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INTRODUCTION:
Steam generators, or boilers as they are often called, form an essential part of any power plant or cogeneration system. The steam-based Rankine cycle has been synonymous with power generation for centuries. Though steam parameters such as pressure and temperature have been steadily ncreasing during the last several decades, the function of the boiler remains the same, namely, to generate steam at the desired conditions efficiently and with low operating costs. Low pressure steam is used in cogeneration plants for heating or process applications, and high pressure superheated steam are used for generating power via steam turbines. Steam is used in a variety of ways in process industries, so boilers form an important part of the plant utilities. In addition to efficiency and operating costs, another factor that has introduced several changes in the design of boilers and associated systems is the stringent emission regulations in various parts of the world. Though pulverized coalfired boilers form the backbone of utility plants, fluidized bed boilers are finding increasing application when it comes to handling solid fuels with varying moisture, ash, and heating values; they also generate lower emissions of NOx and SOx. Oil- and gas-fired fire tube boilers are widely used in small process plants for generating low pressure saturated steam. Main uses of these systems are found in: Generation of power Process industry like paper, textile etc. Centrally heating offices/homes.
i.
BOILER CLASSIFICATION:
The terms boiler and steam generator are often used in the same context. Boilers may be classified into several categories as follows:
A) Application:
Utility Marine or Industrial boiler. Utility boilers are the large steam generators used in power plants generating 500 1000MW of electricity. They are generally fired with pulverized coal, though fluidized bed boilers are popping up in some plants. Utility boilers generate high pressure, high temperature superheated and reheat steam; typical parameters are 2400 psig, 1000 F. A few utility boilers generate supercritical steam at pressures in excess of 3500 psig, 1100 F. Double reheat cycles are also in operation. Industrial boilers used in cogeneration plants generate low pressure steam at 150 psig to superheated steam at 1500 psig at temperatures ranging from 700 to 1000 F.
B) Pressure:
Low to medium pressure High pressure, and Supercritical pressure.
C) Circulation method:
Natural, Controlled, Once-through, or Combined circulation Natural circulation is widely used for up to 2400psig steam pressure. There is no operating cost incurred for ensuring circulation through the furnace tubes, because gravity aids the circulation process. Controlled and combined circulation boilers use pumps to ensure circulation of a steamwater mixture through the evaporator tubes. Supercritical boilers are of the once-through type. It may be noted that once-through designs can be employed at any pressure, whereas supercritical pressure boilers must be of a once-through design.
D) Firing Methods:
Stoker cyclone furnace fluidized bed register burner fixed or moving grate
E) Construction:
Field-erected Shop-assembled
Fire-Tube Boilers:
The firetube boiler requires a shell to enclose the water and steam to complete the pressure vessel portion of the boiler and that shell is the principal limit on the size of a firetube boiler. To understand why the shell is the limiting factor we have to understand some basics about strength of materials and how we determine the required thickness of the shell, tubes,
Since the outer shell of a firetube boiler is very large it has to be quite thick. Thicker materials require more elaborate construction practices in addition to more weight so the price of a boiler increases proportional to its diameter with sudden large steps in price associated with different construction rules depending on the thickness and temperature. A big break point for high pressure boilers come at 1/2 inch thick and 650F. The increasing thickness has imposed a normal limit on firetube boilers of 250 psig MAWP (maximum allowable working pressure). Its possible to get a firetube boiler for a higher pressure but its not a common one. The other practical limit on the size of a firetube boiler is its diameter. Anything larger than 8 feet 6 inches in diameter will require special permits for transporting it.
2. Locomotive boiler: A locomotive boiler is a good example of a firetube boiler modified to provide some water cooling of the furnace. The increased cost of the boiler to create a water jacket around the furnace was justified for locomotive service because the steel and water were considerably lighter than the refractory that would be required while providing more heating surface to make the locomotive more powerful. Stay bolts are used to hold the flat surfaces against the internal pressure and their failure was one reason many of these boilers are no longer around.
