Proburn Waste Incinerators are free-burning and have no moving parts, ensuring trouble-free operation. The innovative design allows for fast and efficient waste burning. It only takes a few moments to ignite them and they can be left to burn their waste load unattended. Manually, the waste is loaded into and ignited through the top loading doors. Primary air is fed to the flames through the openings in the cleaning doors, which flow up the grill floor. After the flames have been lit, secondary air from the underside is drawn. This causes a secondary combustion that destroys the gases and smoke.
The original mass is reduced by 99% to a light, sterile dust that falls through the grill’s floor into an ash collection pit. It is only necessary to remove the ash when it accumulates, not every time you burn. After the first load of waste has been burned, you can add more. Proburn Waste Incinerators are available to be used whenever you want.
Free-burning incinerators do not require external fuel. The waste must be combustible for them to work. This makes it ideal for burning a wide variety of waste. Paper, cardboard, wood offcuts and pallets are all suitable for incinerator manufacturer. Incineration of less combustible materials such as food waste, green grass clippings, and plastics is possible as long as these are mixed with combustible material.
Incineration is a concern for many people. They believe that it will interfere with the efforts to reduce waste. In addition to the financial incentive of generating as much energy as you can, the countries that have the highest recycling rates are also the ones that rely more on waste-to energy than landfilling. Incinerators still require a steady stream of waste in order to function efficiently. In countries like Sweden, which are experts at recycling waste and rely on waste-to energy for a large amount of their energy needs, they have been forced to import garbage in order to keep the incinerators going.
In order to determine whether landfilling or incineration is the best option for a particular community, it’s important to consider the local resources and environmental vulnerability. Incineration may be the best option for communities that do not have a suitable landfill or low-carbon transport methods to get waste there, or where WTE is cleaner and more efficient than their current energy mix.
The optimal design and operation of an incinerator requires that you pay attention to the incineration temperatures, the turbulence in the gas mixture, and the time the gas spends at incineration temperatures. For efficient combustion, the entire gas stream must reach a high enough temperature and remain there for a long enough time. There must also be an adequate mix of oxygen and fuel.
Temperature is achieved by the heat released during the oxidation. It must be high enough to complete combustion, but not too high to damage equipment or produce excessive nitrogen oxides. Temperatures are usually controlled by limiting how much material is charged into the furnace. This ensures that the heat release rate is within the desired range. The excess air then helps to temper the conditions.
In order to improve combustion efficiency, as well as other benefits, such as improved ash quality, a number of new features and operating methods have been implemented in the design and operation of waste incinerators. These include waste-pretreatment techniques such as shredding, blending and oxygen enrichment, in addition to features and methods described below. The measurement and control key operating conditions has been given considerable attention to improve the control of combustion.