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EPRI Wet Stack Design
EPRI Wet Stack Design
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www.epri.com Final Report, December 2012
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Copyright © 2012 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Acknowledgments The following organization, under contract to the Electric Power
Research Institute (EPRI), prepared this report:
Principal Investigators
D. Anderson
L. Maroti
CICIND
Comité International des Cheminées Industrielles
(International Committee for Industrial Chimneys)
Talacker 50, CH-8001
Zurich, Switzerland
Background
A “wet stack” is a chimney, stack, or flue that exhausts saturated flue
gas downstream from a wet-scrubbing process, such as a wet flue gas
desulfurization (WFGD) system. All recently designed and
constructed WFGD systems have installed wet stacks. Although the
technology is relatively mature, there are a number of technical issues
that utilities must address to achieve a successful installation. This
guide provides answers to these questions, whether the installation is
new or retrofit.
v
Objectives
To provide background information and updates of previously
published information
To summarize current state-of-the-art design
To list and discuss important parameters and options
To give specific recommendations for wet stack design
Approach
Investigators collected the information from a literature survey, the
in-house expertise of contractors, phone contacts with vendors, a
utility advisory committee, and a limited number of site visits. They
collated and summarized the information to produce the report,
which the advisory committee also reviewed.
Results
The information in the guide covers the design process and
operational issues for both new and retrofit wet stack installations.
Important issues addressed include system design for favorable wet
operation, stack liquid discharge, plume downwash, stack-liner
geometry, gas velocity in the liner, and liquid-collection devices and
drainage. In addition, the report also provides a guide to developing a
wet stack specification.
EPRI Perspective
Because most new FGD systems include wet stacks, it is imperative
that accurate, reliable information is available. This guide contains
the most up-to-date information, and it should be useful for
personnel responsible for wet stack design, specifications, or
operation. Care must be taken to use these recommendations with
good engineering judgment and consideration for site-specific
installations.
Keywords
Air-emissions control
Flue gas desulfurization (FGD)
Wet stacks
Wet scrubbers
SO2 control
Stack liquid discharge (SLD)
vi
Abstract
In 1996, the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), in a tailored
collaboration with New York State Electric & Gas (NYSEG),
retained Burns & McDonnell and DynaFlow Systems to prepare a
design guide for wet stacks. The purpose of this guide was to provide
the utility industry with information and recommendations
concerning the design and specification of wet stacks. Since that
time, the number of wet stack installations has grown considerably,
and a wealth of practical real-world operating and maintenance
experience has been obtained. This document, the Revised Wet Stack
Design Guide, has been prepared to present this updated information
and to provide the power-generation industry with the latest state-
of-the-art information for favorable wet stack design and operation.
This new document strives to thoughtfully update the original guide
and to provide the industry with the definitive reference needed by
the engineers and designers responsible for the specification, design,
and implementation of effective wet stacks.
vii
Table of Contents
x
3.11.7 Stack-Entrance Collectors – Bottom-Entry
Elbow ...................................................................... 3-58
3.11.8 Liner Collectors .............................................. 3-60
3.11.9 Sloped Liner Floor .......................................... 3-63
3.11.10 Stack-Outlet Collectors ................................. 3-63
3.11.11 Drains ........................................................ 3-65
3.11.12 Post-Installation Inspections ........................... 3-67
3.12 Laboratory Flow-Modeling....................................... 3-67
3.12.1 Computer Modeling. ...................................... 3-69
3.13 Plume Downwash and Icing .................................... 3-71
3.13.1 Downwash Modeling ..................................... 3-71
3.13.2 Windscreen Design ....................................... 3-72
3.13.3 Single versus Multiple Liners ............................ 3-72
3.13.4 Methods of Downwash Minimization ............... 3-73
3.13.5 Stack-Top Icing .............................................. 3-74
xi
4.4 What to Ask For in a Bid Document ........................... 4-25
4.4.1 Warranties/Guarantees ................................... 4-25
4.4.2 Design Calculations ......................................... 4-25
4.4.3 Materials Testing ............................................. 4-27
4.4.4 Construction Procedures ................................... 4-28
4.4.5 On-Site Testing and Inspection .......................... 4-30
xii
List of Figures
xiii
Figure 3-1 Good and Poor Internal Duct-Truss Arrangements
for Wet Operation ......................................................... 3-12
Figure 3-2 Internal Duct-Truss Gusset Plate .............................. 3-13
Figure 3-3 Chimney with Constant-Diameter Brick Liner ............ 3-17
Figure 3-4 Chimney with Fiberglass-Reinforced Plastic Liner ...... 3-18
Figure 3-5 Chimney with Metal Liner – Typical for Alloy,
Glass-Block, or Protective-Coating Liner System .................. 3-19
Figure 3-6 Borosilicate Block–Lined Upper Wind Screen .......... 3-30
Figure 3-7 Sloped Liner–Floor Arrangements ........................... 3-37
Figure 3-8 Miter-Cut Bottom-Entry Elbow Arrangements ............ 3-38
Figure 3-9 Side-Wall and Round-Duct Liquid-Collection
Gutters .......................................................................... 3-51
Figure 3-10 Ceiling Liquid-Collection Gutters .......................... 3-52
Figure 3-11 Horizontal Brace with Liquid-Re-entrainment–
Prevention Disk .............................................................. 3-55
Figure 3-12 Upper and Lower Stack-liner Aerodynamic
Zones ........................................................................... 3-56
Figure 3-13 Typical Side-Entry Breech Liquid-Collection
System .......................................................................... 3-59
Figure 3-14 Side-Entry Breech Wing-Collector Design .............. 3-59
Figure 3-15 Bottom-Entry Elbow Liquid-Collection System
with Liner-Expansion Joint ................................................ 3-60
Figure 3-16 Liner-Expansion-Joint Placement and
Incorporation Within Ring Collectors ................................ 3-61
Figure 3-17 Liner-Expansion-Joint Liquid-Collector Concept ....... 3-61
Figure 3-18 Liner Rear-Wall “V” Diverter ................................ 3-62
Figure 3-19 Stack-Outlet Liquid Collector ................................ 3-64
Figure 3-20 Alternate Liner-Outlet Liquid-Collector Detail .......... 3-65
Figure 3-21 Typical Wet Stack Physical-Flow Models ............... 3-69
Figure 3-22 Typical Plume-Downwash Study – CFD Model
Results .......................................................................... 3-71
Figure 3-23 Recommended Alignment of a Stack with Two
Flues ............................................................................. 3-73
Figure 5-1 Droplet Probe ........................................................ 5-8
xiv
Figure 5-2 Droplet-Probe Orientation ....................................... 5-8
Figure 5-3 Typical Droplet-Probe Test Results ............................. 5-9
xv
List of Tables
xvii
Section 1: Background and Objectives
1.1 Preface to the Revised Wet Stack Design Guide
For the past 14 years, the design of wet stacks around the world has been guided
by the original EPRI Wet Stacks Design Guide (1996) [2]. Since that time, the
number of wet stack installations has grown considerably, and a wealth of
practical real-world operating and maintenance experience has been obtained.
The laws of physics have not changed, and most of the information presented in
1996 is just as valid today as it was when originally published. What has changed
is the power-generation industry’s experience in using this information and the
day-to-day operation of wet stacks. Much had been learned over the intervening
years about the design and operation of wet stack systems, and it had become
clear that some updating of the recommendations made in the original guide
were needed. This document, the Revised Wet Stack Design Guide, has been
prepared to present this updated information and to provide the power-
generation industry with the latest state-of-the-art information for favorable wet
stack design and operation. Much of this document will be familiar to those who
have read the original design guide. Some sections of the original guide have
been reused with only minor changes; others have been significantly revised; and
new sections discussing the industry’s experience with wet stack operation and
maintenance have been added. The outline of the guide has been rearranged to
be easier to use and follow, bringing the reader through the entire wet stack
design process, from the fundamentals of droplet collection and liquid-film flow
to the duct’s and stack’s final design, commissioning, and operation. This new
document strives to thoughtfully update the original guide and to provide the
industry with the definitive reference needed by the engineers and designers
responsible for the specification, design, and implementation of effective wet
stacks.
1.2 Introduction
A "wet stack" is a chimney, stack, or flue that exhausts saturated, scrubbed flue
gas. A wet stack is located downstream from a wet flue gas desulfurization
(WFGD) system. These systems spray slurry (typically limestone-based) into the
gas stream, which reduces the sulfur dioxide (SO2) content, saturates the flue gas
with water vapor, and reduces the temperature of the flue gas to 115–130°F (46–
54.4°C) for bituminous and hard coals and to 136–145°F (57–63°C) for lignite
and sub-bituminous coals.
1-1
The 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments (CAAA) required utilities to reduce
emissions of SO2. Many utilities have added WFGD systems to comply with the
Phase I requirements, whereas a lesser number have implemented dry-scrubber
technologies. Phase II of the program went into effect in 2000, further reducing
SO2 emissions and increasing the number of plants affected. As part of their
Phase II Compliance Plan, many plants with partial flue gas bypass systems have
decided to eliminate the bypass and scrub 100 percent of their flue gas. Many
other utilities have installed new or retrofit FGD systems, which typically use wet
stack operation because of reduced operating and maintenance costs.
The design of ducts and stacks for wet operation must address several issues that
were not present in unscrubbed or reheated gas stack designs. Some of the
important issues to consider in the design of a wet duct/stack system include
Stack liquid discharge (SLD)
Plume downwash and icing
Corrosion/chemical attack
Stack height
Absorber-outlet duct arrangement/geometry
Liner-breach geometry
Stack-liner geometry and material of construction
Gas velocity in the liner
Liquid-collection devices and drainage
The purpose of this revised guide is to provide the utility industry with
information and recommendations concerning the specification and design of
wet stacks. However, these recommendations should not be used without
applying good engineering judgment and consideration for site specifics.
Operating conditions, design conditions, and economics all play important roles.
The goals of the Revised Wet Stack Design Guide are to
Provide information for the fundamental understanding of wet stack
operation.
Update previously published information and recommendations.
Present the current state-of-the-art wet stack design.
Identify the parameters and options that will lead to favorable wet operation.
Give specific recommendations regarding wet stack design for new and
retrofit installations.
Present information related to wet stack startup and maintenance issues.
It is assumed that those who will use this guide have a general familiarity with
stack designs and FGD systems. This guide is intended for personnel who are
considering wet stacks and/or are responsible for designs, specifications, or
operation of wet stacks.
1-2
Section 2 of this guide provides fundamental information on the physical
processes and phenomena important to wet stacks and discusses the basic
objectives for favorable wet stack operation. Section 3 addresses new or retrofit
wet stack design and discusses the issues unique to wet stack operation. A guide
to developing specifications for wet stacks is presented in Section 4.
The first scenario involves adding a new FGD system that incorporates a wet
scrubber and a new wet stack. In such a scenario, the designer is given the most
freedom regarding plant layout, liner material, and stack-geometry selections. A
state-of-the-art wet stack design should be used that is based on the latest
analytical, experimental, and field data available. The goal is to produce an
effective wet stack design that minimizes both installation and operating costs.
The second scenario involves converting an existing dry stack to wet operation.
In such a scenario, the most important design consideration is whether or not the
existing liner and ductwork material can withstand the reduced temperatures and
wet conditions typical of wet stack operation and whether the liner-gas velocity
will result in droplet re-entrainment from the stack walls. If not, the existing
chimney liner must be modified or a new stack installed. Because of the outage
time required to modify an existing stack, it is often more economical to build a
new stack for scrubbed gas and use the existing stack for emergency gas bypass
around the scrubber as needed.
The liquid inside a stack with a WFGD system exists as droplets from mist-
eliminator carryover and as the moisture content of the gas flow entering the
stack liner. The vapor content is usually the maximum that can occur when the
flue gas is saturated with water vapor at the operating temperature. If there is an
induced-draft (ID) fan between the absorber and the stack, the fan-temperature
rise could result in a lower-than-saturation vapor content. What happens to the
vapor and liquid content before the gas reaches the top of the liner defines how
much liquid there is and in what form it is discharged from the stack. The major
gas/liquid flow processes that may lead to the SLD are described in the next four
subsections—including the major features of the SLD. A description of the
liquid-flow balance in wet stacks is provided in [1], pp. 4-3 to 4-5. Liquid-flow
rates typical for wet ducts and stacks are given in Section 3.4, “Wet Duct
Operation,” Table 3-1.
1-3
1.4.1 Mist-Eliminator Carryover
The gas stream leaving the mist eliminator is saturated with water vapor, and
entrained fine liquid droplets are carried by the gas flow under normal design and
operating conditions. It is important that the mist eliminators operate properly at
the designed gas velocity and liquid load to minimize the size and rate of droplet
carryover. The mist eliminators are designed to reduce carryover of liquid and
slurry to the downstream ductwork. Mist-eliminator problems can result in
increased liquid carryover. Some larger droplets may also be present in the gas
stream, which have been re-entrained from the mist-eliminator blades, the mist-
eliminator support structure, and areas of the mist eliminator containing solids
buildup. During the wash cycles, washing the mist eliminator can also increase
the amount of liquid carried with the gas flow downstream of the mist eliminator
because of the increased localized liquid loading associated with the wash sprays.
