Coupled Oxygen-Enriched Combustion in Cement Industry CO 2 Capture System: Process Modeling and Exergy Analysis

: The cement industry is regarded as one of the primary producers of world carbon emissions; hence, lowering its carbon emissions is vital for fostering the development of a low-carbon economy. Carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) technologies play significant roles in sectors dominated by fossil energy. This study aimed to address issues such as high exhaust gas volume, low CO 2 concentration, high pollutant content, and difficulty in carbon capture during cement production by combining traditional cement production processes with cryogenic air separation technology and CO 2 purification and compression technology. Aspen Plus ® was used to create the production model in its entirety, and a sensitivity analysis was conducted on pertinent production parameters. The findings demonstrate that linking the oxygen-enriched combustion process with the cement manufacturing process may decrease the exhaust gas flow by 54.62%, raise the CO 2 mass fraction to 94.83%, cut coal usage by 30%, and considerably enhance energy utilization efficiency. An exergy analysis showed that the exergy efficiency of the complete kiln system was risen by 17.56% compared to typical manufacturing procedures. However, the cryogenic air separation system had a relatively low exergy efficiency in the subsidiary subsystems, while the clinker cooling system and flue gas circulation system suffered significant exergy efficiency losses. The rotary kiln system, which is the main source of the exergy losses, also had low exergy efficiency in the traditional production process.


Introduction
In recent years, climate issues have garnered significant attention, and the substantial amount of CO 2 emissions is a crucial factor contributing to global warming.Based on statistical data, the cement sector accounts for around 7% of the world's total carbon emissions [1].To solve this problem, CCUS technology is regarded as a viable method targeted at minimizing CO 2 emissions and achieving a rational usage of CO 2 resources [2,3].The pre-combustion capture technique [4], post-combustion capture technology [5], and oxygen-enriched combustion technology [6,7] are the three primary CO 2 capture methods available today.
Pre-combustion capture technology is a process that transfers the chemical energy from carbon components to carbon-based fuels (like coal) and then separates the carbon from other energy-carrying compounds [8].Systems for integrated coal gasification combined with cycle power production have made extensive use of this technique [9].Pre-combustion capture technology, however, is not relevant to the cement industry since the primary source of CO 2 generation in this sector is the breakdown of carbonates.On the other hand, post-combustion capture technology involves installing CO 2 separation devices on the flue gas channel to collect CO 2 in the flue gas after use in fossil fuel combustion equipment [10].However, obstacles exist in the deployment of post-combustion capture technology in cement production owing to huge exhaust gas volumes, low pressure, low carbon dioxide concentrations, and high pollutant content.Currently, the most established post-combustion capture systems include physical absorption and chemical absorption, both confronting challenges linked to costly capture costs [11].Calcium looping is a new CO 2 capture technology that uses solid adsorbents to react calcium oxide with CO 2 to produce calcium carbonate, and then releases CO 2 through the process of carbonate decomposition through calcination to achieve the purpose of capturing CO 2 .Studies have shown that calcium looping technology has a high CO 2 capture efficiency and better economic indicators [12].However, calcium looping technology is currently at an early research phase, especially addressing the difficulty of sustaining the activity of solid sorbents during long-term cycling.Therefore, there are presently no commercial-scale demonstration instances in the cement sector [13].
Oxygen-enriched combustion technology is a novel and highly effective energy-saving approach that considerably improves the combustion rate of fuels, promotes full combustion, boosts combustion temperature, decreases smoke production, and enhances energy usage efficiency.This technology has already been widely adopted in industries such as metallurgy and glass production [14][15][16].The high cost of CO 2 collection may be efficiently addressed in the cement industry by using oxygen-enriched combustion technology.It is feasible to raise the temperature at which coal powder burns while decreasing the emissions of various pollutants, such as sulfur compounds (SO X ) and nitrogen oxides (NO X ) under oxygen-enriched combustion circumstances.Furthermore, this may lower the energy consumption of the product and the amount of coal used under the same operating circumstances [17].
With the progress of computer technology and numerical simulation methods, theoretical research on oxygen-enriched fuel combustion in the cement industry may now be undertaken through simulations.This has significant value in guiding actual production while reducing research costs.Research suggests that raising the oxygen content in the burner considerably boosts the combustion rate and temperature of coal powder, consequently boosting the heat transfer process in the kiln [18].Wang et al. found that increasing oxygen content also significantly increases the highest temperature in the kiln, which is beneficial to the clinker calcination process [19].Marin et al. believed that introducing highpurity oxygen into the main burner of the kiln improves the combustion characteristics, efficiency, and production capacity of the kiln.Additionally, studies have shown that the temperature of the clinker and the kiln's refractory elements are not significantly affected by the burning of pure oxygen fuel [20].According to Granados et al., boosting flue gas recirculation during the burning of oxygen-enriched fuel increases the clinker output, kiln heat transfer efficiency, and combustion efficiency [21].Ditaranto and Bakken optimized the oxygen-enriched combustion process of the rotary kiln through CFD simulation, achieving stable combustion, temperature control, heat transfer, and complete combustion [22].Magli et al. explored the optimum design and cost analysis of carbon dioxide purification and compression devices during oxygen-enriched fuel combustion.They discovered the ideal separation temperature and pressure, stressing that air leakage greatly affects clinker prices and carbon dioxide recovery rates [23].Relevant research suggests that compared to other carbon dioxide capture methods, oxygen-enriched combustion technology has the greatest carbon capture rate and lowest capture costs when employed in the cement sector, concurrently decreasing cement production costs [24].Presently, research on the oxygenenriched combustion process in cement mostly relies on numerical simulation calculations, lacking the modeling of an entire system.By integrating the oxygen-enriched combustion process with cement production, this study reduces the amount of exhaust gases released and increases the proportion of carbon dioxide in the fumes.This curbs carbon emissions and improves energy utilization efficiency.The energy efficiency of the entire kiln system was analyzed and compared to those of traditional production processes to demonstrate the superiority of the proposed solution.Additionally, the exergy efficiencies of the entire system and its subsystems were explored, as well as potential improvements within these sub-components for overall energy utilization.

