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First check the excess air being given to the boiler for combustion. If it is lower than
recommended by the designers, then increase it. It may even help if the excess air is increased
slightly above the design recommendation.
Check the primary air through the mill. If they are much higher than required, this reduces the
secondary air available for combustion, since the excess air in the boiler is maintained.
Once the primary air is ensured to be the minimum required, then check the secondary air
distribution between the burners or elevation accordingly.
Check if the number of mills in operation can be increased, if yes then cut in new mill and
reduce the load on the operating mills. During this suitably take care of secondary air
distribution.
If for any reason a high reactive fuel like oil or gas is fired in combination with coal then it will be
good to remove this fuel. High reactive fuel will reduce oxygen availability for coal molecules
resulting in a localized reducing atmosphere. This increases the potential for coal ash to slag.
Check the soot blower operation, both the wall blowers in the furnace and the long retract.
Increase the frequency of wall blowers as this can cool the flame more and reduce the slagging
potential.
Check the pulverized coal fineness ensure 75% through 200 mesh sieve and only less than 1% is
left over 50 mesh sieve.
If with all the above the heavy deposition / slagging does not reduce then this may even warrant
a load reduction on the boiler.
The coal being fired can be outside the design range and could be causing the problem. This warrants
checking the coal ash characteristic in detail.
Check the chemical composition of the ash and work out the slagging propensity ratios. If it fits
in a matrix of these ratios, then it can give an idea whether the coal being fired can slag in the
boiler.
Check the ash fusion temperatures starting from initial deformation temperature to fusion
temperature. Normally this is carried out in an oxidizing condition; it will be a good practice to
check the fusion temperature in the reducing atmosphere. A high differential between this will
indicate a higher propensity to slag. In this case air distribution and excess air level play a high
role.
Elaborate studies both in the field and laboratories by collecting large volume data on all required area
has not yielded a single or multiple set of rules to predict coal slagging in boiler furnaces.
Controlling Slagging in Boiler