As droplets flow with the flue gas, they will impinge upon internal surfaces
because of droplet-trajectory paths controlled by the earth's gravity, centrifugal
forces on the droplets when the gas flow turns, and gas-drag forces. Large
droplets (300–6000 μm) from the gas-flow path deposit on duct and liner
surfaces most readily; medium droplets (100–300 μm) deposit only partially; and
small droplets (10–100 μm) deposit hardly at all. Fine droplets (<10 μm) follow
the gas flow and do not deposit. The higher the gas velocity and the sharper the
turn of the flue gas path, the more likely it will be that significant numbers of
droplets will impinge upon walls, turning vanes, baffles, and internal duct
components (bracing, gusset plates, and expansion joints).
Liquid deposition can be promoted, and the resulting liquid film collected, by
properly designed vanes, baffles, and liquid-collection devices installed in the
duct system. Maximum deposition and collection of the liquid on the duct walls
and stack liners must be achieved in order to control SLD. One of the main
1-4
objectives of physical-flow modeling is to design flow-control devices and to
develop liquid collectors such as ceiling gutters, side-wall channels, floor guides,
ring collectors, and drains to collect deposited liquid before re-entrainment can
take place. This process is discussed in Section 3.12, "Laboratory Flow
Modeling."
Another liquid-deposition area is on the choke surface in stacks that have chokes.
Because of the rapid change in flow direction created by the choke, some of the
fine droplets entrained in the gas flow will be deposited on the choke’s inner
surface. The collected liquid will lead to SLD if the local gas velocities in the
choke are high enough to drag the liquid up to the stack outlet and no liquid
collector is installed.
1.4.3 Condensation
Adiabatic Condensation (or bulk condensation) occurs in the bulk of the gas as
the pressure of the saturated gas flow decreases as a result of pressure loss and
elevation change along the height of the stack. The decrease in absolute pressure
of the saturated gas causes water vapor to condense on fine droplets or on small
solid particles in the bulk of the gas. Droplets formed by this type of
heterogeneous condensation will tend to be very small (<1 μm) and to be located
throughout the volume of the gas flow. Only a very small fraction of this
adiabatic condensation reaches the liner surface by the turbulent-deposition
process. The rest is discharged from the top of the stack, which creates the white
plume typical of wet stacks, and which evaporates as the plume mixes with the
outside air.
Annulus pressurization of brick-lined stacks using ambient air increases the rate
of condensation on the liner surfaces. Leakage of pressurizing air through the
liner in older brick stacks can significantly increase the condensation. Insulation
of alloy and FRP liners can significantly reduce the amount of thermal
condensation within the liner.
1-5
1.4.4 Liquid Re-entrainment
The liquid on the liner surface produced by deposition and condensation flows in
the form of film or rivulets is governed by gravitational, surface-tension, and gas-
shear forces. If high enough, the gas-shear force can shear the liquid off the
surface, causing re-entrainment. This is the most frequent source of SLD and the
fallout of liquid droplets in the vicinity of the stack.
1-6
collector system. Droplets over 100 μm do not evaporate outside of the stack, and
they will probably reach the ground level.
Occasionally, ID fans will be located between the absorbers and the stack of a
utility power plant when retrofitted with an FGD system. These fans usually
require periodic or continuous washing to prevent solids buildup on the fan
impellers, which can cause fan-rotor imbalance. All of the liquid sprayed into the
fan inlet leaves the fan impeller as droplets. Most of the liquid will be propelled
by the high centrifugal-force field to the fan scroll, where it will deposit. Most of
this liquid will re-entrain back into the gas flow unless a properly designed high-
velocity scroll-liquid collector is installed. Preferably, fans should be located
upstream of the absorber to avoid these problems. Alternatively, they should be
located such that there are a sufficient number of duct turns and/or duct lengths
between the fan outlet and the stack inlet to provide opportunities for liquid
collection.
The stack liquid discharge (SLD) is also known as rainout or acid-mist fallout. It
is important to note that all wet stacks have some amount of SLD. However,
SLD is only a problem if the droplets are large enough to be detectable at ground
level near the stack.
The amount of liquid discharged at the top of the stack is a result of gas- and
liquid-flow processes that take place in the ductwork and stack system between
the discharge of the absorbers and the top of the stack liner. The source of the
liquid discharge can be categorized by the liquid-flow process and by the droplet
sizes as follows:
Liquid droplets carried from the absorber to the top of the stack liner by the
gas stream without depositing along the gas-flow path. Typically, these are
droplets less than 50 μm in diameter, the majority of which can travel
through the ducts without significant deposition. Droplets of this size, when
ejected from the stack, will typically evaporate before reaching the ground.
Droplets re-entrained from liquid deposition and condensation on duct
surfaces that can be discharged. These tend to be larger drops—greater than
300 μm in diameter— and are usually the major contributors to the SLD.
Droplets formed by adiabatic or bulk condensation. These represent a large
liquid-flow rate but are very fine droplets (<1 μm), which have a negligible
effect on the SLD detectable at ground level. This condensation forms the
visible white plume typical of wet stack operation.
Liquid deposited and condensed on the liner, which flows either upward or
downward, depending on the local gas velocity. Liquid flows upward in those
areas of the stack where the gas velocity is higher than the flow-reversal
velocity for the specific liner material used. This phenomenon can be a
significant problem in tapered liners, in which the upper portion of the liner
1-7
can experience high gas velocities. The droplet sizes re-entrained at the top
of the liner, where velocities are highest, can be quite large (300–6000 μm),
depending on the liner-top geometry. The upper section of a stack choke is
usually in this mode of upward liquid flow.
The quantity and location of the fallout at a given plant is a function of the
droplet-size distribution of the discharged liquid and the atmospheric
conditions—such as ambient temperature, wind, relative humidity, and
turbulence level. The very small droplets of the bulk condensation make the gas
plume white and visible. The plume is cooled as it mixes with the surrounding
air. This cooling results in condensation on the small droplets in the plume. The
increase in diameter is only 1 to 10 μm; therefore, the droplets of the bulk
condensation can evaporate before reaching the ground and cannot be detected.
The mixing with the drier air away from the stack causes droplet evaporation.
The balance between the cooling and mixing processes defines the length of the
visible plume. Therefore, it is a function of the ambient air temperature and the
air relative humidity.
One of the major objectives in developing an effective wet stack design is to limit
SLD to a minimal acceptable level. The goal is to limit the droplet size that will
exit the stack. If the droplets are small enough, they will evaporate before hitting
the ground. However, if the droplets are large, they will land on nearby surfaces
such as plant structures, equipment, and cars. The wet stack survey indicates that
the fallout of liquid droplets, if noticeable, usually occurs on the downwind side
of the stack within a half-mile radius.
With wet stack operation, corrosion is less severe than with reheat, but it still
must be considered. Corrosion can be resisted by means of proper material
selection. The floors of the ductwork should be sloped to provide proper drainage
of the corrosive liquid after shutdown of the unit. The exposed materials of the
ductwork and the stack liner must be resistant to chemical attack. Several types of
material are available for both the scrubber-outlet duct and the stack liner. The
materials should be selected according to their corrosion resistance to the
chemical properties of the flue gas downstream of the absorber. Refer to Section
3.9.1, “Materials of Construction,” for more information.
Designing for a low gas velocity at the stack exit can decrease the amount of
SLD. However, this type of design increases the potential for plume downwash
at elevated wind velocities. During downwash episodes, the reduced static-
pressure zone generated along the downwind side of the stack shell and liner
extensions can draw the flue gas into a downwash pattern along the stack shell.
In this process, saturated flue gas comes in contact with the liner extension, stack
hood, and stack shell. This contact can lead to deterioration of the stack
construction materials because of exposure to acid in the flue gas. It also increases
the potential for ice formation on the top of the stack. A cross wind at the top of
1-8
the stack will deflect the plume from its vertical path. As the ratio of vertical
plume momentum to horizontal wind momentum [(ρV2 ) FLUEGAS / (ρV2)WIND]
falls below a value of about 2.0 for a single-flue free-standing stack, the plume
may become partially entrained in the low-pressure zone that is formed on the
downwind side of the stack. This phenomenon is known as plume downwash.
To reduce the frequency of downwash, the height of the liner(s) can be increased
above the shell, or the momentum ratio can be increased—either by reducing the
liner diameter or by installing a choke at the top of the liner.
For a multiple-flue stack, the equivalent momentum ratios for initiation of plume
downwash are higher, and they vary significantly with the wind direction relative
to the axis of the liners. The extent of downwash can also be more pronounced,
because of the larger size of the shell needed to enclose the multiple liners.
Stack-top icing can occur at below freezing conditions all winter long, every
winter, and it creates a potential danger to people and property around the base
1-9
of the stack. Whether ice forms on the top of the stack depends on the
temperature of the stack surface, the temperature of the mixture of saturated flue
gas and cold ambient wind, and on whether water vapor will condense out of the
mixture. Ice formation is most likely at plants where below-freezing temperatures
are common and where they last for extended periods of time.
1-10
Icing can often lead to serious buildups that can fall to the ground. However,
when the icing is occurring, the platform near the top of the stack, the railings,
and possibly the roof, may be slippery. If icing is observed at the top of the stack,
care should be taken in the area around the base of the stack because of the
possibility that the ice could become dislodged and fall to the ground.
The potential for icing can be reduced by employing the following steps:
1. Install a liner extension above the shell to minimize the potential for plume
downwash.
2. Select a stack-liner discharge velocity that minimizes plume downwash over
the expected operating range of the unit at the existing local wind conditions
and that is consistent with other design objectives.
3. During cold ambient temperature conditions with high winds, run the unit at
near full load. (Employing this operating procedure may be natural under
such conditions, because more power is consumed in below-freezing
weather.)
4. Use heated annulus air or heat-tracing to heat the stack hood, roof, or other
areas where ice forms on the top of the stack above the freezing point.
The main contents of the design guide are intended to provide the industry with
information concerning the design and specification of wet stacks.
A main objective of the Revised Wet Stack Design Guide is to provide the latest
information about key issues. For example, the design guide contains discussions
on gas velocity, materials for liner construction, liquid-collection devices and
drainage, continuous-emissions-monitoring systems, and flow modeling. This
guide is intended to provide background information and identify the parameters
that need to be considered in the development of an effective wet stack design.
The key to the successful design of a wet stack is an understanding of the choices
that lead to favorable wet stack operation at an early stage in the design process.
Often, simple low-cost design changes can result in significantly improved wet
operation. But these changes need to be identified early in the design process.
This design guide focuses on the options that should be considered, identifies
existing constraints, and describes the effects that variations in the parameters
have on the design of a wet stack.
Another main objective of this Revised Wet Stack Design Guide is to summarize
the latest technology available regarding wet stacks. This design guide is a
follow-up to EPRI report CS-2520, Entrainment in Wet Stacks, published in
1982 [1]; EPRI report TR107099, Wet Stacks Design Guide, published in 1996
[2]; and EPRI report TR-109380, Guidelines for the Fluid Dynamic Design of
1-11
Power Plant Ducts, published in 1998 [4]. The Revised Wet Stack Design Guide
contains a presentation of the latest information available, updating what has
been learned in the laboratory and from field installations over the past 14 years.
The Revised Wet Stack Design Guide is intended to provide the wet stack designer
with information and recommendations concerning the design and specification
of wet stacks. A systematic process is provided in Section 4 to assist the designer
in identifying the important issues that need to be addressed in the design
process.
The guide is presented in two main sections: 1) wet stack fundamentals and 2)
the design process. These sections provide the designer with the information and
background that lead to a bid specification and identify what to specify for work
scope, what information to provide in the specifications, and what to expect in
terms of state-of-the-art operation.
1-12
Section 2: Wet Stack Design Fundamentals
2.1 Introduction
It is important to note that all wet stacks will have some amount of SLD.
However, SLD is only a problem if the droplets are large enough to be detectable
at ground level near the stack.
The quantity of liquid discharged from the top of a stack is the result of gas- and
liquid-flow processes that take place in the ductwork and stack system between
the discharge of the absorber(s) and the top of the stack liner. The sources of
liquid discharge can be categorized by the type of liquid-flow process at the
location of their origin, and by the resulting droplet sizes, as follows:
Liquid droplets carried from the absorber to the top of the stack liner by the
gas stream without depositing along the gas-flow path. Only small droplets
(10–100 μm) travel through the ducts without complete deposition. This
means that most conventional scrubber designs, which have horizontal ducts
connecting the absorber to the stack, will result in the deposition of most of
their larger droplets on the internal duct and stack-liner surfaces.
Medium-sized drops (100–300 μm) are typically generated from a mist
eliminator that is experiencing performance issues. They may or may not
collect in the wet duct/stack system, depending on the geometry of the
system.
Droplets re-entrained from liquid deposition and condensation on duct and
liner surfaces that can be discharged if the local gas velocities are high and/or
if the local geometry is not favorable for wet operation. These droplets will
typically be large (300–6000 μm) and are usually the major contributors to
the SLD.
2-1
Droplets formed by adiabatic condensation. These represent a large liquid-
flow rate but are made up of very fine droplets (<10 μm), which have a
negligible effect on the SLD detectable at ground level.