Cement Production System with Coupled Oxygen-Enriched Combustion Process
The production process of cement typically involves three steps: grinding, homogenization, and burning.Firstly, raw materials are proportioned, dried, homogenized, and finely ground to create the appropriate particle size.The compositions and flow rates of raw materials are shown in Table 1.Subsequently, the raw materials enter the suspension preheater, combining with the gas created by the rotary kiln, preheating the materials before entering the pre-decomposition furnace.Heat exchange between the solid and gas phases occurs in a countercurrent way.In a four-stage suspension preheater, the outlet gas temperature is usually between 300 • C and 380 • C. The preheated raw materials then enter the pre-decomposition furnace, where most of the CaCO 3 and MgCO 3 are decomposed.Once inside the rotary kiln, the broken-down raw materials exchange heat with hot flue gas in a countercurrent manner.The rotary kiln is set at a certain inclination angle, and during the rotation process, the materials gradually flow to the kiln head under the influence of gravity.Under high temperatures, the components in the raw materials undergo chemical reactions and form clinker. High-temperature flue gas from the kiln head enters the rotary kiln while the coal burns within the burner.Usually, the temperature and main air flow rate are adjusted to regulate the rotary kiln's temperature.The high-temperature clinker is cooled by cooling air.The fourth-stage suspension preheater's high-temperature flue gas is treated to remove dust, cool down, and dehydrate.After going through the gas distributor, some of the flue gas that was combined with high-purity oxygen is utilized to cool the clinker, and the remaining portion is used as coal injection air that enters the burner.As a complicated physical and chemical process, cement manufacturing involves the breakdown of source materials, material movement, sintering processes, and gas-solid heat transfer.Therefore, we make the following assumptions before establishing the model: • The whole process is in a stable condition, and the composition of the feedstock does not vary.• All chemical reactions within the system are in thermodynamic equilibrium.
• The pressure decrease and partial heat loss of the process are ignored.
• All materials in the reactor are in the same state and leave the reactor at the same temperature.

•
In total, 70% of the CaCO 3 and MgCO 3 are decomposed in the decomposition furnace.• All chemical reactions take place only in the reactor.The physical property method used in this module is the ideal method.Coal composition is too complex to be defined using conventional methods, so the HCOALGEN and DCOALIGT models (shown in Figure 1) were used to establish the Aspen Plus process for the entire production process.The process is separated into five subsystems: a four-stage suspension preheating system, a rotary kiln system, a pre-decomposition furnace system, a coal powder combustion system, and a flue gas circulation system.The four-stage suspension preheating system, based on Aspen Plus, is mainly used for gas-solid heat transfer and separation.The heater module and the mixer module simulate gas-solid heat transfer, while the SSplit module simulates the gas-solid separation process.The rotary kiln system comprises the RGibbs module, heater module, SSplit module, and RStoic module used to model raw material breakdown and clinker sintering processes [25].The following reaction processes are mainly considered in this process: ventional components C, H, O, N, S, and ash, and the yield of each component is controlled through formulas written in Fortran.Unconventional component-pulverized coal was defined through industrial, elemental, and sulfur analyses.A composition comparison is shown in Table 2. Decomposition products are defined through the Gibbs free energy minimization principle to determine the products of the combustion reaction process as well as the composition; the solids and flue gases produced after combustion are separated from gas and solids through the separation module, and the ash materials produced are decomposed into conventional components as raw materials for cement production through the RYield module.Table 3 shows the specific configuration parameters of the module.The Gibbs function is represented in Equations ( 2) and (3) [26,27]: where S is the system's single phase; K is the total number of phases in the system; m is the number of moles; and G is the system's Gibbs free energy.To replicate the combustion process of pulverized coal, the RGibbs module, RYield module, and SSplit module make up the pulverized coal combustion system.The RYield module decomposes the non-conventional components of pulverized coal into the conventional components C, H, O, N, S, and ash, and the yield of each component is controlled through formulas written in Fortran.Unconventional component-pulverized coal was defined through industrial, elemental, and sulfur analyses.A composition comparison is shown in Table 2. Decomposition products are defined through the Gibbs free energy minimization principle to determine the products of the combustion reaction process as well as the composition; the solids and flue gases produced after combustion are separated from gas and solids through the separation module, and the ash materials produced are decomposed into conventional components as raw materials for cement production through the RYield module.Table 3 shows the specific configuration parameters of the module.The Gibbs function is represented in Equations ( 2) and (3) [26,27]: where S is the system's single phase; K is the total number of phases in the system; m is the number of moles; and G is the system's Gibbs free energy.