3. Firebox Boiler:
The firebox boiler was the first potential package boiler because it only required construction of an insulated base in the field with all other parts assembled in the factory. A partial form of the boiler was also built to provide comparable performance at lower construction and shipping costs by requiring construction of part of the furnace as a brickwork base then setting the boiler on top of that base
end of the boiler or they can be multiple with separate doors providing access to various portions of the
The locomotive boiler is a basic single pass design. The flue gases enter the boiler proper and flow through all the tubes to the outlet of the boiler. The HRT design provided improved heat transfer by providing two passes, the flue gases are turned and return down a portion of the tubes on their way to the stack. Note that a pass consists of a path for flue gas to travel from one extreme end of the flue gas containing parts of the boiler to another. Neither of these designs required a baffle to direct the flow of flue gas. Scotch marine designs can have two, three, or four passes. A two pass scotch marine boiler requires no baffles other than means to separate the burner from the returning flue gas. Three pass scotch marine construction requires one baffle in the rear of the boiler to separate the first and second pass turning box from the third pass outlet while four pass boilers require a baffle there plus one at the front to separate the second and third pass turning box from the fourth pass outlet
The section through a firetube boiler in figure also reveals another important element of their construction, staybolts. The tube sheet isnt supported by the boiler tubes in the top of the boiler (what we call the steam space) so staybolts are required to keep that portion of the tube sheet from buckling out. Part of a boiler internal inspection is checking the fillet welds attaching the staybolts to the top of the boiler shell, and the staybolts themselves, for corrosion. The staybolts normally penetrate the tube sheet and their welds should be checked on the outside as well as the inside. Theres another classification of firetube boiler that you may encounter. Theyre called oil field boilers and theyre designed for that application. Boilers used in oil fields get little care, normally run on raw water with little condensate return and dont get the quality treatment provided by a wise boiler operator so theyre designed for the abuse. They have thicker hells, thicker tubes, and lower heat transfer rates. There are many advantages to a scotch marine firetube boiler which includes simplicity in design. Theyre relatively easy to clean completely on the fire side, once you get those heavy doors off. They can be packaged in most of the sizes, they contain minimal refractory. Tube replacement is less expensive because all the tubes are straight. They also hold a larger volume of water compared to a watertube boiler so they absorb load swings a little better.
Water-Tube Boilers:
Water tube boilers just like firetube boilers need a shell to contain the water and steam most watertube boilers require drums or headers to close off the ends of the tubes, provide a path for the water and steam to flow into and out of the tubes, and provide a place for steam and water to separate. The difference between the header and drum is that drums are big and headers are small. That rule doesnt always work when it comes to what we call a mud drum which is the lowest drum in a boiler and has connecting piping for blowoff so the mud can be removed from the boiler. Waterwalls consist of tubes that may be bent to connect to a steam or mud drum or connect to a header that is connected to one of the drums with more tubes.
University of engineering and technology, Lahore, Pakistan Most common designs of water tube boilers are: Cross-drum boiler Bent tube boiler 1. Cross Drum Boiler: This is a three pass boiler. The flue gases traverse the furnace from the burners to the rear but thats not counted as a pass. The gases turn up at the back of the boiler and pass up through the superheater and boiler tubes until they reach the top (first pass) then drop down through the middle of the tubes (second pass) and finally up through the tubes at the front of the boiler and out the stack. The baffles are made out of refractory and include tile laid on top of the screen tubes to form the bottom of the second and third passes.
The bottom two rows of tubes are called screen tubes because they form a screen that blocks the radiant energy from the superheater. They also protect the baffle. The sectional header part of this boiler involved the forged square headers shown in the detail which were connected to the steam drum and bottom header by tube nipples (short lengths of tube) and contained hand holes on the side to gain access to the tube ends so they could be rolled. The headers were forged in a semi-square shape to provide a uniform surface for rolling the tubes. Drums are normally of sufficient diameter that there is no problem rolling a tube in them. To gain access to the tube ends to roll them and for other parts the drums have manholes, usually a 12-inch by 16-inch oval opening. Water separated from the steam and boiler feedwater mixes in the steam drum (a common arrangement) then drops down the front header s (which are exposed to the coolest flue gas) and rises up the sloped tubes going from the front of the boiler to the rear. In those tubes the water is heated to the point of saturation and starts boiling, changing from water to steam. The steam forms small bubbles in the water, displacing the heavier water and reducing the density of the steam and water mixture as it travels along the tube.
