Biomass
Handling Consulting
for the
25 MWe Tracy Biomass Power Plant
Client
Sigma
Energy Solutions, Inc.
One Huntington Quadrangle
Melville, NY 11747
Completion Date
October, 2005
Project Description
GWF’s
Tracy Power Plant is a 25 MWe plant located in Tracy CA. It has a Babcock & Wilcox boiler fitted
with a Detroit Stoker hydrograte. The
biomass fuel is a combination of agricultural and urban wood waste, which is
received by trucks and stacked in outdoor stockpiles. The fuel is reclaimed via a payloader fitted
with a large, wood chip bucket. Wood
chips are stored in segregated piles by fuel type and supplier. The payloader reclaims the fuel, blending it
with alternate scoops from different piles.
The
primary fuel system consists of several components. Two under pile reclaimers (No. 10 and 12)
discharge onto belt conveyor No. 14.
Conveyor No. 14 is fitted with spike roller, a self-cleaning, cross-belt
magnet, and metal detector. The spike
roller is a plant retrofit that levels the uneven wood chip surcharge on the
conveyor. The fuel is then routed to the
disc screen and hog transfer, which load conveyor No. 18. Conveyor No. 18 is fitted with a belt
scale. It elevates the wood chips and
discharges to the plant’s distributing drag conveyor No. 20. This drag chain conveyor fills three (3)
plant bins (No.’s 3, 2, and 1) in a cascade sequence. The fuel discharges from the drag conveyor
from three 1ft x 2ft openings/chutes, directly above each bin. Excess fuel is discharge from the drag onto
overflow conveyor No. 22, which stacks this material into a conical pile. This fuel system is largely seen in the above
photograph.
Combustion
problems were experienced when fuel properties stratify so that fuel fed to the
north side of the boiler burns mostly in suspension while fuel fed to the south
side burns on the hydrograte. This
results in piles of fuel stacking on the south side, especially when the fuel
is wet. Combustion conditions become
upset and piles of fuel fail to completely combust. Misinterpretation of the situation
exacerbates the problem when the fuel feed is increased and the pile of fuel on
the hydrograte enlarges.
In
addition to the combustion problems, a variety of material handling problems
were experienced. In the fuel yard,
there is a fair amount of dust, spillage, and flow problems. On the hydrograte as seen in the ash residue,
a fair amount of dirt, metals, and unburned fuel is found.
Energy
Associates conducted a condition assessment and recommended improvements to
remedy these problems.
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