Cooler1
Exhaust gas cooling process

Cooler3
Defining the heat loss of the grate cooler

Air Separation System
This research leveraged a Cryogenic Air Separation Unit (CASU) to develop an air separation system.Compared with pressure swing adsorption and membrane separation methods, a CASU is more mature in the industry and can produce higher quantities and mass fractions of oxygen [28,29].The air separation system was established using Aspen Plus, which includes an air compressor, a distillation tower, and heat exchangers.The entire process was simulated using the Peng Robinson property method [30].The system adopts a full low-pressure external compression process.Prior to entering the primary heat exchanger, the air is first compressed and then condensed many times.A portion of the air is cooled to −152 • C and enters the upper tower, while another portion is cooled to −174 • C and enters the lower tower.In the lower tower, the separated rich-oxygen liquefied air and nitrogen undergo heat exchange and enter the upper tower.At the bottom of the tower, oxygen products with a purity of 99.4% are separated, while high-purity nitrogen products are also separated.The mixture of oxygen and argon, separated from the upper part of the tower, enters the crude argon tower.The top of the tower releases crude argon gas, while the bottom of the tower recovers, further separates, and purifies high-purity oxygen.Finally, the crude argon gas enters the refined argon tower to separate high-purity argon [31,32].

CO 2 Purification Unit
The high level of carbon dioxide purity in the flue gas is a result of the process's use of oxygen-enriched combustion technology, which removes the need for further carbon dioxide absorption procedures to directly purify and compress the flue gas [33].Noncondensable gases (O 2 , NO, NO 2 , etc.) and water vapor are the primary contaminants found in flue gas [34].The flue gas is compressed to around 3 MPa through many stages in order to separate part of the water, and using molecular sieves, the leftover water vapor is eliminated.Main heat exchanger 1's condensers and flash tanks are positioned in between the compressors.Then, MEX3 cools the compressed flue gas to −5 • C before it reaches the first-stage flash tank for flashing.The gas phase enters main heat exchanger 2 (MEX4) and further cools to −23 • C before entering the second-stage flash tank.The cooling capacity required for the entire system can be generated through the pressure reduction throttling of the liquid product [35,36].Since non-condensable gases (SO X and NO X ) dissolve in water during the high-pressure flue gas condensation process, the entire system does not require additional desulfurization and denitrification devices [9].After purification and compression, the CO 2 mass fraction in the flue gas reaches 96%, satisfying the real storage and transit demands [37].The compressed flue gas is pressurized to 7 MPa and then cooled to 20 • C to become liquid, which can be transported through pipelines.The system as a whole uses 4.54 MW of energy, with an adiabatic compression efficiency of 0.85.The specific energy consumption for CO 2 compression is 0.568 MJ/kg.The CO 2 flow rate at the inlet is 29,061.7 kg/h, and the CO 2 flow rate obtained after the flue gas compression and purification is 28,185.6kg/h, with a CO 2 recovery rate of 96.98%.As shown in Figure 2, based on the three systems above, a low-carbon cement production process coupled with the CASU and CO 2 purification unit was constructed.

Model Verification
Every step of the manufacturing process was modeled using Aspen Plus, and then the correctness and efficacy of the developed model were verified by comparing the simulation results with real production data.The first validation was the difference in the chemical composition of the clinker product.A chemical analysis of the clinker used in the real manufacturing process provided the reference data in Table 4.The primary cause

Model Verification
Every step of the manufacturing process was modeled using Aspen Plus, and then the correctness and efficacy of the developed model were verified by comparing the simulation results with real production data.The first validation was the difference in the chemical composition of the clinker product.A chemical analysis of the clinker used in the real manufacturing process provided the reference data in Table 4.The primary cause for the disparity between the simulation results and the real production results is the removal of various minor chemical components, such as Na 2 SO 4 , CaSO 4 , K 2 SO 4 , TiO 2 , etc. From Table 4, it can be seen that there is a significant deviation in tricalcium aluminate (C 3 A), which is due to the lack of physical property data for tetracalcium alumino ferrite (C 4 AF) in the Aspen database, and its proportion in the clinker composition is relatively small.Therefore, it is expected that all tricalcium aluminate (C 3 A) is created throughout the reaction process.Additionally, the model implies that dicalcium silicate (C 2 S) combines fully with free lime (CaO) to form tricalcium silicate (C 3 S) [25].Table 5 shows the contrast between actual plant operation data and Aspen Plus simulation calculation data.The majority of parameters demonstrate a close resemblance to the actual operation data; yet, due to the model's idealized nature, a negligible disparity emerges.It is evident that the exhaust gas's oxygen content has significantly deviated from normal.The root cause is that the production process is not a perfectly closed system, resulting in undetected air leaks, which have yet to be incorporated into the current modeling framework.Furthermore, the pulverized coal flow rate deviates significantly from the actual production process due to the intricate nature of the pulverized coal combustion process.Suboptimal combustion efficiency and other factors that are accepted in the real manufacturing process result from the unit operation model's inability to adequately represent the many physical and chemical changes that take place throughout this process [38,39].