Liquid deposited and condensed on the liner, forming a liquid film that will
flow upward in those areas of the stack where the gas velocity is higher than
the flow-reversal velocity for the liner material used (see Section 2.2.2). If
this liquid film reaches the stack outlet, it will be re-entrained back into the
gas flow. The droplet sizes re-entrained at the top of the liner, where
velocities are highest, can be quite large (300–6000 μm), depending on the
liner-top geometry. Droplets of this size will impact ground-level surfaces in
the vicinity of the liner because they will not be able to evaporate before
reaching the ground. The upper section of the stack choke, if installed, is
usually operating in this mode of upward liquid flow.
All plants operating with a WFGD system will have a white plume. This plume
is a result of the very small droplets formed both by adiabatic condensation and
by additional condensation as the water vapor in the plume is cooled by mixing
with the surrounding air. This cooling process results in additional water-vapor
condensation on particulates and on small droplets within the plume. The
increase in diameter is small (only 1–10 μm). At this size, these newly formed
droplets will follow the local gas-flow patterns; they should evaporate before
reaching the ground as a result of mixing with the drier air away from the stack.
The balance between the plume-cooling and turbulent-mixing processes defines
the length of the resulting visible plume. Therefore, the visible plume length is
primarily a function of the ambient air temperature and the air relative humidity.
The quantity and location of the fallout at a given plant is a function of the
droplet-size distribution of the discharged liquid and the local atmospheric
conditions, such as ambient temperature, wind, relative humidity, and turbulence
level. Large droplets (>300 μm) discharged from the top of the stack will typically
reach the ground under most circumstances. Mid-sized droplets (100–300 μm)
can make it to the ground before evaporating, depending on the local weather
conditions. For example, droplet deposition is typically greater on hot humid
days than on dry days because of the suppressed droplet-evaporation rates. Small
droplets (10–100 μm) typically evaporate before hitting the ground.
As stated previously, all stacks will have occurrences of SLD. One of the major
objectives in developing an effective wet stack design is to limit SLD to a
minimal acceptable level through proper system design and the installation of an
effective liquid-collection/drainage system. The goal of this system is to collect
and remove deposited liquid from the system before it has an opportunity to re-
entrain back into the gas flow and to limit the size of droplets that will ultimately
reach the stack outlet. If the droplets are small enough, they will evaporate
before hitting the ground. However, if the droplets are large, they will land on
plant structures, equipment, and cars. A survey of plants with wet stacks found
that the fallout of liquid droplets, if noticeable, usually occurs within a half-mile
radius of the stack.
2-2
2.2 Droplet and Liquid-Flow Fundamentals
As droplets flow suspended within the flue gas, they will impinge upon and be
collected on internal surfaces as a result of droplet-trajectory paths controlled by
the earth's gravity, centrifugal forces on the droplets when the gas flows through
a turn, and gas-drag forces on the droplet. Because of their size and inertia, large
droplets (300–6000 μm) from the gas-flow path deposit most readily; medium-
and small-sized droplets (10–300 μm) deposit only partially; and fine droplets
(<10 μm) deposit hardly at all because these droplets follow the gas-flow patterns.
The higher the gas velocity and the sharper the turn of the flue gas–flow path,
the more likely it will be that significant numbers of smaller droplets will impinge
upon and be collected on walls, turning vanes, baffles, and internal duct
components (bracing, gusset plates, and expansion joints).
Large drops are easily separated from the gas flow by both centrifugal and
gravitational forces. In addition to gravitational and centrifugal separation, small-
to medium-sized droplets can also deposit on duct and liner surfaces in regions of
separated flow and as a result of turbulent deposition. However, because of the
generally uniform flow patterns within the upper liner, the turbulent deposition
of fine droplets formed by adiabatic condensation (as a result of the pressure
reduction with elevation change in the liner) along the height of the stack is
relatively small. Only 2.5–5% of the fine droplets formed as a result of adiabatic
condensation actually contact and collect on the liner wall.
Gas velocity, duct geometry, stack geometry, and droplet size govern the amount
and location of liquid deposition within the wet stack system. Significant
quantities of liquid collect along the outside radius of turns and on the pressure
side of turning vanes and baffles. The major droplet-deposition area in a stack is
on the liner opposite the breeching duct for stacks with side-entry breeches, and
along the outside radius of stacks with bottom-entry elbows.
Liquid deposition and removal from the system can be promoted by installing
properly designed collection devices, vanes, and baffles in the wet duct/stack
system. In order to minimize the potential for SLD, maximum deposition and
collection of the liquid on the duct walls and stack liners must be achieved.
Liquid-collection systems are typically designed by using a physical-flow model.
The main objectives of physical-flow modeling are 1) to understand the system’s
internal deposition and liquid-film flow patterns and 2) to design liquid-
collectors—such as ceiling gutters, side-wall channels, and floor guides—to
collect and channel deposited liquid to a drain before re-entrainment can take
place. This process is discussed in Section 3.11.1, under "Laboratory Flow
Modeling."
2-3
2.2.2 Liquid-Film Flow on Surfaces and Re-entrainment
Fundamentals
The liquid on the duct and liner surfaces is produced by droplet deposition and
condensation flows in the form of a film, or as rivulets (small flow streams on the
liner surface), governed by the local gravitational, surface-tension, and gas-shear
forces. The liquid film naturally wants to flow both downward (because of
gravitational forces) and in the direction of the gas flow because of the gas-shear
forces). In ducting, these forces will result in liquid flowing toward the duct floor
as it moves in the direction of the gas flow near the surfaces.
The liquid-film flow in the vertical stack liner is a function of the gas-shear and
gravitational forces, which are acting in opposite directions to each other. For
most liner surfaces, in which gas velocities are below 70 ft/sec (21.3 m/s),
gravitational forces dominate, and the liquid film will flow downward. At
velocities between 70 and 90 ft/s (21.3 and 27.4 m/s), the gravitational and shear
forces have approximately the same magnitude, and the forces are balanced. In
this range, the liquid film in the liner will generally be stagnant on the wall and
will not move in either direction. At velocities above 90 ft/s (27.4 m/s), the gas-
shear forces dominate, and the liquid film will start to flow vertically toward the
stack outlet. This velocity point is called the flow-reversal velocity.
The changes in the liner liquid-film velocity are gradual. At low gas velocities,
gravity dominates, and the liquid film moves quickly downward—resulting in a
thin liquid film. As the flue gas velocity increases, the downward velocity of the
liquid film decreases because of increased vertical gas-shear forces. However, as
the liquid deposition and condensation rates are relatively independent of the gas
velocity, the total quantity of liquid accumulating on the liner wall remains
constant with time. This means that, as the downward velocity of the liquid-film
flow decreases, the drainage rate of collected liquid from the liner surface
decreases, and the thickness of the film on the liner wall must therefore increase.
The surface of thick liquid films is less stable than that of thin ones, and it is
easier for waves to form, which can lead to large quantities of re-entrained
droplets. Thick liquid films are the most frequent source of SLD and the
resulting fallout of liquid droplets in the vicinity of the stack.
Droplets can easily be re-entrained from the surfaces of thick liquid films because
of surface instabilities when they are exposed to a gas flow. Thick liquid films can
be generated in three different ways. First, as detailed above, thick liquid films
can be generated if the liner surface-drainage rate is reduced by exposing the film
to high gas velocities. Thick liquid films can also be generated if the liquid feed
rate to the wall is high as a result of high levels of droplet deposition or
condensation. Finally, they can be generated if the stack is too high and all the
collected liquid flows to the bottom of the liner without any intermediate
drainage locations.
With the possible exception of materials, the design of wet ducts is the same as
that for dry ducts with respect to their overall design and pressure-loss
considerations. The reader is directed to EPRI Report TR-109380, Guidelines for
the Fluid Dynamic Design of Power Plant Ducts, for a detailed discussion of this
process [3]. Some basic considerations for wet operation are discussed in that
report.
2-5
The gasses exiting the absorber will be fully saturated and will contain suspended
droplets. These gasses will flow through the ducting, coming in contact with the
duct walls and with any internal structures within the duct. Liquid will be
continuously condensing from the gas onto these surfaces, forming a liquid film
that will flow downward under gravity and in the direction of the local gas flow.
Care needs to be taken to ensure that the gas-flow patterns moving this liquid
film are favorable for wet operation, minimizing conditions such as flow
separations or recirculation zones—potentially resulting in the re-entrainment of
liquid back into the gas-flow. Also, to the extent possible, the gas-flow patterns
should be managed in such a way as to move the resulting liquid films to drainage
points for removal from the system.
Turning vanes are typically used to optimize gas-flow patterns, reduce pressure
losses, and/or promote liquid collection. An economic assessment must be made
with respect to the value of turning vanes. Although desirable from a pressure-
loss standpoint, the corrosion-resistant materials required for installation in a wet
environment are very expensive, and the installation cost may not justify the
savings gained by the reduced operating cost. An economic study should be
performed to quantify the life-cycle cost or savings of such an installation.
A more detailed discussion of wet duct design is presented in Section 3.6 of this
guide.
2-6
Droplet
Deposition
High on Liner
Wall
Droplet
Deposition
Low on Liner
Wall – Liquid
Collection is
Enhanced
Figure 2-1
Liner Inlet Gas-flow Patterns – Close-Coupled Absorber
The gas-flow profiles within the stack liner are very important with respect to the
collection and drainage of liquid from the flow gas. It is important to ensure that
these flow profiles are as well defined and robust as possible, given the ductwork
arrangement leading to the liner. There are two major stack-entry design options:
a side-entry breech and a bottom-entry elbow (Figure 2-2). Both designs are
similar in terms of fluid dynamics, given that they both turn the gas flow 90°
from horizontal to vertical. However, there are major differences between them
with respect to the intensity of the resulting flow patterns and to the way in
which these flow patterns interact with their respective physical geometries.
2-7
Liner Liner
Figure 2-2
Typical Stack-Inlet Arrangements
As a uniform gas profile flows through a 90° elbow, the gas flow will want to
continue in a straight line. This tendency will result in the formation of a region
of high gas velocity along the back wall of the liner for a side-entry breech
arrangement, and along the outside radius of the bend for a bottom-entry elbow
arrangement. The resulting gas velocity along the outer radius of the elbow can
be 50–100% higher than the average gas velocity entering the elbow. When the
gas hits the back wall of the elbow, it splits in two, and each half flows
circumferentially around toward the inside radius of the bend. This flow
generates two counter-rotating secondary vortices, which form on the
downstream side of the turn. If the curvature radius of the elbow is small enough,
a flow-separation zone will also form along the downstream side of the inner
radius of the turn. These phenomena are shown in Figure 2-3. The strength of
the secondary vortices and the size of the separation zone increase with the
sharpness of the turn and with the velocity of the gas entering the elbow.
2-8
Higher than
Average Axial
Velocity
Along Outside
Radius of Bend
A A
Secondary
Flows
SECTION AA
Secondary
Flows
Figure 2-3
Gas-flow Patterns Through a Standard 90° Elbow
For favorable wet operation, strong secondary vortices and a large region of flow
separation are desirable. For this reason, the side-entry breech, defined by a sharp
90° turn, is considered the most favorable design for wet operation. The flow
entering the liner through the breech generates strong robust secondary flows, in
the form of two large counter-rotating vortices, in the lower liner. A large gas-
recirculation zone is formed just above the breech in the liner as the gas turns
from the vertical into the liner. These secondary flows, and the recirculation zone
detailed in Figure 2-4, are relied upon to move the collected liquid film on the
walls of the liner circumferentially out of the main gas flow and into the quiet
zones for drainage from the system. Experience has shown that the secondary
flows generated within a liner using a side-entry breech remain stable and well-
defined even at reduced flows, ensuring effective wet operation over a wide range
of unit operating loads.
2-9
Uniform Vertical
Gas Flow
Flow C C
Reattaches
SECTION CC
Well
Gas Flow Centered
Stagnation
A A Point
SECTION AA
Secondary Flow
Chaotic Flow Vortices
Along Liner Floor
Figure 2-4
Liner-Inlet Gas-flow Patterns – Side-entry Breech
The use of bottom-entry elbows has become very popular with the increased use
of FRP liners. Bottom elbows are very similar to standard duct elbows and,
because of their size, are usually fabricated from liner-can sections spun and
assembled on site. Typically, bottom-entry elbows consist of three to four miter
cuts, forming a 90° elbow with the center-line turn radius to internal-diameter
ratio of between 0.8 to 1.5. This design is very clean in terms of fluid dynamics,
and it results in low system-pressure loss. When flue gas flows through an
unvaned bottom-entry elbow, two counter-rotating secondary-flow vortices are
generated, as detailed above. Because the change in direction from horizontal to
vertical is generally gradual, the intensity of the secondary-flow vortices is not as
great as that generated in the more abrupt side-entry breech arrangement.