2. Bent tube boilers: Bent tube boilers come in various designs, the most common are the A, D, and O-designs. These designs provide the current optimum in cost and performance, some better than others, and represent the heart of the packaged watertube boiler industry. A Type boiler: The A shape is attributed to the single steam drum at the center top and the two mud drums, commonly called headers, at the bottom. They require a second blow down line and more soot blowers but provided features like a water cooled furnace from one end to the other and balanced construction which makes them easy to transport as package boilers. The tubes inside that form the furnace have alternating shapes. One will drop from the steam drum around the furnace and down into the bottom header while the next tube turns above the bottom header and crosses the bottom of the furnace to enter the side of the opposite bottom header. Shifting the tube arrangement by one sets up the crossing pattern with a tangent tube wall construction (Figure 9-19) in most of the roof and sides of the furnace. The furnace floor (the tubes at the bottom) has a maximum spacing of one tube width. O Type boiler:
The O type boiler (Figure 9-20) is similar to the A while eliminating one header by providing a drum in the bottom center just like the top. The headers required many handholes for rolling the tubes in an A type boiler so the single drum eliminated that expense but produced a boiler with a smaller furnace cross section.
D Type boiler:
The predominant design is the D type (Figure 9-21) which has only one drawback and that s the problem with transporting and supporting something with most of the weight on one side. The D tubes extend out of the drum to form the roof of the furnace, drop to form the furnace side wall, and return under the furnace to the mud drum. It has one convection bank of tubes centered between the drums to limit sootblower requirements. This construction makes it possible for the flue gas to leave the boiler via the front or side.
A more detailed diagram shows some of the standard features of this construction:
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ii.
Drum:
The purpose of the drum is to separate water from steam. Its lower part is full of water. It comes from the economizer through tubes external to the boiler or if it is missing, directly from the feed pumps. The upper part is filled with steam instead taken from the main valve. If the superheater is included, the steam passes through the entry header of the latter instead. In big radiation units, downcomers are inserted into the lower part of the drum feeding the steam-generating tubes of the bank (if there is one), as well as the screens of the furnace. Return tubes coming from the upper headers are inserted laterally into the drum.
In small units, the downcomers can also be coupled to the lower part of the drum while the return tubes are connected to the sides. Otherwise, the tubes making up the screens of the furnace and those making up the steam-generating tubes of the bank can be coupled directly to the drum.
iii.
Superheaters:
Superheaters may be of convection type superheater or radiation type superheater
1. Radiation-type superheaters: Radiation-type superheaters are those placed along the walls of the furnace. In small generators, this solution is used at times for superheaters that push up the steam temperature by a few dozen degrees above the temperature of the saturated steam. The goal is to dry the steam taken from the drum and to bring it to such a temperature that it reaches the machines it is meant for, still saturated and dry, regardless of the heat loss occurring in the external piping between generator and usage. These superheaters are done by substituting some of the steam-generating tubes on the walls of the furnace with the tubes of the superheater. The location is in the terminal part of the furnace. This way, the tubes will not see the flame from the front. Superheaters placed along the walls of the furnace are used even in very large units. In that case, they represent the first stage of the superheater (primary superheater). This prevents the temperature of the fluid inside the tubes to increase too much. Hanging superheaters of radiation-type are called SH platen, if they are placed at the exit of the furnace and consist of far apart coils (see Fig. 3.35). In fact, in this case, the heat transferred directly from the flame, or through radiation by the flue gas at high temperature, is greater than the heat transferred by convection, given the low velocity of the gas and the value of the so-called mean beam length. 2. Convection type superheater:
By combining a convection superheater with a radiation superheater, it is possible to achieve a temperature of the superheated steam that will remain constant, regardless of load variations or that will at least reduce temperature variations. Note that radiation superheaters carry smaller costs. In fact, given equal heat absorption, the radiation superheater has a much smaller surface and is much easier to build compared to the convection superheater.