Study on System Operating Conditions Parameters
A sensitivity analysis of the main operating parameters can provide important information for the system production process.Therefore, the research and analysis of relevant parameters can improve the performance of the entire production process.This section primarily examines the effects of varying coal and oxygen flow rates on the kiln's oxygen-fuel coupled combustion process's performance and pollution emissions.

Effect of O 2 /CO 2 Atmosphere on the System
Although higher temperatures can be achieved with less oxygen and coal flow in an oxygen-rich combustion state, the amount of flue gas generated will also decrease.Convective and radiative heat transfer are the methods used in the rotary kiln to transmit heat from the flue gas to the raw material [40,41].Insufficient flue gas carries less enthalpy, which has a detrimental effect on clinker production.Coal combustion must be performed in an O 2 /CO 2 environment in order to guarantee that the temperature distribution in the kiln stays consistent with the heat transfer characteristics and standard operating parameters [42].With the results shown in Figure 3, under the condition of constant oxygen combustion ratio, the flue gas temperature under diverse O 2 /CO 2 atmospheres was simulated.Because CO 2 has a larger heat capacity than N 2 , the flue gas temperature in an O 2 /N 2 atmospheric environment is somewhat higher than that of an O 2 /CO 2 atmospheric environment.This is because the flue gas temperature in the former is lower than the air temperature in the atmospheric environment [43].

Effect of Different Oxygen and Coal Flow Rates on Combustion Systems
High-concentration oxygen with a quality score of 99.4% was chosen as the combustion-supporting gas to study the effects on the combustion system under different oxygen and coal flow conditions.The experimental findings are displayed in Figure 4. From Fig-

Effect of Different Oxygen and Coal Flow Rates on Combustion Systems
High-concentration oxygen with a quality score of 99.4% was chosen as the combustionsupporting gas to study the effects on the combustion system under different oxygen and coal flow conditions.The experimental findings are displayed in Figure 4. From Figure 4a, it can be noted that when m O 2 = 10,000 kg/h and m coal = 4000 kg/h, the temperature in the kiln reaches 1910 • C, which is acceptable for production.Compared to the coal flow rate utilized in the reference (m coal = 5000 kg/h), roughly 20% of coal usage may be avoided.The clinker output on this manufacturing line is 35,000 kg/h, with a specific energy consumption of 4200 kJ/kg coal.When the coal input rate is 4000 kg/h, the specific energy consumption in the rotary kiln is 3360 kJ/kg coal, suggesting a decrease of around 840 kJ/kg coal in specific energy consumption.It should be noted that this can be achieved only under ideal conditions without considering heat loss, system air leakage, or combustion in the production process, but overall, the oxygen-rich state can still achieve significant coal-saving effects.Figure 4b-d show the variation trends of the main gas product contents with oxygen and coal flow rates.When m O 2 = 7052.632kg/h and m coal = 3500 kg/h, the maximum CO 2 content is 89.94% (wt.%), indicating the optimal stoichiometric ratio between coal powder and oxygen, and the combustion is more complete.The CO decreases with an increase in the oxygen-to-coal ratio.When m O 2 = 10,000 kg/h and m coal = 3500 kg/h, the mass fraction is 0.75%, indicating that the excess O 2 increases the generation of CO.The trend of NO is opposite to that of CO.With an increase in the oxygen-to-coal ratio, its content dramatically increases.When the oxygen-to-coal ratio is about 2.5, its concentration is 4.63 × 10 −4 (wt.%).As indicated in Figure 4a, the gas temperature under this working state is quite high, which is favorable to the generation of thermal NO X [44].

Effect of Pulverized Coal Flow on Tail Gas Emissions
Under oxygen-rich combustion circumstances, the impact of the coal powder flow rate on pollutant emissions in the exhaust gas was evaluated.The simulation results are shown in Figure 5.With a rise in the coal powder flow rate, the flow of CO2 increases while the flow of O2 drops.Therefore, at mO2 = 8500 kg/h and from mcoal = 3000 kg/h to mcoal = 3000 kg/h, the coal powder is in a good combustion state.The rise in CO flow rate may be attributed to the increase in the coal flow rate, which elevates the temperature of the flue gas and causes the dissociation of a tiny quantity of CO2.Both NOX and SO3, the main pollutants, show decreasing trends, but the flow rate of SO3 increases significantly due to The fuel specific heat energy consumption was calculated as follows: where q (kJ/kg) is specific heat energy consumption, LHV (kJ/kg) encompasses lower fuel heating values, m coal (kg/h) is the fuel flow rate, and m f (kg/h) is the clinker flow rate.