Additionally, because the turn is more gradual, a region of flow separation may or
may not be generated along the downstream side of the inside radius of the
elbow. If a region of flow separation is generated, it will be smaller and less
intense than that generated in the side-entry breech arrangement. It has been
observed in flow-model studies of bottom-entry elbow arrangements that two
small—but very intense—regions of flow recirculation are generated on both
sides of the elbow along the last miter cut (Figure 2-5). These recirculation zones
2-10
are formed because the change in direction from horizontal to vertical is abrupt
in these locations, and the incoming horizontal gas flow “over shoots” the inside
radius of the turn. Although small, these recirculation zones are problematic,
because they can be sites of significant liquid re-entrainment.
Uniform
Vertical Flow
C C
Flow SECTION CC
Flow Separation
Reattaches
High Gas
B B Velocity
Flow Along
Separation High Gas Rear Wall
Velocity Along
Rear Wall
SECTION BB
A A
Gas Flow
SECTION AA
High Intensity Secondary Flow
Gas Recirculation Vortices
Along Duct Wall
at Seam
Figure 2-5
Liner-Inlet Gas-flow Patterns – 3-Miter Cut Bottom-Entry Elbow
It is clear that the secondary-flow vortices are desirable and necessary for
favorable wet stack operation. For this reason, flow controls in the liner are
2-11
discouraged unless absolutely necessary. Flow controls can reduce or eliminate
the secondary-flow vortices and can act as locations for liquid collection and re-
entrainment back into the gas flow with little chance for recollection—both of
which can lead to increased levels of SLD. It should be noted that a division wall
separating two breech entries into a single liner would not normally be
considered to be a flow-control device as defined above. A properly designed
division wall will divide a liner into two separate aerodynamic regions, each of
which will be allowed to form its own secondary-flow vortices and flow-
separation zones, resulting in favorable liquid-collection potential.
All of the water-vapor content in the stack-inlet flue gas flow comes from the
absorber outlet where the flue gas is fully saturated. The liquid content of the
stack-inlet flue gas flow comes from the following sources:
Mist-eliminator droplet carryover, which consists of fine drops (<10 μm), a
portion of which never contact a mist-eliminator blade.
Medium-sized droplets (100–300 μm) will re-entrain from mist-eliminator
vanes at high velocities and from solids buildup during abnormal operation.
Condensation on the duct surfaces upstream of the stack inlet, which adds
liquid onto the duct surfaces.
Deposition of droplets on duct surfaces, vanes, baffles, and structure, which
removes droplets from the gas-flow stream.
Re-entrainment of droplets from duct surfaces, vanes, baffles, and structure,
which adds large droplets to the gas-flow stream.
Installation of liquid collectors on duct walls and ceilings, vanes, baffles, and
structure, which collect liquid from these surfaces and guide the liquid to the
duct floor of stack-bottom drains for removal from the duct/stack system.
The geometry of the ducts between the absorbers and the stack inlet; the
number of vanes, baffles, and liquid collectors in the ducts; and the
effectiveness of the mist eliminators and duct liquid collectors will determine
the amount of liquid, droplet sizes, and distribution of liquid in the stack
breeching duct at the stack inlet.
The gas stream leaving the mist eliminator is saturated with water vapor, and
entrained fine liquid droplets are carried by the gas flow under ideal design and
operating conditions. Mist-eliminator carryover is a function of the gas velocity
through the blades and the liquid load in gpm/ft2 (l/min/m2) at its inlet face. It is
important that the mist eliminators operate properly to minimize the size and
rate of droplet carryover. The mist eliminators are designed to minimize
carryover of liquid and slurry from the WFGD absorber into the downstream
ductwork. Absorber problems resulting in a nonuniform gas-flow profile entering
the mist eliminator, or problems such as excessive mist-eliminator pluggage or
fouling, can result in increased liquid carryover. Some larger droplets may also be
2-12
present in the gas stream that were re-entrained from the mist-eliminator blades,
the mist-eliminator support structure, and areas of solids buildup on the mist
eliminator. During the wash cycles, washing the mist eliminator can also increase
the amount of liquid carried with the gas flow downstream of the mist eliminator
because of increased liquid load from the washed section.
The mist-eliminator system is the first and most important element of the liquid
collectors in a wet duct/stack system. The selection of the best mist eliminators to
match the absorber and duct design will result in reduced liquid load in the
duct/stack system and less elaborate duct and stack liquid-collection systems. In
FGD service, the function of the mist eliminators is to remove entrained
scrubbing slurry from the flue gas before it travels out of the absorber into the
downstream ductwork and stack. The mist eliminators are located downstream of
the absorber spray zones, where the flue gas contacts the scrubbing slurry that
removes sulfur dioxide. The slurry content of the liquid carryover can cause solids
buildup in the outlet ductwork and stack, high particulate emissions, and
corrosion. The amount of liquid that the flue gas carries into the mist eliminator
will depend on many factors, including (but not limited to) the droplet size, the
gas velocity, the liquid-to-gas ratio, and the washing method.
Mist eliminators can be oriented toward any number of gas-flow directions, from
horizontal to vertical (Figure 2-6). Most modern WFGD systems utilize a
vertical gas-flow orientation or a singularly supported roof top or diamond
design.
2-13
2nd ME Stage
1st ME Stage
2nd ME Stage
1st ME Stage Gas Flow
Gas Flow
Drainage through
Incoming Gas Flow
Drain Box
2nd ME Stage
1st ME Stage
Drainage through
Incoming Gas Flow
Figure 2-6
Common Mist-Eliminator Arrangements
2-14
Roof-top, or diamond-type, arrangements fall between the two extremes. This
arrangement is becoming more popular because of its ability to support what is
essentially a two-stage mist-eliminator arrangement from a single support
elevation within the absorber. In this design, two stages of mist-eliminator blades
are oriented diagonally, forming a parallelogram which has been rotated so that it
is supported from two of its corners. The design enhances liquid drainage across
most of the collection surface. Higher-than-average liquid loadings will still be
experienced at the unit’s drainage points because the collected liquid is still
required to drain against the incoming gas-flow at these locations. Another
concern with this arrangement is the need to use a mist-eliminator blade design
with a more torturous path (increased curvature) to maintain the ability for the
blades to inertially separate droplets from the gas flow. For a given blade design,
as the angle of the gas passing through it increases from 0° (perpendicular) to 45°
or higher, the path length through the blades increases in the diamond
arrangement (Figure 2-7). If the curvature of the blade has not changed, the
side-to-side deflection will be the same for the increased path length through the
blades, so the resulting inertial separation will be lower.
Comparison of Flow
Paths Through ME
A 135°
Flow Path Through ME
90° A
Perpendicular
137°
Direction of
Gas Flow
Through Mist 95° B
Eliminator
ME Side Elevation
B
Figure 2-7
Comparison of Gas-Path Lengths Through a Mist Eliminator as a Function of Angle
2-15
The amount of liquid-droplet carryover into the wet duct/stack system from the
mist eliminators can be minimized by
1. Selecting the most suitable mist-eliminator elements for the operating
conditions of the installation
2. Using two-stage mist elimination
3. Using a vertical or angled mist-eliminator orientation
4. Using gas velocities with a safe margin under the critical re-entrainment
velocity for the mist-eliminator blades selected
5. Achieving a sufficiently uniform velocity profile into the second-stage mist-
eliminator to keep all regions below the critical re-entrainment velocity
6. Selecting effective washing techniques and procedures to prevent solids
buildup on the mist eliminators, without entraining wash spray in the gas
flow
7. Establishing inspection and maintenance procedures for the mist eliminators
8. Maintaining good pH control to reduce solids precipitation in the mist
eliminators
EPRI Report GS-6984, FGD Mist Eliminator System Design and Specification
Guide [3] describes all essential aspects of mist-eliminator design, application,
operation, and maintenance necessary for an effective mist-elimination system.
The measured laboratory performance of several commercially available mist
eliminators is also furnished in this report.
2-16
Pressure Drop vs Gas Velocity
0.300
0.250
0.150
0.100
0.050
0.000
0.00 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00 12.00 14.00 16.00 18.00 20.00
Velocity (ft/s)
Figure 2-8
Typical Chevron-Type Mist-eliminator Pressure Drop vs. Gas-Velocity Curve
Figure 2-9
Typical Chevron-Type Mist-Eliminator Carryover vs. Gas-Velocity Curve
2-17
Figure 2-10
Typical Mist-Eliminator Collection Efficiency vs. Droplet-Size Curve
WFGD absorbers typically operate at an average gas velocity entering (but not
within) the mist-eliminator sections of 10–14 ft/s (3.0–4.3 m/s) for vertical gas-
flow–oriented mist eliminators and 16–20 ft/s (4.9–6.1 m/s) for horizontal gas-
flow–oriented mist eliminators. Under normal inlet-liquid loading conditions—
typically 0.5 gpm/ft2 (0.0123 l/min/m2)— carryover starts to become an issue at
velocities above 16 ft/s–20 ft/s (4.9–6 m/s) for vertical gas-flow and horizontal
gas-mist eliminators, respectively.
2-18
2.3.1.3 Mist-Eliminator Liquid Carryover
To the extent possible, all the liquid carryover from the mist eliminator that
deposits on the duct- and stack-liner surfaces must be collected. A significant
portion of this carryover must be collected in the downstream ducting before it
reaches the stack liner, making the downstream ducting an important part of the
overall liquid-collection system. For this reason, placing the stack liner directly
on top of an absorber should be discouraged. In this arrangement, liquid
carryover from the mist eliminator will have very limited deposition and little
opportunity for collection before being discharged from the top of the liner as
SLD.
2-19
Generally, the lower mist eliminator in a two-stage mist-elimination system
is washed with more liquid than the upper mist eliminator. Most
manufacturers recommend washing the bottom of the lower mist eliminator
at 1.5 gpm/ft2 (61.1 l/min/m2) and the top of the lower mist eliminator at
0.5–0.6 gpm/ft2 (21–25 l/min/m2). It is also recommended to wash the
bottom of the upper mist eliminator at 0.5–0.6 gpm/ft2 (21–25 l/min/m2).
Typically, the top of the upper mist eliminator is not washed during absorber
operation.
During the wash cycle, the liquid within the mist-eliminator section being
washed will be significantly higher, and increased carryover into the downstream
ducting from this section will be expected. A properly designed wet duct/stack
system will be able to handle this additional carryover without increased potential
for SLD.
2-20
Detailed design drawings of the stack shell and liner, including the number
and orientation of liners relative to true North, materials of construction,
material thickness versus elevation, annulus air-gap thicknesses versus
elevation, location and size of stack-shell vents to atmosphere
Information on the liner insulation: type, thickness, and covering
Expected flue gas conditions: temperature, flow rate, constituents, water-
vapor content
Plant elevation
Wind-rose data for a minimum of 1 year (5 years preferred), presenting air
temperatures, barometric pressure, wind speed, and direction
Annulus pressurization of brick-lined stacks using outside air increases the rate of
condensation on the liner surfaces. Leakage of pressurizing air through the liner
in older brick stacks can significantly increase the condensation.
It should be noted that, with the exception of alloy liners, the use of insulation in
wet stacks is not very common. Insulation is typically used in dry stacks to keep
the metal temperature of the liner above the acid dew point. And because wet
stacks are always below the acid dew point, corrosion-resistant materials are used
that do not require insulation. FRP, borosilicate block, and brick liners have
some insulating value and rarely have needed to add insulation. However,
because a major source of the liquid generated on the liner surface is thermal
condensation, insulation can be used to significantly reduce this phenomenon.
Previous condensation studies have shown that the addition of two inches of liner
insulation can reduce the quantity of thermal condensation by approximately a
factor of four. Additional increases in the insulation thickness will reduce
condensation further, but at a diminishing rate of return.
Adiabatic condensation (or bulk condensation) occurs in the bulk of the gas as
the pressure of the saturated gas flow decreases as a result of pressure loss and
elevation change along the height of the stack. This type of condensation may
generate an appreciable quantity of liquid. The decrease in absolute pressure of
2-21
the saturated gas causes water vapor to condense on fine droplets or on small
solid particles within the bulk of the gas. Droplets formed by this type of
heterogeneous condensation will be very small (<10 μm). Only a very small
fraction of this adiabatic condensation will reach and be deposited on the liner
surface by the turbulent-deposition process. Estimates of this fraction range from
2.5 to 5%. The expected percentage of droplets coming in contact with the liner
wall decreases with increasing liner diameter, because of the greater distance a
droplet would need to travel from the center of the liner to the liner wall.
Historically (as stated above), estimates of 2.5–5% have been used, and these
percentages have been anecdotally supported by observations from operating
units, which can monitor the liquid-drainage rate from their liquid-collection
systems. Condensed droplets that do not encounter the liner wall are discharged
from the top of the liner, which creates the familiar white plume associated with
wet stack operation. These droplets do not represent a problem, because their
size is very small, and they will evaporate before reaching the ground.
The stack effect is the hydrostatic-pressure difference between the inside and
outside of the stack liner. This difference is due to the lower density of the heated
gas in the stack compared to the density of the ambient air. Therefore, the stack
effect is calculated by multiplying the density difference of the gas in the stack
and the ambient air times the height of the stack. Net stack draft is the operating
pressure at the inlet of the stack liner, and it is calculated by subtracting the fluid
friction, the inlet losses, and the exit losses from the stack effect.
