Coal pyrolysis experiments were performed in the post-flame region of a CH4
/H-2/air flat-flame burner operating under fuel-rich conditions, where the
temperature and gas compositions were similar to those found in the near-bu
rner region of an industrial pulverized coal-fired furnace. Volatiles relea
sed from the coal particles formed a cloud of soot particles surrounding a
centrally fed coal/char particle stream. Soot samples were collected from t
he cloud at different residence times using a water-cooled, nitrogen-quench
ed probe. The soot samples were then analyzed for their elemental compositi
ons of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, sulfur, and (by difference) oxygen plus
inorganic matter. Soot from three parent coals (Pittsburgh #8, Illinois #6,
and Utah Hiawatha) and two gaseous hydrocarbon fuels (propane and acetylen
e) were investigated at temperatures of 1650, 1800, and 1900 K. The results
reveal that the yield of coal-derived soot decreases with increasing react
or temperature, even though the total volatiles yield increased only slight
ly with temperature. The coal-derived soot yield at each reactor temperatur
e condition also increased slightly with residence time. The carbon content
in the coal-derived soot decreased with increasing particle residence time
(at a given reactor temperature) and with increasing reactor temperature (
at a given residence time) for all three coals. Carbon content remained con
stant with residence time for the gaseous hydrocarbon-fuel-derived soot. It
is suggested that the observed decrease in coal-derived soot yield with in
creasing temperature is due to reactions of radical species from the flame
with the soot precursors (i.e., the tar molecules). The slight increase in
coal-derived soot yield with increasing residence time is due to attachment
of light gas species such as acetylene which are richer in hydrogen than t
he local soot particles. The different behavior of soot from coal and the g
aseous hydrocarbon fuels is explained in terms of their different chemical
structures; coal-derived soot molecules have more aliphatic attachments and
heteroatoms than soot from acetylene or propane. Carbon/hydrogen ratios in
the soot samples were observed to be significantly different for the diffe
rent soot types depending on parent fuel.