Effect of Pulverized Coal Flow on Tail Gas Emissions
Under oxygen-rich combustion circumstances, the impact of the coal powder flow rate on pollutant emissions in the exhaust gas was evaluated.The simulation results are shown in Figure 5.With a rise in the coal powder flow rate, the flow of CO 2 increases while the flow of O 2 drops.Therefore, at m O 2 = 8500 kg/h and from m coal = 3000 kg/h to m coal = 3000 kg/h, the coal powder is in a good combustion state.The rise in CO flow rate may be attributed to the increase in the coal flow rate, which elevates the temperature of the flue gas and causes the dissociation of a tiny quantity of CO 2 .Both NO X and SO 3 , the main pollutants, show decreasing trends, but the flow rate of SO 3 increases significantly due to the high temperature promoting the generation of SO 2 during combustion [45].

Effect of Pulverized Coal Flow on Tail Gas Emissions
Under oxygen-rich combustion circumstances, the impact of the coal powder flow rate on pollutant emissions in the exhaust gas was evaluated.The simulation results are shown in Figure 5.With a rise in the coal powder flow rate, the flow of CO2 increases while the flow of O2 drops.Therefore, at mO2 = 8500 kg/h and from mcoal = 3000 kg/h to mcoal = 3000 kg/h, the coal powder is in a good combustion state.The rise in CO flow rate may be attributed to the increase in the coal flow rate, which elevates the temperature of the flue gas and causes the dissociation of a tiny quantity of CO2.Both NOX and SO3, the main pollutants, show decreasing trends, but the flow rate of SO3 increases significantly due to the high temperature promoting the generation of SO2 during combustion [45].

Effect of Oxygen Flow Rate on Tail Gas Emissions
The sensitivity analysis results of oxygen flow rate are shown in Figure 6.When mO2 = 7000 kg/h, the flow rates of O2, SO3, NO, and NO2 in the exhaust gas are close to 0 kg/h, and then they start to increase linearly.This shows that previous to this, the incomplete burning of coal powder and lower combustion zone temperature prevented the creation of thermal NOX, and at this moment, the predominant kind of NOX formed is fuel related.

Effect of Oxygen Flow Rate on Tail Gas Emissions
The sensitivity analysis results of oxygen flow rate are shown in Figure 6.When m O 2 = 7000 kg/h, the flow rates of O 2 , SO 3 , NO, and NO 2 in the exhaust gas are close to 0 kg/h, and then they start to increase linearly.This shows that previous to this, the incomplete burning of coal powder and lower combustion zone temperature prevented the creation of thermal NO X , and at this moment, the predominant kind of NO X formed is fuel related.At this time, the main type of NO X generation is fuel type.When m O 2 = 6000 kg/h, the flow rate of CO reaches its maximum at 1852 kg/h, and then declines to close to 0 kg/h with the rise of oxygen flow rate.Generally, the generation of SO 2 increases with the increase in the combustion zone temperature.Before m O 2 = 7000 kg/h, with the increase in the oxygen flow rate, the ideal oxygen-to-coal ratio is progressively achieved, and the combustion zone temperature also increases.However, the ongoing rise in the quantity of oxygen results in a part of the heat being used to heat the extra oxygen, thereby decreasing the temperature of the combustion zone and leading to a subsequent drop in the flow of SO 2 .CO 2 linearly increases to 29,061 kg/h at m O 2 = 7000 kg/h, and then remains constant.This is because at this moment, the coal powder has been totally consumed, and under the circumstance of abundant oxygen, no additional CO 2 is formed.It is evident from a comparison of Figures 5 and 6 that variations in the oxygen flow rate are more sensitive to changes in the exhaust gas composition than are variations in the coal powder flow rate.At this time, the main type of NOX generation is fuel type.When mO2 = 6000 kg/h, the flow rate of CO reaches its maximum at 1852 kg/h, and then declines to close to 0 kg/h with the rise of oxygen flow rate.Generally, the generation of SO2 increases with the increase in the combustion zone temperature.Before mO2 = 7000 kg/h, with the increase in the oxygen flow rate, the ideal oxygen-to-coal ratio is progressively achieved, and the combustion zone temperature also increases.However, the ongoing rise in the quantity of oxygen results in a part of the heat being used to heat the extra oxygen, thereby decreasing the temperature of the combustion zone and leading to a subsequent drop in the flow of SO2.CO2 linearly increases to 29,061 kg/h at mO2 = 7000 kg/h, and then remains constant.This is because at this moment, the coal powder has been totally consumed, and under the circumstance of abundant oxygen, no additional CO2 is formed.It is evident from a comparison of Figures 5 and 6 that variations in the oxygen flow rate are more sensitive to changes in the exhaust gas composition than are variations in the coal powder flow rate.