For wet stack design, the worst-case conditions are the maximum stack gas-flow
rate resulting in the highest friction loss, in combination with the hottest and
most humid ambient conditions. These conditions can normally be expected to
produce a positive gas pressure at the stack inlet. The stack effect at worst-case
conditions is generally only 0.2–0.3 in Wg (0.05–0.07 kPa) for wet stack
operation—a small amount compared to the friction and exit losses at full load.
Because the flow characteristics are so different, the discussion of the liquid-film
behavior on the liner wall must be broken down into two sections: the lower liner
and the upper liner. The lower liner is defined as that portion of the liner located
below a point four liner diameters above the roof of the breech duct or bottom-
entry elbow. The upper liner is everything above that location.
As discussed previously, the gas-flow patterns in the lower liner are three-
dimensional and complex, and they are used for the majority of the liquid
collection in the stack. The flow entering the liner through the breech or bottom-
entry elbow generates secondary flows in the form of two large counter-rotating
vortices in the lower liner. These secondary flows are relied upon to drag the
liquid film on the walls of the liner circumferentially out of the high-velocity gas
flow into low-velocity or separated regions where it can be drained from the
system.
2-22
In a side-entry breech arrangement, the droplets entrained in the incoming gas
flow will typically impact on the rear wall of the liner. The droplets will impact in
a zone extending approximately ± 1 liner diameter from a point on the rear wall
corresponding to the roof of the breech opening (Figure 2-11). Finer droplets
will impact in the upper portion of this zone, whereas larger droplets will impact
lower in the lower portion. Secondary gas flows generated by the turn into the
liner will direct a large portion of the liquid collected on the rear wall of the liner
upward, then circumferentially around to the front of the liner above the breech,
where it will encounter the downward flow in the gas-recirculation zone located
above the breech opening on the front wall of the liner. When the liquid reaches
this recirculation zone, it will flow downward and be re-entrained from the top
edge of the breech opening. Liquid collected on the liner walls below the droplet-
impact zone will either flow downward onto the liner floor or will be pulled
circumferentially around the liner to the vertical side edges of the breech, where
it will be re-entrained back into the gas flow. Effective liquid collectors can be
developed to work with these liquid-flow patterns to collect and direct these
liquid films to drain points for removal from the system.
Reentrainment Uniform
Liquid Film Flow Downward Liquid
Film Flow
From Upper Liner
Circumferential
Liquid Film Flow
Downward
Liquid Film
Flow in Flow Upward Liquid
Flow
Separation
Droplet Impact
Reentrainment Zone
Gas Flow
Downward Film
Downward Flow Flow Below REAR WALL OF
Along Breach Impact Zone LINER
Opening
Liquid Pooling with
Chaotic and Vortex
Flow On Liner Floor
Figure 2-11
Lower Liner Droplet- and Liquid-Film Flow Patterns – Side-Entry Breech
2-23
Some liquid will make it to, and collect on, the liner floor. If the liner floor is flat,
the collected liquid will pool and slosh around until it finds a drain point.
Typically, two vortices can be observed on the flat floor of the liner, their centers
located approximately 1/3 of the way across the liner and even with the side walls
of the inlet breech duct (Figure 2-12). Under some conditions, these vortices can
be sufficiently strong to re-entrain liquid off of the floor and back into the gas
flow.
X/3
Liquid Pooling on
Liner Floor
Gas Flow
Vortex Flows on
Liner Floor
Reentrainment
Liquid Film Flow
Vortex Flows on
Liner Floor
Figure 2-12
Liner-Floor Liquid-Film Flow Patterns – Side-Entry Breech
For a bottom-entry elbow, the droplets entrained in the incoming gas-flow will
typically impact in a zone starting on the outside radius of the elbow at an
elevation corresponding approximately to the roof of the inlet duct and extending
vertically approximately 1–1.5 liner diameters (Figure 2-13). Similar to the side-
entry breech, finer droplets will impact along the top of the impact zone, and
larger droplets will impact along the bottom. Secondary gas flows generated by
the 90° elbow into the liner will drag a large portion of the liquid collected on the
2-24
rear wall of the liner upward. Then it will be dragged circumferentially around to
the inside radius of the inlet elbow, where it will encounter a lower vertical gas
velocity. It will then flow downward until it either re-entrains back into the gas
from the top of the duct, or it will flow circumferentially downward on either
side of the inlet duct toward the bottom of the elbow. In this latter case, there is a
high probability that the liquid will be shredded off of the wall by recirculation
zones located along the walls of the elbow near the inside radius. Liquid that
makes it to the floor of the inlet elbow will tend to pool there, because the
horizontal gas velocity along the floor is not high enough to drag the liquid back
up the outside radius of the elbow.
Reentrainment
Uniform
Liquid Film Flow
Downward
Liquid Film
Flow From
Upper Liner
Circumferential
Liquid Film Flow Upward Film
Flow
Downward
Flow in Flow
Separation
Circumferential
Liquid Film Flow
Droplet
Deposition
Zone
Downward
Gas Flow Film Flow
Droplet Reentrainment
Liquid Pooling on Inlet from High Intensity Gas REAR WALL OF
Duct Floor Recirculation LINER
Figure 2-13
Lower-Liner Droplet- and Liquid-Film Flow Patterns – Bottom-Entry Elbow
Stacks are typically designed so that condensed liquid on the liner wall will flow
downward for collection. The stack-design velocity is the average gas velocity in
the liner defined as the volume flow rate divided by the area of liner. As discussed
above, for both inlet arrangements, the flue gas that enters the liner impacts the
wall opposite the inlet and forms a region of locally high gas velocity along the
rear wall of the liner or outer radius of a bottom-entry elbow. The gas velocity is
usually high enough to drag the deposited liquid vertically up the liner wall until
the secondary-flow vortices are strong enough to pull the liquid circumferentially
around and out of the high-velocity region. If the vertical gas velocity is not
sufficiently high, the deposited liquid will either move very slowly upward or not
2-25
move at all. Both of these situations are undesirable, because as more liquid is
deposited in this region, the liquid-film thickness will increase until the surface
becomes unstable, wavelets are formed, and droplets will begin re-entraining
back into the gas flow. There is little chance that many of these droplets can be
recollected before exiting the liner as SLD. If this situation occurs, liquid-
collection devices in the form of “V”- shaped gutters and other types of liquid
collectors will need to be installed in the droplet-impact region to mechanically
help the liquid move circumferentially into the secondary-flow vortices. These
devices will be discussed in more detail in Section 3.11.8.
Liquid-film flows in the upper liner should be better behaved. In this region, the
gas-flow profile moving up the liner is more uniform, and the liquid film formed
as a result of thermal and adiabatic condensation should flow downward without
obstruction.
The motion of a vertical liquid film exposed to a gas flow is a function of many
variables. The most important of these are the surface tension of the liquid being
used, the gas velocity near the film, the roughness of the surface, and the liquid-
film thickness (which is itself a function of the condensation rate, the film-
drainage rate, and the height over which the condensation takes place).
Figure 2-14
Wetting vs. Nonwetting Surfaces
2-26
If liquid if deposited on a vertical, smooth wetting surface at a uniform rate
without being exposed to a vertical gas flow, the resulting liquid film will flow
easily downward under the influence of gravity. If a vertical gas flow is applied to
this wetting surface, a new force—gas-shear—is added to the downward-flowing
liquid film. This force produces an upward drag on the liquid film, slowing its
downward movement. As the gas velocity is increased, the gas-shear force
increases, and more drag is applied to the liquid film—further slowing it down.
Because the liquid is being deposited at a constant rate, the reduction in the
downward flow of the film means that the drainage rate is reduced and the
inventory of liquid held on the plate is increased. This process results in an
increase in the thickness of the liquid film. The thickness is not uniform; it
occurs in waves and ripples on the film surface.
At gas velocities below 50 ft/s (15.2 m/s), the liquid-film motion will be
downward, and the surface of the film will be smooth. Between 50 and 60 ft/s
(15.2–18.3 m/s) the liquid-film motion will still be downward, but waves and
ripples will form on the surface of the film.
At 70–85 ft/s (21.4–25.9 m/s), the magnitude of the gas-shear force equals that
of the gravitational force, and the liquid film stops moving and is stagnant on the
wall. At this point, the thickness of the liquid film continues to increase, until the
surface of the film becomes unstable and starts to break down. Waves are formed
of sufficient size to allow the gas flow to get under them, forming “white caps”
not unlike waves on the ocean. Large quantities of liquid are shed back into the
gas flow. If left unchanged, a steady-state condition will be reached, in which all
of the liquid deposited on the plate must leave the plate as re-entrained droplets.
Operating under these conditions, all of the liquid condensing within a stack
liner would leave the liner as SLD.
If the gas velocity is increased to 85–90 ft/s (25.9–27.4 m/s), the gas-shear forces
will begin to dominate the gravitational forces, and the liquid film will begin to
move again—but now vertically up the surface. Significant quantities of droplets
will still be re-entrained off of the surface of the liquid film. Liquid will begin to
move toward the top edge of the plate for drainage. If uncollected, this liquid will
flow over the top of the plate or be re-entrained back into the gas flow.
Additional increases in gas velocity will increase the vertical speed of the liquid
film.
2-27
At velocities above 90 ft/s (24.7 m/s), re-entrainment off of the liquid-film
surface is significantly reduced (although not eliminated), and the vertical motion
of the liquid film is well-defined. This condition can often exist at the outlet of a
wet stack incorporating an outlet choke.
Figure 2-15
Liquid-Film Flow Patterns on a Smooth, Vertical Wetting Surface vs. Vertical Gas
Velocity
The observations described above apply to the ideal case of a smooth wetting
surface. In reality, the surfaces are anything but smooth. On alloy liners, there are
horizontal weld beads; on FRP liners, there are joints between adjacent liner
cans; and on brick liners, there are horizontal mortar joints every 2–4 in (50–100
mm) up the entire height of the liner. These disturbances are referred to as liner-
wall discontinuities.
2-28
When the liquid film flows over a horizontal discontinuity, there is a potential for
the upward- flowing flue gas to get under the liquid, resulting in the formation of
droplets. A portion of these droplets will be re-entrained back into the gas flow
and will exit the liner as SLD.
The major areas of concern in an alloy liner are the horizontal weld beads joining
the plates together. Vertical weld beads will have little to no impact on droplet
re-entrainment. But horizontal weld beads on alloy liners can cause liquid re-
entrainment in the stack at gas-flow velocities as low as 40 ft/s (12 m/s) if not
properly made. The height of the horizontal weld beads is critical, and their
height should be the minimum possible that does not exceed the standard for
good weld quality: 1/8 in (3.1 mm). Grinding all horizontal beads flush to the
base material is ideal. However, laboratory studies have demonstrated that, for
gas velocities up to 50 ft/s (15.2 m/s), a 1/8-in (3.1-mm) bead height on a butt
joint will result in minimal levels of droplet formation (assuming the bead is
smoothly rounded). Slight increases above this velocity—55–60 ft/s (16.7–18.3
m/s)—resulted in liquid holdup along the joint and the start of droplet re-
entrainment back into the gas flow. At velocities above 65 ft/s (19.8 m/s), droplet
re-entrainment becomes more pronounced. Figure 2-16 details liquid-flow
patterns over a 1/8-in (3.1-mm) weld bead as a function of gas velocity.
Droplets
Reentrained From
Surface
Film Thickening
Wave/Rivulets Due to Liquid
Liquid Flows Forming on Surface Holdup
Over Weld Bead
Droplets
Reentrained
Weld Bead
From Weld Bead
Liquid Starts to
Holdup Over Gas gets Under
Liquid at Weld
Gas Flow
Weld Bead
With some Bead and Waves
Reentrainment
Down Flow of
Liquid Reduced or
Stopped
Gas Velocity Gas Velocity Gas Velocity >65
<50 ft/s (15.2 m/s) 55 - 60 ft/s (16.8-18.3 m/s) ft/s (19.8 m/s)
Figure 2-16
Liquid Flow over 1/8-in (3.1-mm) Weld Beads
The rings of an FRP liner should be joined together with material mostly on the
outside of the liner. Only a minimal inward protrusion with smooth transitions is
recommended. FRP liner-can joints are typically lap-type joints with interior and
exterior overlays (Figure 2-17). A 6:1 to 10:1 taper should be used from the
stiffener ring—top and bottom—back to the base-liner material, with smooth
transitions.
2-29
Liner Wall
Exterior
Interior Reinforcing
Reinforcing Band Band
(Minimum Thickness
Possible)
Detail 1
Figure 2-17
FRP Liner-Can Joints – Internal-Taper Requirement
Special attention must be paid to brick liners. Every effort must be made to
ensure the proper radial alignment of the bricks and to strike the mortar flush
with the inside surface of the liner. If the maximum projection or offset between
bricks on the interior surface of the liner exceeds 1/8 in (3.1 mm), re-entrainment
may occur from the liner surface. Extruded or depressed mortar joints can be
significant sources of liquid re-entrainment back into the gas flow. The
construction should be clean, without mortar smeared on the inside surface of the
liner, because this could also create a location for droplet re-entrainment.
2-30
2.6 Re-entrainment
The liquid on the duct and liner surfaces produced by deposition and
condensation flows in the form of film or rivulets is governed by gravitational,
surface-tension, and gas-shear forces. The gas-shear force can shear the liquid off
of the surface, causing re-entrainment. This phenomenon is the most frequent
source of SLD and fallout of liquid droplets in the vicinity of the stack.
