Influence of Mercury and
Chlorine Content of Coal
on Mercury Emissions from Coal-Fired Power Plants in China
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Abstract
China is the largest mercury emitter in the world and
coal combustion
is the most important mercury source in China. This paper updates
the coal quality database of China and evaluates the mercury removal
efficiency of air pollution control devices (APCDs) based on 112 on-site
measurements. A submodel was developed to address the relationship
of mercury emission factor to the chlorine content of coal. The mercury
emissions from coal-fired power plants (CFPPs) in China were estimated
using deterministic mercury emission factor model, nonchlorine-based
and chlorine-based probabilistic emission factor models, respectively.
The national mercury emission from CFPPs in 2008 was calculated to
be 113.3 t using the deterministic model. The nonchlorine-based probabilistic
emission factor model, which addresses the log-normal distribution
of the mercury content of coal, estimates that the mercury emission
from CFPPs is 96.5 t (P50), with a confidence interval of 57.3 t (P10)
to 183.0 t (P90). The best estimate by the chlorine-based probabilistic
emission factor model is 102.5 t, with a confidence interval of 71.7
to 162.1 t. The chlorine-based model addresses the influence of chlorine
and reduces the uncertainties of mercury emission estimates