I had a client that had a waste wood fired boiler, bark, sawdust and planer shavings, who did not have a single soot blower in his boiler. Seems whoever built it for him just didn't put them in. It was a used boiler, and old Springfield, and tough as nails, and had started out its life as a coal fired boiler in Anderson, IN as one of a right hand / left hand boiler set, both with soot blowers.
Both boilers ended up in the same southern state about 90 mi apart each on its fourth owner each about 40 years old when it got there. Both burnt wood, but one burnt hardwood while the other burnt pine waste. One still had its soot blowers, and I could not convince my client, the owner of the one without to add soot blowers. He used the boiler for about 20 years without them, while every other single wood fired boiler in the region that I knew of all had soot blowers, so go figure.
Much as I tried, (it would have been a nice project for me to engineer for him) I could never argue with his years of success without them.
Now, regarding coatings; coatings are extensively (or were) in black liquor chemical recovery furnace wall tubes to reduce corrosion and erosion. They worked well, but they had to be replinished over time.
I'm still from Missouri regarding coatings reducing the need for soot blowers. Now, making the effectiveness of sootblowers better, I can buy that. I can't see how a piece of ash, above its ash fusion temperature would know to say 'oh, that tube is coated, so I can't land and stick there-I'll just keep going and find somewhere else to set down and stick.' I could see it with dry friable ash below the ash fusion temperature.
rmw