2-31
2.7 Recommended Liner-Gas Velocities
Wet stack designers should select the liner diameter based on liquid-collection
considerations. Selecting the liner diameter so that the gas velocity is below the
critical re-entrainment velocity increases the opportunity for liquid to be collected
within the stack rather than being emitted with the gas stream. The critical re-
entrainment velocity varies depending on the liner’s surface roughness, material,
and quality of construction. Surfaces with high levels of discontinuities and
roughness, such as those of a brick liner, will be more likely to re-entrain liquid,
in comparison to smoother surfaces, such as those of an alloy or an FRP liner.
Therefore, the liner diameter will depend upon the liner material selected. For
instance, brick liners will require a larger-diameter liner than an alloy or FRP
liner with the same gas-flow rate. Although there are many economic drivers for
minimization of the stack-liner diameter, it must be clearly understood that the
primary controlling parameter for effective wet stack operation is that of
minimizing the potential for SLD.
The stack-liner velocity recommendations in the original EPRI Wet Stack Design
Guide were developed on the basis of laboratory testing of different liner-material
surfaces. These materials were tested in a vertical wind tunnel under ideal
conditions, and their surface behaviors were characterized without weld beads or
other surface discontinuities. Since this testing was performed, a large amount of
valuable field experience has been obtained. On the basis of this experience, the
recommended velocities have been slightly reduced to accommodate “practical
variabilities” in the quality of the field installation, such as weld-bead heights on
alloy liners and joints in FRP liners. The currently recommended liner-gas
velocities are presented in Table 2-1. These slightly reduced values also provide
the plant some margin to account for increases in the flue gas flow rate as a result
of changes in fuel source, increases in plant efficiency, and/or future increases in
plant output. On the basis of this experience, it is now recommended that alloy
and FRP liners should be designed for a maximum velocity of 55 ft/s (16.8 m/s),
whereas brick liners (which inherently have a less smooth surface) should be
designed for 45 ft/s (13.7 m/s). The maximum recommended liner velocity for
borosilicate block is 60 ft/s (18.3 m/s). This recommendation takes into account
the significant increase in the effective surface area afforded by the closed-cell
surface structure of the material and the resulting increased surface-tension forces
holding the liquid to the material.
2-32
Table 2-1
Recommended Stack-Liner Velocities for Wet Operation
*Laboratory testing of coating material is recommended to finalize liner velocity for favorable wet
operation.
A number of different liner-coating materials have been suggested for wet stack
operation, ranging from gunite to spray-on polymers. Most of these coatings
have not been evaluated for determination of their recommended liner velocity
for favorable wet operation. The favorable velocity for coatings is highly
dependent upon the smoothness and wetting nature of the material after it has
been applied within the liner. Laboratory testing of the coating system should be
performed before a liner velocity is finalized for a specific material and
application. A velocity of 55 ft/s (16.8 m/s) is recommended for materials that
result in a smooth, discontinuity-free surface within the liner.
Stack liquid discharge (SLD) can occur at any time, even from a well-operating
stack. Disturbances in the operating conditions of the plant and/or absorber as
well as ambient weather conditions can initiate the start of an SLD event.
However, SLD is only a problem if the droplets are large enough (>100 μm) to
be detectable at ground level near the stack.
The amount of liquid discharged at the top of the stack is a result of gas- and
liquid-flow processes that take place in the ductwork and stack system between
the discharge of the absorbers and the top of the stack liner. The source of the
liquid discharge can be categorized by the liquid-flow process and by the droplet
sizes as follows:
2-33
Liquid droplets carried from the absorber to the top of the stack liner by the
gas stream without depositing along the gas-flow path. Only small droplets
(10–100 μm) travel through the ducts without complete deposition. This
means that most conventional scrubber designs, with horizontal ducts
connecting the absorber to the stack, will result in deposition of most large
droplets on the duct surfaces.
Droplets re-entrained from liquid deposition and condensation on duct and
liner surfaces that can be discharged. These are large drops, and they are
usually the major contributors to the SLD.
Droplets formed by bulk condensation. These represent a large liquid-flow
rate but are very fine droplets (<10 μm), which have a negligible effect on the
SLD detectable at ground level.
Liquid deposited and condensed on the liner, which flows upward in those
areas of the stack where the gas velocity is higher than the flow-reversal
velocity for the liner material. The droplet sizes re-entrained at the top of the
liner, where velocities are highest, can be quite large (300–6000 μm),
depending on the liner-top geometry. The upper section of a stack choke is
usually in this mode of upward liquid flow.
The quantity and location of the fallout at a given plant is a function of the
droplet-size distribution of the discharged liquid and the local atmospheric
conditions—such as ambient temperature, wind, relative humidity, and
turbulence level. The very small droplets of the bulk condensation make the gas
plume white and visible. The plume is cooled as it mixes with the surrounding
air. This cooling results in condensation on the small droplets in the plume.
These droplets are typically 1–10 μm in diameter and therefore do not fall to the
ground and cannot be detected. The mixing with the drier air away from the
stack causes droplet evaporation. The balance between the cooling and mixing
processes defines the length of the visible plume. Therefore, it is a function of the
ambient air temperature and the air relative humidity.
One of the major objectives in developing an effective wet stack design is to limit
SLD to a minimum acceptable level. The goal is to limit the droplet size that will
exit the stack. If the droplets are small enough, they will evaporate before hitting
the ground. However, if the droplets are large, they will land on nearby surfaces
such as plant structures, equipment, and cars. The wet stack survey indicated that
the fallout of liquid droplets, if noticeable, usually occurs within a half-mile
radius of the stack.
A cross wind at the top of the stack will deflect the plume from its vertical path.
As the cross wind increases, the plume may become partially entrained into the
low-pressure region behind the stack windscreen. This phenomenon is known as
plume downwash.
Designing a liner for favorable wet operation will decrease the potential for SLD.
However, such a design increases the potential for plume downwash at elevated
wind velocities (Figure 2-18). During downwash episodes, saturated flue gas
comes in contact with the liner extension, stack hood, and stack shell. This
contact can lead to deterioration of the stack construction materials because of
exposure to acid in the flue gas. It also increases the potential for ice formation
on the top of the stack. The potential deterioration problem is a long-term
situation caused by continual exposure to SO2, which has been evidenced in
recent years by the deteriorating conditions of tombstones, stone buildings, and
the top of stack shells. The icing problem can occur at below-freezing conditions
all winter long, every winter, and creates a potential danger to people and
property.
Figure 2-18
Plume Downwash
The second most important ratio is the shell outer diameter to the liner inside
diameter at the top of the shell. A larger shell- to liner-diameter ratio results in
increased downwash potential at the same momentum ratio.
Plume downwash is most likely to occur during reduced unit load operation, in
which stack-discharge velocities are reduced, and during high wind conditions.
Plume downwash is least likely to occur under the opposite conditions of high
unit load operation and low wind velocity.
For a multiple-flue stack, the equivalent momentum ratios for initiation of plume
downwash are higher, and they vary with the relative wind direction. This
difference in momentum ratios occurs because the shell- to liner-diameter ratio is
larger for multiple-flue stacks. The reduced static pressure in the wind vortices
generated off the stack shell and liner extensions can draw the flue gas into a
downwash pattern along the stack shell. In the process, the saturated flue gases
that are drawn into the vortices come into contact with the roof and sides of the
stack liner and shell.
The interaction of a plume with the cross wind is a function of the following
parameters:
Liner-extension diameter
Shell diameter
Liner-extension length
Roof shape
Number of liners
2-36
Wind direction, velocity, and air density at the top of the stack
The annual frequency of wind occurrence as a function of wind velocity
Liner exit-gas velocity and gas density
Plume buoyancy due to flue gas temperature
Ambient air temperature
The momentum ratio (MR) is the most important fluid-dynamic force ratio that
controls plume downwash. The individual parameters within this ratio have the
following importance for wet stack plume downwash:
1. Flue gas density (ρflue gas) is almost constant for saturated flue gas at about
0.066 lb/ft3 (1.06 kg/m3) at sea-level ambient pressure.
2. Wind density (ρwind) varies with ambient temperature at sea-level ambient
pressure from 0.090 lb/ft3 (1.44 kg/m3) at -20°F (-29°C) to 0.071 lb/ft3
(1.14 kg/m3) at 100°F (38°C) (an approximately 25% spread).
3. Reduced ambient pressure for plants at high elevations above sea level
reduces density by 10–20%, but it changes both density values by the same
amount.
4. The flue gas discharge velocity (Vflue gas) is at the highest stack elevation and is
set by the liner or choke discharge diameter and the low-load to high-load
flue gas volume flow rate. This value can range from 20 to 120 ft/s (6–37
m/s) for a wet stack plume discharge, including partial-load operation.
When reviewing the wind data, a judgment must be made when selecting a
worst-case wind magnitude and cumulative frequency of occurrence (to eliminate
unusually high windstorms of short duration that seldom occur).
Items 1, 2, 3, and 5 above can usually be set for a specific plant site. Item 4, the
flue gas discharge velocity, must then be selected to satisfy the requirements for
Liquid re-entrainment from the inside of the liner
Liquid collection and drainage
Plume downwash
2-37
Unit load schedule versus time
Wind-rose data
Geometry of the top of the stack (liner inner diameter, liner-extension
height, shell outer diameter, roof or cap geometry)
Extent of downwash allowed:
- None (may not be achievable)
- On liner extension
- On roof or hood*
- On stack shell
Cumulative time of downwash (per year):
- Zero (may not be achievable)
- Less than 2 days (0.5%)
- 2–4 days (0.5–1%)*
- 4–8 days (1–2%)
*The extent of downwash and the cumulative time of downwash marked are suggested
values at which to start the evaluation of downwash and its effect on stack-discharge
velocity.
A computational fluid dynamic (CFD) flow-model study of the stack top for a
specific plant and geometry is required for an accurate evaluation of the extent of
plume downwash and the cumulative time of downwash. Presented below are
some approximate guidelines that can be used for the preliminary evaluation of
the expected degree of plume downwash and for the selection of starting
geometries of the stack top for CFD model selection.
For all stack-top geometries discussed below, the stack-shell diameter should be
as small as practicable to contain the number of liners.
2-38
Single-Flue Stacks
1. For an angled hood and no liner extension:
- MR1 = 3–5
- MR2 = 2–3
2. For a flat or angled roof and a short liner extension of 0.5 liner diameter:
- MR1 and MR2 expected to be lower (10–20%)
Two-Flue Stacks
1. For a flat roof plus a liner extension of about one liner diameter:
Best wind direction (prevailing-wind direction in line with the axis of the
two flues)
- MR1 = 1.5–2.0
- MR2 = 1.1–1.5
2-39
the lowest cumulative time for plume downwash for a specific combination of
flue gas–discharge velocity and stack-top geometry.
Whether ice forms on the top of the stack depends on the temperature of the
stack surface, the temperature of the mixture of saturated flue gas and cold
ambient wind, and on whether water vapor will condense out of the mixture. Ice
formation is most likely at plants where below-freezing temperatures are
common and where they last for extended periods of time.
2-40
The roof of a The stack roof usually does not directly touch the liners, which
multiple-liner stack permits expansion and movement of the liners. The roof can
receive heat from the stack annulus. Liquid must be drained from
the roof area. Preferably, drains should be located on the inside of
the annulus to keep them from freezing.
Railings The metal railings at the top of the shell will quickly cool to the
temperature of the mixture of the flue gas and the ambient air, and
they will be the first surfaces to become iced. In other words, these
railings are the most likely places for ice to form.
Platform near top of A metal platform on the outside of the stack near the top can also
stack be exposed to low concentrations of flue gas. Because it is metal
and is exposed to the ambient- and flue gas–mixture temperature, it
may also experience occasional ice buildup. Such platforms are
the second most likely places for ice to form.
Shell If ice forms on the shell, it can be expected to be on the downwind
side of the stack. This condition occurs when visible downwash can
be seen on the downwind side of the stack shell.
Icing can result in significant ice buildups along the top of the stack. These ice
buildups can dislodge and fall, potentially causing serious damage to people and
equipment on the ground.
The potential for icing can be reduced by employing the following steps:
1. Select a stack-liner discharge velocity that minimizes plume downwash over
the expected operating range of the unit at the existing local wind conditions
and that is consistent with other design objectives.
2. During cold ambient temperature conditions with high winds, run the unit at
near full load. Employing this operating procedure may be natural under
such conditions, because more power is consumed in below-freezing weather.
3. Use heated annulus air or electrical heating elements to heat the stack hood,
roof, or other areas where ice forms on the top of the stack.
4. Do not use insulation on sloped rain hoods constructed of a corrosion-
resistant material.
5. Use a parapet wall instead of metal railings around the top of the liner shell.
A parapet wall is usually an extension of the concrete shell above the roof.
There is normally less icing on a concrete parapet than on a metal railing,
and the parapet wall will contain ice that could fall from the liner or liner
extension.
