, or by upwards of 95% reductions of higher inlet concentrations. And they can lower the electrical load by reducing fan requirements compared to flue gas recirculation. Catalyst costs have steadily dropped since SCR’s introduction in the 1960s, yet transaction expenses generally make SCR a costly NOx reduction strategy. A common issue is ammonia breakthrough that can occur when excess reagent for various reasons “slips” past the catalyst unreacted. Some jurisdictions have limits not only for NOx emission limits but also for ammonia slip, complicating the use of SCR as an abatement strategy.

Selective Catalytic Reduction with Economizers

Incorporating an extended-surface economizer with SCR delivers low NOx emissions and higher system efficiency, lowering operational costs. The SCR is the first phase of the system, converting NOx to nitrogen and oxygen. The second phase is a finned tube economizer, capturing and redirecting wasted heat back via heat transfer to feedwater or makeup water. Increasing efficiency by one or two percentage points can amount to measurable cost savings. Users of this two-phase system also report higher turndowns (the ratio of maximum to minimum firing rate), more stable flames, and faster response times to load swings.

Flue Gas Recirculation (FGR)

FGR (5 ppm to 20 ppm NOx requirement) is a well-attested, pollution-reducing technology that reduces thermal NOx by decreasing the burner flame temperature and slows the combustion reaction. In the FGR process, a portion of flue gases generated during combustion is redirected to the burner with fresh air, which helps to cool down the flame’s peak temperature and slows combustion reactions, thereby reducing the formation of NOx. One downside of FGR is that flue gas recirculation requires electrical energy for additional air handling. Another issue is that not all thermal processes can use FGR, for example, if the flue gases are too hot or too high in oxygen.

Benefits of NOx control technologies range from lowering your business’s carbon footprint to maximizing fuel efficiency. When it comes to reducing nitrogen oxide levels, selection of options will depend on your thermal processing systems, site-specific conditions, and regulatory and economic considerations. With so many ways to control NOx levels, heat treaters can choose the option that works best for them.

 

References

[1] “Basic Information about NO2,” EPA.gov, United States Environmental Protection Agency, June 2022, https://www.epa.gov/no2-pollution/basic-information-about-no2.

[2] Roland Pease, “Traffic pollution kills 5,000 a year in UK, says study,” BBC.com, BBC News, June 2022, https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-17704116.

[3] Fabio Caiazzo et al. “Air pollution and early deaths in the United States. Part I: Quantifying the impact of major sectors in 2005,” Atmospheric Environment 79 (2013): 198-208, June 2022, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1352231013004548.

[4] Justin M. McGrath et al, “An analysis of ozone damage to historical maize and soybean yields in the United States,” June 2022, https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1509777112.

About the Author: Throughout Robert’s 32+ years of experience within the combustion field, he has been involved in the automotive, abatement-oxidation, aerospace, agriculture, food and beverage, HVAC, heat treating, glass, asphalt, pyrolysis, reducing furnaces, dryers, immersion heaters, and power generation industries. He has formerly worked with Eclipse, Honeywell, and Haden, Inc. and now brings systems integration, as well as the application experience of how systems interact in various environments to Rockford Combustion as the director of business development. Robert is a member of the NFPA-86 technical committee.


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