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The steam temperature in packaged boilers is often controlled from 60%to 100% load by using a two-stage superheater design with interstage attemperation as shown in Fig. 3.18. Steam temperature can also be maintained from 10% to 100%; however, this calls for a much larger superheater surface area. Demineralized water should be used for attemperation, because it does not add solids to the steam. The solids in the feedwater used for attemperation should be in the 30100 ppb. If solids are deposited inside the superheater, the tubes can become overheated, particularly if operated at high loads and high heat flux conditions. The convective superheaters are generally oversized at 100% load as explained earlier. The quantity of water spray is larger at higher load. In the radiant design, the steam temperature remains nearly flat over the load range because the radiant component of energy increases at lower loads and decreases at higher loads. Thus many radiant superheaters do not use a two-stage design.
The steam temperature in packaged boilers is often controlled from 60%to 100% load by using a two-stage superheater design with interstage attemperation as shown in Fig. 3.18. Steam temperature can also be maintained from 10% to 100%; however, this calls for a much larger superheater surface area. Demineralized water should be used for attemperation, because it does not add solids to the steam. The solids in the feedwater used for attemperation should be in the 30100 ppb. If solids are deposited inside the superheater, the tubes can become overheated, particularly if operated at high loads and high heat flux conditions. The convective superheaters are generally oversized at 100% load as explained earlier. The quantity of water spray is larger at higher load. In the radiant design, the steam temperature remains nearly flat over the load range because the radiant component of energy increases at lower loads and decreases at higher loads. Thus many radiant superheaters do not use a two-stage design. However, reviewing other concerns such as possible overheating of tubes and higher tube wall temperatures, the choice is left to the user. When demineralized water is not available, a portion of the saturated steam from the drum is taken and cooled in a heat exchanger, preheating the feedwater as shown in Fig. 3.18. The condensed water is then sprayed into the attemperator between the two stages of the superheater. Often, in order to balance the pressure drops in the two parallel paths, a resistance is introduced into each path or the exchanger is located vertically up, say 3040 ft above the boiler, to provide additional head for the spray water control valve operation. Spraying downstream of the superheater for steam temperature control is not recommended, because the steam temperature at the superheater exit increases with load, thus increasing the superheater tube wall temperature, which can lead to tube failures. For example, if 800_F is the final steam temperature desired, the steam temperature at the superheater exit may run as high as 875 925_F, which will diminish the life of the tubes over a period of time. Also, the water droplets may not evaporate completely in the piping and the steam turbine could end up with water droplets and the solids present in the water, leading to deposits on turbine blades. To prevent problems with water depositing in them many superheaters are designed to drain completely by installing the headers at the bottom with the tubes extending up from the headers. We call them drainable superheaters. Boilers in most utility plants are of a construction that doesnt drain, the tubes hang down from the headers into the furnace or flue gas passages and theyre called pendant type superheaters.
iv.
Economizer:
The function of the economizer is to heat the feed water before it enters the drum. Meanwhile the flue gas is cooled, thus positively impacting generator efficiency, given the reduced sensible heat loss of the flue gas. Economizers are used as heat recovery equipment in packaged boilers instead of air heaters because of NOx concerns. They are also less expensive and have lower gas pressure drops across them. Economizers for gas firing typically use serrated fins at four to five fins per inch. For distillate fuel, about 4 fins/in, solid fins are preferred. For heavy oil, bare tubes or a maximum of 23 fins/in. are used, depending upon the dirtiness of the flue gas and the ash content of the fuel. Economizers are generally of vertical gas flow and counterflow configuration with horizontal tubes as shown in Fig. 3.23. The water-side velocity ranges from 3 to 7 ft/s. Small packaged boilers, below 40,000 lb=h capacity, use circular economizers that can be fitted into the stack. Another variation is the horizontal gas flow configuration with vertical headers and horizontal tubes. Generally, steaming in the economizer is not a concern, as discussed earlier. Feedwater temperatures of 230320_F are common, depending on acid dew point concerns. The feedwater is sometimes preheated in a steam water exchanger if the deaerator delivers a lower feedwater temperature than that desired to avoid acid corrosion in the case of oil-fired boilers.
v.
Air Heater:
Air heaters are used in a few waste heat boilers for preheating combustion air. Incineration plants and reformer furnaces also use preheated air. Like the economizer, the air heater is installed to reduce the temperature of the flue gas entering the chimney and improve the generator efficiency. Note that a reduction of 20C of this temperature roughly corresponds to an increase in efficiency of 1%. The air heater cools the flue gas, it also heats the combustion air, this way increasing the heat going into the furnace. This strongly influences the sizing of the furnace, the amount of heat radiated by the flame, as well as the exit temperature of the flue gas from the furnace.