2-41
Section 3: Practical Design
Recommendations
3.1 Introduction
Having presented the basic understanding of the fundamentals of gas and liquid
flows within wet duct/stack systems in Section 2, we can now turn our attention
to the use of these fundamentals for practical applications. Essentially, all new
and retrofit WFGD units are typically designed for wet stack operation. During
the initial design phases of the project, a feasibility study is normally conducted
to determine such factors as layout, materials of construction, economics, and
construction time. The Revised Wet Stack Design Guide addresses what needs to
be considered during the feasibility-study phase of a new or retrofit wet stack
project. For example: Will the existing stack-liner exit velocity be acceptable for
wet stack operation? Can the existing stack be modified, or will a new stack be
required?
Wet stacks have been designed and operated effectively at new WFGD
installations for many years, thanks largely to the guidance provided to the
industry by the original EPRI Wet Stacks Design Guide. Although most of the
design criteria presented in this original guide is still valid, experience with its
practical implementations has shown that some revisions and updates are
warranted. In each situation, the rules affecting a system’s favorability for wet
operation are the same. However, there are application-specific issues that need
to be addressed. These issues are discussed in detail in the following sections of
this guide.
The recommendations presented in this revised design guide will both help the
designer make decisions that will affect wet operation and provide the necessary
background information to understand why the recommendation is being made.
3-1
3.2 New Wet Stack Designs
Stacks that operate under reheat, partial bypass, or full bypass generally have been
designed for a higher gas velocity in the liner than new wet stacks. When
operating the stack wet, by eliminating reheat, the gas velocity in the liner
decreases and the density increases. Wet operation results in system-pressure-loss
decreases of 5–10%, compared to the system-pressure loss with a reheat
temperature rise of 30–60°F (17–33°C).
Operating an existing liner that is converted to wet stack operation can often
result in a gas velocity in excess of the recommended liner velocities previously
presented in Table 2-1 for wet liners; this higher gas velocity makes liquid
collection within the liner more difficult. Dry stacks were typically designed for
higher gas velocities. Existing liners that are converted to wet operation and have
velocities that exceed these recommendations may require that the majority of
the liquid be collected in the absorber top and the absorber-outlet ductwork. The
use of additional and more-extensive liquid collectors in the absorber top and the
absorber-outlet ductwork will need to be evaluated. Droplets entrained within
the gas flow will impinge upon the liner, forming a liquid film. Because of the
unfavorably high gas velocity in the liner, a large fraction of the liquid may
become re-entrained back into the gas flow. If the wet-gas velocity is higher than
the flow-reversal velocity for the liner, all deposited and condensed liquid will
flow upward to the top of the liner and be re-entrained there.
If gas velocities in the ductwork are also high, liquid collection in the ductwork
may also be difficult; therefore, the gas velocities in the absorber-outlet ductwork
should be evaluated as well. Ductwork for reheated or bypass gas is typically sized
for 60 ft/s (18 m/s) or higher. Ductwork for wet stacks should be sized for 50 ft/s
(15 m/s) or lower to minimize the potential for liquid re-entrainment back into
3-2
the gas flow. Critical re-entrainment velocities in the ductwork are difficult to
determine and are not available.
If the liner velocity is lower than the range of recommended maximum values,
the liquid re-entrainment rate is lower and the need for additional liquid
collectors is reduced.
A single-stack liner that serves multiple FGD modules may produce large
volumes of liquid for drainage. Drainage-pipe diameters need to be sized
accordingly. If the liquid collected from multiple FGD modules is returned to
the FGD process, the volume of liquid may be too large to be returned to a single
FGD module without significant changes to its operational characteristics.
Initially, water enters the duct and the stack by droplet and water carryover, with
the saturated flue gas passing through the mist eliminators of the scrubbers. The
liquid accumulates on surfaces by deposition of liquid droplets and by vapor
condensation from the saturated flue gas.
Most of the liquid suspended in the gas will be deposited on the walls and
internal structures (turning vanes, dampers, trusses) by impingement, caused by
the departure of the trajectory of a liquid droplet from the streamline flow in a
curved gas-flow field. Some deposition also occurs because of turbulent
deposition, caused by the turbulence-induced motion of small droplets in a
direction perpendicular to the main gas-flow direction. The liquid on the walls
and internal structures will be in the form of films, rivulets, attached droplets,
and (in some cases) large pools on horizontal surfaces. The gas-shear force can
drag the liquid through the system (even upwards against gravity and wall
friction) if the gas velocities are high enough; it can also shear off and re-entrain
droplets from the liquid flowing on the walls and internals. Some small droplets
may negotiate the gas-flow path from the scrubber outlet to the top of the stack
without contacting a solid surface.
3-3
During normal operation, the largest contributor to the liquid flow on a liner
surface is condensation, rather than deposition of the droplet carryover from the
mist eliminators. The condensation on the liner cannot be measured in a
laboratory-scale model of the stack. Therefore, analytical calculations are required
to define the amount of condensed liquid-flow rate in the stack.
Liquid condensation occurs continuously on all wet duct and stack-liner surfaces
because the flow gas is saturated and the liner's inside surface temperatures are
lower than the gas dew-point temperature. But the rate of condensation per unit
surface area can vary significantly, depending on geometry, materials,
temperatures, and wind speed.
The duct and stack condensation rate cannot be measured in experimental flow
models. A 2-D condensation analysis is satisfactory for calculating the
condensation rate that accounts for stack geometry, mass flow, heat loss, gas
psychometric conditions, and the ambient atmospheric-pressure variation along
the height of the stack. Assuming axial symmetry for the stack, all the variables
can be described or calculated as a function of vertical height with computer
programs developed for this purpose as design tools.
The major conclusions drawn from the results of these calculations are as follows:
The bulk condensation in the liner is a function of stack height.
For brick liners, the pressurizing-air leakage through the liner increases the
bulk condensation by additional cooling. Thermal condensation also
increases because of the colder annulus air used for pressurization.
The wall condensation is directly proportional to the temperature difference
between the gas and the ambient air.
With the exception of borosilicate block (which has an inherently high
insulating value), the choice of liner material only marginally affects the wall-
condensation rate, because the thermal resistance of the liner is a small
fraction of the total thermal resistance between the flue gas and the ambient
air.
The wall condensation may be reduced by a factor of about four by insulating
the outside of alloy or FRP liners with a 2-in (0.05-m) mineral wool layer.
Increasing the insulation thickness from 2 in (0.05 m) to 4 in (0.1 m) will
result in a small reduction in condensation rate. Therefore, more than 2 in
(0.05 m) of insulation is seldom required. Insulation does not eliminate the
liner condensation, but it can reduce it significantly.
3-4
A wind-speed increase of 20–40 mph (9–18 m/s) increases the condensation
rate by only a few percentage points, because the convective-heat transfer
levels off above 20 mph.
Having more than two liners in a shell increases the total wall-condensation
rate by about 5%. This increase is mainly attributable to a higher
condensation rate on the liner extension above the shell.
The results of the condensation calculation are used to design the liquid
collectors and to plan for the liquid-disposal system. The estimated ranges of the
liquid-flow rates in the wet duct and stack of a typical 550-MW unit are listed in
Table 3-1. These numerical values help the stack designer estimate the amount
of liquid flow to be controlled and accounted for in a wet duct/stack system.
Table 3-1
Estimated Ranges of Liquid Flows in the Wet Duct/Stack of a Typical 550-MW
Unit
All the droplet-producing sources are controlled primarily by the local gas
velocity. The two basic mechanisms for producing liquid droplets are the
shear force caused by the local gas velocity and the dynamic pressure of the
gas flow at local flow disturbances on the solid surfaces. The particle-size
range for re-entrained droplets is primarily 300–6,000 µm.
3-5
3.5 Absorber Design and Placement
There are many types of WFGD absorber designs in use around the world.
These include, but are not limited to, open-spray towers (with and without liquid
hold-up trays), dual-contact absorbers, jet-bubbling reactors, venturi scrubbers,
and horizontal gas-flow weir or duct-type absorbers. All absorbers incorporate
mist eliminators at their outlet to ensure that the gas flow exiting into the ducts
toward the stack or other downstream equipment has a minimum quantity of
suspended droplets.
After the gasses pass through an absorber’s mist-eliminator section, they are
directed to the absorber outlet, which connects to the ductwork leading to the
stack. In the outlet hood, the flue gas is accelerated from the mist-eliminator
outlet velocity to the duct velocity—typically 50 ft/s (15.2 m/s) for wet operation.
Absorber outlets can be either horizontal or vertical, and either rectangular or
round in shape, depending on the design of the outlet ducting. Absorbers with
horizontal outlets tend to be rectangular, whereas absorbers with vertical outlets
tend to be round.
The proper design of power-plant ducting is detailed in [4]. The design of a duct
that is to operate in a wet environment is basically the same as that for a dry duct.
However, some considerations specific to wet operation must be addressed.
Properly designed ducting with effective mist-elimination and liquid-collection
systems can result in a system that is very favorable for wet operation.
3-7
3.6.1 Guidelines for Selection of Geometry for Wet Ducts
The following three objectives need to be achieved by the design and the
operation of a wet duct and stack system without reheat:
Minimum re-entrainment of the deposited liquid by the gas shear and
turbulence
Maximum deposition and separation of the liquid on the duct walls, baffles,
turning vanes, and stack liners
Good collection and protected drainage of the liquid from the duct and stack
system
In addition, special care is needed if an ID fan located in the wet portion of the
system is used. See Section 3.8.2 for guidelines on these components.
The selection of wet duct design-area average-velocity levels are based on the
following considerations:
The effect of velocity and velocity head on pressure loss and the costs
associated with the fan-energy requirement
The upper limit of the velocity that starts to entrain liquid droplets from the
walls and wall-related discontinuities
The movement of liquid films, rivulets, and droplets along the wall because
of gravity and gas-drag forces
The incorporation of liquid collectors and drains to prevent entrainment of
liquid from surfaces and remove it from the duct system
The addition of liquid collectors will add a small amount of additional pressure
loss as a result of the contraction and expansion of the gas flow to get past the
liquid collectors.
For wet ducts with saturated gas flow downstream of WFGD modules, the duct-
design velocity levels are limited by high gas-velocity droplet re-entrainment
values. Suggested maximum design-area average-velocity values for different wet
duct design situations are presented below. The design-area average velocities
used can be any value less than these. It is necessary that liquid collectors and
drains be designed, optimized, and evaluated by an experimental two-phase
laboratory-model test for each installation.
3-8
1. 65 fps (20 m/s): This maximum velocity level should be used if the following
duct features are present:
- Any duct with an upward slant of less than 30°, and in which most of the
duct is horizontal or sloped downward. Some sections with vertical,
upward, smooth duct slants (60–90°) could also be included if the
velocity for the stack design is compatible.
- Duct components are less aerodynamic than those of Item 1 above,
but are still reasonably good.
- A few internal trusses, beams, and surface discontinuities are allowed
near the stack, but no louver dampers can be near the stack.
- Ducts have some restrictions on vane extensions to minimize cost,
but no restrictions on liquid-collector design.
2. 50 fps (15 m/s): This maximum velocity level should be used if the
following duct features are present:
- Ducts have several or numerous sections that slant upward by 30–
60°angles from the horizontal.
- Duct components are aerodynamically crude and include sharp
corners.
- Ducts have no restrictions on internal trusses, gussets beams, surface
discontinuities, expansion joints, or louver dampers.
- Ducts have some restrictions on vanes, baffles, and liquid-collector
installation.
If higher velocities must be used, then the re-entrained liquid could still be
collected by the installation of more extensive baffles and liquid collectors in the
stack bottom.
3-9
The following duct components have desirable features for inclusion in wet duct
sections:
Horizontal large-angle bends for elbows, junctions, and manifolds with
several large vanes or baffles that can act as impingement and collection
surfaces
Vertical to horizontal elbows with large vanes that can act as impingement
and collection surfaces
Ducts that are horizontal or sloped downward, in which water will easily flow
on surfaces in the direction of the gas flow
Rounded inner corners on all bends
The use of a few large vanes in bends that can have vertical or inclined liquid
collectors on the outlet edges of the vanes. The vanes may also have extended
trailing edges with inclined trailing-edge collectors for improved collection
and drainage.
Expansion joints are natural collection regions and must have drains installed
to prevent overflow and re-entrainment. Drains must be designed to prevent
flow of air into the flue gas duct. The flexible portion of the expansion joint
must not protrude into the duct during plant operation.
The following duct components have undesirable features for inclusion in wet
duct sections:
Ducts that slope upwards on the floor or roof, because liquid can flow back
against the gas flow and be re-entrained.
Horizontal to vertical upward-vaned and unvaned bends, because the liquid
wants to flow downward as a result of gravity against the gas flow. This
situation cannot be avoided in the stack bottom. Special liquid collectors are
needed in these bends.
Internal pipe trusses, gussets perpendicular to the gas flow, louver dampers,
and structural beams located near the stack entrance where liquid can
impinge and be re-entrained as larger droplets.
Steps or discontinuities in the duct walls at flanges, dampers, and expansion
joints—particularly near the stack.
Sharp corners on elbows, junctions, or manifold entrances where liquid can
be re-entrained.