Results under Different Working Conditions
Figure 7 compares the differences in various production parameters between conventional conditions and oxygen-enriched combustion conditions.The graph shows that the coal powder feed decreased from the real operating state of 5000 kg/h to 3500 kg/h under

Results under Different Working Conditions
Figure 7 compares the differences in various production parameters between conventional conditions and oxygen-enriched combustion conditions.The graph shows that the coal powder feed decreased from the real operating state of 5000 kg/h to 3500 kg/h under the oxygen-rich condition, saving almost 30% of the coal.However, if the actual combustion efficiency and heat losses are taken into account, it should be lower than this.In addition, the specific energy consumption decreases from 4200 kJ/kg coal to 1174 kJ/kg coal.The primary air flow rate reduces from 11,438 kg/h to 8750 kg/h, owing to the lower gas supply volume under pure oxygen circumstances.The secondary air flow rate is reasonably close, since the circulating flue gas is important for recovering the heat of the clinker and increasing the heat transfer properties of the kiln.The exhaust gas flow rate decreases from 67,536 kg/h to 30,647 kg/h, which is a reduction of 54.6%.In the oxygen-enriched combustion process, the source of the secondary air shifts from air to circulating flue gas, resulting in a considerable drop in the exhaust gas flow rate.At the same time, the decreased exhaust gas flow rate helps to minimize the energy consumption in the later CO 2 collection operation.Table 6 shows a comparison of various components in the exhaust gas under normal operating conditions and oxygen-enriched combustion conditions.From the table, it can be observed that the mass fraction of CO2 in the exhaust gas is 94.828% under oxygenenriched combustion circumstances, whereas the mass fraction of CO2 at normal operating settings is only 34.642%.This creates suitable circumstances for a later CO2 collection and may considerably lower the cost of collecting CO2 in cement kilns.Due to the employment of high-purity oxygen as a combustion helper, the content of N2 drops, resulting in reductions in the amounts of NO and NO2.The increases in SO2 and SO3 may be due to the favorable conditions for the formation of SO2 under higher combustion zone temperature under oxygen-enriched combustion conditions.In addition, the percentage of N2 in the exhaust gas under oxygen-enriched combustion circumstances reduces dramatically to 0.318%, whereas the mass fraction of N2 under normal operating settings is 63.534%.During the production process, a considerable amount of heat is used to heat N2, which is then lost in a subsequent heat transfer, resulting in a decrease in the overall system thermal efficiency.Table 6 shows a comparison of various components in the exhaust gas under normal operating conditions and oxygen-enriched combustion conditions.From the table, it can be observed that the mass fraction of CO 2 in the exhaust gas is 94.828% under oxygen-enriched combustion circumstances, whereas the mass fraction of CO 2 at normal operating settings is only 34.642%.This creates suitable circumstances for a later CO 2 collection and may considerably lower the cost of collecting CO 2 in cement kilns.Due to the employment of high-purity oxygen as a combustion helper, the content of N 2 drops, resulting in reductions in the amounts of NO and NO 2 .The increases in SO 2 and SO 3 may be due to the favorable conditions for the formation of SO 2 under higher combustion zone temperature under oxygen-enriched combustion conditions.In addition, the percentage of N 2 in the exhaust gas under oxygen-enriched combustion circumstances reduces dramatically to 0.318%, whereas the mass fraction of N 2 under normal operating settings is 63.534%.During the production process, a considerable amount of heat is used to heat N 2 , which is then lost in a subsequent heat transfer, resulting in a decrease in the overall system thermal efficiency.Energy analysis and exergy analysis are excellent thermodynamic analytical methodologies.Energy analysis is based on the first rule of thermodynamics, quantitatively revealing the energy transmission in the system.In contrast, energy analysis employs the second rule of thermodynamics to assess energy from a mass viewpoint.It may also pinpoint the origins and locations of thermodynamic losses [46,47].Energy analysis is crucial for assessing industrial process systems in the context of sustainable energy development [48,49].Therefore, in this part, the performance of the oxygen-enriched combustion cement manufacturing system is analyzed utilizing the benefits of exergy analysis.The exergy balance of the whole system was computed using the following equation: where E in E out , respectively, indicate the exergy flow rates entering and exiting each unit of the process, kW; E d,j denotes the exergy destruction rate of subsystem j, kW; and W stands for the shaft power of compressors and pumps, kW.The environmental reference for exergy was specified as T 0 = 301.15K and P 0 = 101.325kPa (the average ambient temperature and pressure during system operation).E Q signifies the heat exergy entering the system, kW, and its calculation formula is as follows: The physical exergy flow rate E PH is where F represents the molar flow rate of the stream, mol/h; h i stands for the specific enthalpy of the stream, kJ/mol; s i denotes the specific entropy of the stream, kJ/(mol/K); h 0 is the specific enthalpy at the reference state, kJ/mol; and s 0 is the specific entropy at the reference state, kJ/(mol/K).The exergy value of a process unit or stream, under the condition that there are no substantial changes in velocity and elevation between the intake and output, was determined by adding the physical and chemical exergy changes together.This is stated as follows: The kinetic and potential exergies of the system in this investigation may be disregarded: The cement production process involves the flow of solid and gas mixtures at different temperatures and pressures.Additionally, various chemical reactions occur within the kiln system.The chemical exergy of several ideal gas combinations [50,51] was calculated as follows: For multi-component mixtures, their chemical exergy [52] is where L o and V o represent the liquid-phase and vapor-phase flow rates of n components, respectively.e CH,ol and e CH,ov denote the standardized chemical exergies of the liquid-phase and vapor-phase components.X 0,I and y 0,i , respectively, indicate the liquid and gas molar fractions of the stream.Th total exergy efficiency of the entire system is expressed as The exergy efficiency of the subsystem is expressed as and the exergy destruction ratio is expressed as The exergy efficiency of process units in the design may be assessed by examining the exergy information, which includes both the physical and chemical exergies of each process stream.This information is shown in Table 7.The method assumes that the exergy variations resulting from heat loss in each process unit and mixing operations are not taken into account.The chemical exergy value of coal was determined using the following calculation [53]:

Exergy Analysis and Discussion
The whole system's mass and energy balance were computed using a simulator.In addition, the exergy efficiency and exergy destruction rates of both the overall system and each individual subsystem were computed using the reference environmental model established by Morris and Szargut [54].This analysis helped identify specific locations within the system where improvements might be made.
Figures 8 and 9 show the exergy efficiencies of the overall system and each subsystem for the cement manufacturing process.This method includes the use of linked enhanced oxygen combustion technology and CO 2 capture purification compression technology, as well as the standard cement production process.Based on these data, an exergy evaluation was undertaken for the process.For the complete cement manufacturing system, the exergy efficiency of the traditional production process was 37.75%, whereas the system's exergy efficiency after linked enhanced oxygen combustion improved to 44.38%, an increase of roughly 17.56%.Figure 7 and Table 6 indicate that in using high-purity oxygen instead of air, the exhaust gas flow and N 2 content decreased significantly, thereby reducing the exergy efficiency drop caused by heat loss.Moreover, pure oxygen enhances coal combustion, improving thermal efficiency, resulting in higher exergy efficiency for COMBUST under enriched oxygen combustion conditions.In other subsystems, the exergy efficiency of the cryogenic air separation system is poor owing to repetitive operations of compression, decompression, and heat exchange, considerably lowering the system's exergy efficiency.The PHT (preheater tower) subsystem employs a more idealized model and involves no chemical reactions, thus exhibiting a high exergy efficiency with almost no energy loss.The BURNING reactor demonstrates a lower exergy efficiency, as it simulates the sintering stage of the kiln involving complex physical and chemical changes, resulting in significant exergy losses.Except for the WALL-LOSS module, the exergy efficiencies of all other modules have shown improvement.
Figures 10 and 11 exhibit the exergy destruction ratios of several subsystems in the cement manufacturing process.In the cement production process employing coupled enriched oxygen combustion technology, the smoke cooling system and smoke circulation system exhibit higher proportions of exergy destruction due to significant heat losses in these two processes.Therefore, developing better techniques to recover heat from clinker and lowering heat losses in the smoke circulation process will effectively decrease the exergy destruction rate of the system.In the case of the typical manufacturing process, the rotary kiln system displays the greatest exergy destruction ratio owing to irreversible exergy losses generated by chemical reactions and gas-solid heat transfer processes.compression, decompression, and heat exchange, considerably lowering the system's ex-ergy efficiency.The PHT (preheater tower) subsystem employs a more idealized model and involves no chemical reactions, thus exhibiting a high exergy efficiency with almost no energy loss.The BURNING reactor demonstrates a lower exergy efficiency, as it simulates the sintering stage of the kiln involving complex physical and chemical changes, resulting in significant exergy losses.Except for the WALL-LOSS module, the exergy efficiencies of all other modules have shown improvement.Figures 10 and 11 exhibit the exergy destruction ratios of several subsystems in the cement manufacturing process.In the cement production process employing coupled enriched oxygen combustion technology, the smoke cooling system and smoke circulation system exhibit higher proportions of exergy destruction due to significant heat losses in these two processes.Therefore, developing better techniques to recover heat from clinker and lowering heat losses in the smoke circulation process will effectively decrease the exergy destruction rate of the system.In the case of the typical manufacturing process, the rotary kiln system displays the greatest exergy destruction ratio owing to irreversible exergy losses generated by chemical reactions and gas-solid heat transfer processes.Figures 10 and 11 exhibit the exergy destruction ratios of several subsystems in the cement manufacturing process.In the cement production process employing coupled enriched oxygen combustion technology, the smoke cooling system and smoke circulation system exhibit higher proportions of exergy destruction due to significant heat losses in these two processes.Therefore, developing better techniques to recover heat from clinker and lowering heat losses in the smoke circulation process will effectively decrease the exergy destruction rate of the system.In the case of the typical manufacturing process, the rotary kiln system displays the greatest exergy destruction ratio owing to irreversible exergy losses generated by chemical reactions and gas-solid heat transfer processes.