Fundamentally, there are two types of air h eaters, the recuperative and the regenerative ones. The recuperative air heaters are static and keep the two fluids on both sides of the heat exchange surface. These can be done with tubes. Generally, in that case, it is preferable to have the flue gas flow through the tubes and the bank hit by the air outside. This facilitates cleaning of the surfaces licked by flue gas that can be done with a pig.
There are two types of regenerative air eaters, one in which the heater matrix rotates, and one in which the connecting air and flue gas duct work rotate. The first type is called the Ljungstrom air heater. The energy from the hot flue gases is transferred to a slowly rotating matrix made of enamel or alloy=carbon steel material, which absorbs the heat and then transfers it to the cold air as it rotates. The elements are contained in baskets, which makes cleaning or replacement easier. Regenerative air heaters are more compact than tubular air heaters, which are heavy and occupy a lot of space. The gas- and air-side pressure drops are high in both these types of air heaters, adding to the fan power consumption. Due to the low heat transfer coefficients of air and flue gases and a low log-mean temperature difference (LMTD), surface area requirements are large for air heaters. However, a lot of surface area can be packed into each basket of a regenerative air heater, so they are more compact than the tubular heater.
One of the problems with regenerative air heaters is the leakage of air from the flue gas side that affects the power consumption and efficiency of the fan. Though the leakage may be low, on the
vi.
Heat recovery steam generators are generally categorized according to the type of circulation system used, which could be natural, forced, or once-through as illustrated in Fig. Natural circulation units have vertical tubes and horizontal gas flow orientation, whereas the forced circulation HRSG uses horizontal tubes and gases flow in the vertical direction. Once-through units can have either a horizontal or vertical gas flow path. In natural circulation units, the difference in density between water and steam drives the steamwater mixture through the evaporator tubes and risers and back to the steam drum. In forced circulation units, a pump is used to drive the steamwater mixture through the horizontal evaporator tubes. At the steam drum, steam separates from the steamwater mixture and dry saturated steam flows through the superheater. In once-through designs, there is no circulation system. Water enters at one end and leaves as steam at the other end of the tube bundle.
Once-Through Units:
A once-through HRSG (called an OTSG) does not have a steam drum like a natural or forced circulation unit (Fig. 2.12). An OTSG is simply made up of serpentine coils like an economizer. Because water is converted to steam inside the tubes, the water should have nearly zero solids. Otherwise deposition of solids can occur inside the tubes to the complete evaporation process. This in turn can lead to overheating of the tubes and consequent tube failure, particularly if the heat flux inside the tubes is high. Like natural or forced circulation units, these units generate single- or multiple-pressure saturated or superheated steam. A once-through unit does not have a defined economizer, evaporator, and superheater section. The location at which boiling starts keeps moving depending upon the gas flow, inlet gas temperature, and duty. The single-point control for the OTSG is the feedwater control valve; valve actuation depends on predefined operating conditions that are set through the distributed control system (DCS). The DCS is connected to a feedforward and feedback control loop, which monitors the transients in the gas turbine load and steam conditions. If a transient in the gas turbine load is monitored, the feedforward control sets the feedwater flow to a predicted value based on the turbine exhaust temperature, producing steady-state superheated steam conditions. Because there is no steam drum, the water holdup is much less than in drum-type units. Often Alloy 800 or 825 tubes are used to ensure dry running and also to limit the sensitivity to oxygen in the water, avoiding the need for active chemical treatment.
Figures 2.12b and 2.12c show the arrangement of natural and forced circulation HRSGs. In the natural circulation unit the differential head between the cold water in the downcomer circuit and the
SOOT BLOWING
Soot blowing is often resorted to in coal-fired or heavy oilfired boilers. In packaged boilers, both steam and air have been used as the blowing media, and both have been effective with heavy oil firing. Rotary blowers are sometimes used with distillate oil firing. Steam-blowing systems must have a minimum blowing pressure of 170200 psig to be effective. The steam system must be warmed up prior to blowing to minimize condensation. The steam must be dry. Increasing the capacity of a steam system Muhammad Uzair Barry +92-333-4425262