Conclusions
In this study, the traditional cement production process was combined with low-temperature air separation technology and carbon dioxide purification and compression technology to deal with the high emission, low carbon dioxide concentration, high pollutant content and high carbon capture difficulty in the cement production process.A complete production model was established using Aspen Plus V11 software, and a sensitivity analysis of related production parameters was carried out.An exergy analysis of the whole furnace system revealed the major energy loss sources in the traditional production process, and revealed improvement measures, which provide a way for the technical transformation of the cement industry.The results indicate that following the adoption of coupled enriched oxygen combustion technology, with the same raw material treatment volume, the overall coal consumption was reduced by approximately 30%, and the specific energy consumption (q) decreased by about 72%.Simultaneously, there was a decrease of around 54.6% in the exhaust gas flow rate, with the CO2 mass fraction in the exhaust gas rising to 94.83%.A further exergy analysis found a 17.56% improvement in the total exergy efficiency of the kiln system compared to the traditional method, where the RTK (Rotary kiln) and PHT subsystems demonstrated better exergy efficiencies in the enriched oxygen combustion process.However, the cryogenic air separation subsystem in the ancillary system showed a lower exergy efficiency.Additionally, an analysis of the exergy destruction ratio indicated significant exergy losses in the clinker cooling system and the smoke circulation system in the enriched oxygen combustion process.Thus, minimizing heat losses in these two systems might effectively reduce the energy consumption of the overall system.In contrast, for the traditional process, the rotary kiln system was the major source of exergy losses, highlighting its potential for development.Future work will emphasize studying the process of integrating novel oxygen supply systems and CO2 capture systems, along with the need for an economic evaluation to verify the industrial potential of this process.

Conclusions
In this study, the traditional cement production process was combined with lowtemperature air separation technology and carbon dioxide purification and compression technology to deal with the high emission, low carbon dioxide concentration, high pollutant content and high carbon capture difficulty in the cement production process.A complete production model was established using Aspen Plus V11 software, and a sensitivity analysis of related production parameters was carried out.An exergy analysis of the whole furnace system revealed the major energy loss sources in the traditional production process, and revealed improvement measures, which provide a way for the technical transformation of the cement industry.The results indicate that following the adoption of coupled enriched oxygen combustion technology, with the same raw material treatment volume, the overall coal consumption was reduced by approximately 30%, and the specific energy consumption (q) decreased by about 72%.Simultaneously, there was a decrease of around 54.6% in the exhaust gas flow rate, with the CO 2 mass fraction in the exhaust gas rising to 94.83%.A further exergy analysis found a 17.56% improvement in the total exergy efficiency of the kiln system compared to the traditional method, where the RTK (Rotary kiln) and PHT subsystems demonstrated better exergy efficiencies in the enriched oxygen combustion process.However, the cryogenic air separation subsystem in the ancillary system showed a lower exergy efficiency.Additionally, an analysis of the exergy destruction ratio indicated significant exergy losses in the clinker cooling system and the smoke circulation system in the enriched oxygen combustion process.Thus, minimizing heat losses in these two systems might effectively reduce the energy consumption of the overall system.In contrast, for the traditional process, the rotary kiln system was the major source of exergy losses, highlighting its potential for development.Future work will emphasize studying the process of integrating novel oxygen supply systems and CO 2 capture systems, along with the need for an economic evaluation to verify the industrial potential of this process.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.Simulation flow of cement oxygen-enriched combustion process based on Aspen Plus.Figure 1. Simulation flow of cement oxygen-enriched combustion process based on Aspen Plus.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.Simulation flow of cement oxygen-enriched combustion process based on Aspen Plus.Figure 1. Simulation flow of cement oxygen-enriched combustion process based on Aspen Plus.

Processes 2024 , 20 Figure 2 .
Figure 2. The coupling of the CASU and CO2 purification unit within the low-carbon cement production process.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. The coupling of the CASU and CO 2 purification unit within the low-carbon cement production process.

Figure 4 .
Figure 4. Effects of different oxygen and combustion flows on combustion system.

Figure 4 .
Figure 4. Effects of different oxygen and combustion flows on combustion system.

Figure 4 .
Figure 4. Effects of different oxygen and combustion flows on combustion system.

Figure 5 .
Figure 5.Effect of pulverized coal flow on flue gas emission.

Figure 5 .
Figure 5.Effect of pulverized coal flow on flue gas emission.

Figure 6 .
Figure 6.Effects of oxygen flow on flue gas emission.

Figure 6 .
Figure 6.Effects of oxygen flow on flue gas emission.

Figure 7 .
Figure 7. Parameter comparison under different working conditions.

Figure 10 .
Figure 10.Exergy destruction ratios of individual subsystems under oxygen-rich combustion settings.

Figure 10 .
Figure 10.Exergy destruction ratios of individual subsystems under oxygen-rich combustion settings.

Figure 11 .
Figure 11.Exergy destruction ratios of various subsystems under normal operating circumstances.

Figure 11 .
Figure 11.Exergy destruction ratios of various subsystems under normal operating circumstances.

Table 2 .
Coal compositions and heating values.

Table 3 .
Aspen Plus cement production system module descriptions.

Table 4 .
Simulation results of Aspen Plus were compared with actual clinker composition data.

Table 5 .
Aspen Plus simulation results are compared with operating parameters.

Table 6 .
Comparison of exhaust gas components in different working conditions.

Table 6 .
Comparison of exhaust gas components in different working conditions.

Table 7 .
Mass flow rates and exergy flow rates of process streams.