Unprotected natural liquid-pool areas on the floors where gas flow can re-
entrain liquid from the pool surfaces. These areas can be protected to prevent
re-entrainment.
Location of dampers close to vaned bends can result in undesirable flow
interactions.
A large number of small vanes in bends, because they would require liquid
collectors on each vane.
3-10
In a field installation, liquid collectors and drains will include some of the
following types of devices, fabricated out of corrosion-resistant materials:
Gutters on walls and vanes constructed from angles and channels
Vane extensions and baffles constructed from plate material
Protection covers for water films or pools constructed from grids or
perforated plates
Drains made from pipes and properly located
To optimize the selection and design of these liquid collectors and drains
for a specific installation, experimental two-phase flow-model tests are
recommended. These tests will provide the designer with a high level of
confidence for successful operation without significant SLD.
Ideally, the inside of the ducting used for wet operation should be as smooth as
possible, with a minimum of discontinuities to act as sites for droplet re-
entrainment back into the gas flow. However, some structures are often required,
and their negative impact on wet operation must be understood and—to the
extent possible—minimized.
To the extent possible, all structural supports should be located on the exterior of
ducts used for wet operation. Internal bracing is often installed in rectangular
ducts on retrofit units that originally operated dry. Horizontal bracing is also
commonly used to support the tall side-walls of breech openings on FRP liners
with side-entry breeches. These internal support structures are not favorable for
wet operation because they provide additional impingement surfaces and re-
entrainment sites for liquid droplets. Liquid collectors should be designed for
these braces, which reduce the re-entrainment of large droplets.
3-11
LIQUID FILM LIQUID FILM
FLOW TO WALL FLOW TO
CENTER OF
DUCT WALL DUCT
DROPLET
REENTRAINMENT
FROM CENTER OF
DUCT
Figure 3-1
Good and Poor Internal Duct-Truss Arrangements for Wet Operation
Expansion joints are typically required in ducting to allow for thermal expansion
of the ducting as well as to isolate duct sections either structurally and/or
seismically. These duct components represent a special discontinuity, because
they usually have a capacity to store liquid. Thermal-expansion joints represent a
potential liquid re-entrainment area in the ducts. Expansion joints can act as
liquid collectors on the walls, and they should have drains installed along the
floor to remove collected liquid and reduce the possibility of re-entrainment.
Expansion-joint drains are only practical at duct pressures near ambient pressure
downstream of ID fans. At locations where negative pressure exists in the duct,
traps are needed to prevent air leakage into the duct. Other re-entrainment-
control methods may also be needed, such as covering the joint with a sliding
plate.
There are a number of different types of expansion joints in use in wet power-
plant ducting. Duct-expansion joints can range from 8–24 in (0.2–0.6 m) in
width and are fabricated from a corrosion-resistant flexible rubber composite or
elastomeric material. The most typical joint utilizes a flexible boot, which forms a
cavity running around the perimeter of the duct. Some designs incorporate a
reverse boot designed to be nearly flush with the duct-liner surface. Experience
has shown that after a few months of operation, many of these boots have twisted
and inverted, with portions protruding into the gas flow—resulting in increased
potential for liquid re-entrainment back into the gas flow.
3-12
Internal duct-support trusses are often located at the end of duct sections, and as
such, can be located immediately upstream and downstream of an expansion
joint. If the truss members are attached to the floor using a gusset plate, care
must be taken to ensure that the expansion joint is protected from a gas-flow
separation zone formed downwind of the gusset plate(s) (Figure 3.2). This
recirculation zone can be very intense, and it can easily rip water out of the
expansion-joint cavity if the joint is not drained. If such an arrangement exists, it
is highly recommended that a 3–4-ft (0.9–1.2-m)-wide metal plate be placed
over the joint. The plate should be centered immediately behind the gusset plate
for protection from the gas-recirculation zone. The plate will need to be
fabricated from a corrosion-resistant material and will need to be secured in such
a manner that it will not hinder the relative motion between the adjacent duct
sections.
GUSSET PLATE
DUCT FLOOR
RECIRCULATION ZONE
FORMED BEHIND GUSSET
GAS FLOW PLATE
GUSSET PLATE
EXPANSION
JOINT
Figure 3-2
Internal Duct-Truss Gusset Plate
3-13
3.6.1.5 Man-Ways and Test Ports
Man-ways and test ports can act as sites for liquid re-entrainment back into the
gas flow if they are encountered by the moving liquid films within the wet duct
systems. To minimize the potential for liquid re-entrainment, liquid-collection
gutters may be required to direct the moving liquid films around these structures.
Because the size and location of these devices is substantially a function of the
local gas- and liquid-film flow patterns, the need for these devices can only be
identified—and their design finalized—as part of the wet stack physical-flow-
model study required for the overall liquid-collection-system design.
Flow-control devices are often required to optimize the gas-flow patterns and
minimize the pressure losses within duct systems. This requirement is true for
wet as well as dry ducts. However, because of the high cost of corrosion-resistant
materials required for use in this environment, the need for flow controls must be
weighed against the economics of their installation. For example, the fabrication
and installation cost of a turning vane desired for pressure-loss reduction may be
higher than the expected lifetime operating-cost savings attributable to the
reduced system-pressure loss.
Flow-control devices such as small vanes, baffles, and diverters are often
recommended for the elimination of recirculation and/or dead zones where liquid
films will collect and possibly re-entrain droplets back into the gas flow.
All turning vanes and other flow-control devices should be evaluated regarding
their need for trailing-edge liquid-collectors. These devices are often directly
exposed to, and therefore collect the droplets entrained within, the gas flow.
These fine droplets collect as a film. They can then re-entrain back into the gas
flow as larger droplets from the downwind or trailing edges of the device. It this
potential exists, trailing-edge collection gutters will need to be designed and
installed to direct the collected liquid film off of the device and onto the duct
walls or floor for subsequent collection and drainage.
3-14
3.8 Fans
Occasionally, ID fans will be located between the absorbers and the stack of a
utility power plant. In this type of application, the ID fans will operate wet. Only
a few existing FGD systems were designed for wet fans, primarily because of the
high cost associated with the requirements for corrosion-resistant materials and
the inherent problem of rotor imbalance caused by scale buildup. For most
installations, wet fans should be considered only if they can be constructed of
corrosion-resistant alloy and if a spare fan can be installed to permit a regular
maintenance program of cleaning and rebalancing.
Fans are used with WFGDs for system pressure–level control and for the
absorber-pressure loss. The fans are either ID fans or booster fans added to the
ID fan to produce the required pressure rise. Large centrifugal fans are used most
frequently, but axial fans are also used. These fans are mostly located upstream of
the absorber, but sometimes the design places them downstream of the absorbers.
The fans located upstream of the absorber are operating with high gas
temperatures and a lower gas density, which means that a higher-head-rise fan
must be used to produce the pressure loss of the FGD system. They are
downstream of the electrostatic precipitators or bag-houses and encounter only
limited fly-ash erosion. Axial fans are more sensitive to erosion than centrifugal
fans. No fan-liquid collectors are needed.
The carryover from the mist eliminators usually contains water droplets, fly ash,
and scrubber sludge, which cause solids buildup on the blades of the fan
3-15
impellers. Wet fans have to be washed to keep the impellers in balance. The fan-
wash spray has to be designed to work effectively with the specific fan-blade
shape and speeds, spraying periodically or continuously. The fan wash is less
sensitive to the fan-blade design of the axial fans.
To minimize the SLD, liquid collectors are needed. Fans are good liquid
separators, but the liquid has to be captured in the high-velocity gas flow in the
scroll, and in the ducts and the stack downstream of the fan. The centrifugal fans
can be equipped with scroll-liquid collectors especially designed for the high gas
velocity in the scroll. The ducts and the stack may require the usual liquid-
collection system with wet fans, depending on the temperature rise—above
saturation— remaining in the gas entering the stack.
If an ID fan is located in the wet portion of the duct system, the following
steps should be taken:
As much liquid should be collected and drained ahead of the fan as possible.
An on-line periodic fan-wash system should be installed and used to keep the
fan impeller clean and in balance. This system needs to be custom-designed
for the particular fan design.
Liquid collectors should be incorporated into the scroll and the downstream
ducts to collect and drain the fan-wash water.
The power input to the fan may provide a 5–20°F (2.8–11.2°C) reheat of the flue
gas if the liquid-droplet load and its total latent heat of evaporation is minimized.
This reheating will help reduce condensation in the downstream ducts and stack
liner.
Steel, alloy, and FRP liners are typically, but not necessarily, limited to plumb or
constant diameters. Several different support methods are available for these
types of liners. For steel and alloy liners, a common arrangement is to support the
liner at or near the base or breeching entry. The liner is supported in
compression, and bumpers or stay rods are used to provide lateral support.
3-16
RAINHOOD LINER
EXTENSION
PLATFORM
OBSTRUCTION
LIGHTS
REINFORCED
CONCRETE SHELL
BRICK LINER
PLATFORM
LIQUID COLLECTION
GUTTERS
ABSORBER
LINER FLOOR OUTLET DUCT
DRAINS
CONCRETE
PEDESTAL
PRESSURIZATION FOUNDATION
FAN
Figure 3-3
Chimney with Constant-Diameter Brick Liner
3-17
RAINHOOD LINER
EXTENSION
OBSTRUCTION
LIGHTS PLATFORM
STAY RODS
REINFORCED
LINER SUPPORT CONCRETE SHELL
STAY RODS
FRP LINER
PLATFORM
LIQUID COLLECTION
RING
LINER EXPANSION
JOINT
EXPANSION JOINT
LINER SUPPORT
LIQUID COLLECTION
GUTTERS
ABSORBER
OUTLET DUCT
LINER BOTTOM
ENTRY ELBOW
DRAINS
LINER EXPANSION
JOINT
FOUNDATION
Figure 3-4
Chimney with Fiberglass-Reinforced Plastic Liner
3-18
RAINHOOD LINER
EXTENSION
PLATFORM
OBSTRUCTION
LIGHTS
PLATFORM
STIFFENERS (TYP.)
BREECHING DUCT
EXPANSION JOINT
EXPANSION JOINT
LIQUID COLLECTION RING
LINER SUPPORT
LIQUID COLLECTION
GUTTERS
ABSORBER
SLOPED LINER OUTLET DUCT
FLOOR
DRAINS
FOUNDATION
Figure 3-5
Chimney with Metal Liner – Typical for Alloy, Glass-Block, or Protective-Coating
Liner System
Tall steel and alloy liners supported in compression would need to be evaluated
for the cost of increased wall-plate thicknesses, versus providing a second support
level near the top of the chimney to support most of the liner in tension. An
expansion joint would be required above the lower support to accommodate
thermal movements.
3-19
FRP liners are generally supported with the major part of the liner in tension.
Supports are provided at two locations—one near the top and the second near
the breeching level—with an expansion joint located above the breeching level.
Expansion joints in wet stack liners are a problem because they tend to collect
liquid, resulting in complete liquid re-entrainment at the expansion-joint cavities.
Therefore, expansion joints should be avoided or provided with liquid collectors.
If required, expansion joints should be located 1 to 1.5 liner diameters above the
roof of the breeching duct or bottom-entry elbow to ensure that the lower liner is
unobstructed for liquid collection and that liquid film flows to the liner-drainage
points.
Several types of liner materials and coating systems are available and have been
used successfully in WFGD environments. The advantages and disadvantages of
each system must be considered prior to the selection of the liner material or
coating. The following sections describe the most common materials that are
currently considered appropriate for wet stack applications. These materials have
previously been utilized with some degree of success. Other materials and
suppliers may be available and acceptable, and they should be evaluated on a
case-by-case basis. Operating conditions, design conditions, and economics all
play important roles in this decision. The advantages and disadvantages of several
different liner and coating-system options, along with estimated installation
costs, are presented in Table 3-2.
3-20
Table 3-2
Liner Material of Construction
Liner Material or
Advantages Disadvantages
Coating
o o
Maximum 300 F (149 C) (approx.)
gas-temperature exposure
Good corrosion resistance
Fiberglass- Quality control during fabrication
Easy to add liquid-
Reinforced Plastic Compressive strength limitations
collection devices
usually requires two support levels
and expansion joint.
Good corrosion resistance
Good insulator (ductwork
and liner should not be
Cannot tolerate abrasion or
Borosilicate-Glass insulated)
physical and mechanical abuse
Block Ability to retrofit to
Care in installing
existing steel liner systems
Good surface for liquid
flow
Surface discontinuities re-entrain
Good corrosion resistance liquid.
Cost-effective Not recommended in high seismic
Acid-Resistant Brick
Liquid adheres to the areas
porous surface. Maintenance of liner accessories
Annulus pressurization
Surface preparation prior to
Fair corrosion resistance placement
Protective Coating
Ability to retrofit to Frequency of repair and
on Carbon Steel
existing steel liner systems maintenance
Limited acceptable selections
Welding quality control
High material costs
Excellent corrosion Welding seams
Alloy C276
resistance Iron Contamination
Acid cleaning
Condensation
3.9.1.1 Brick
3-21
allows the highest levels. Because of the stringent requirements, Type III brick is
the most difficult and expensive to manufacture. Because of availability
limitations for Type III brick, most brick liners for FGD applications are
constructed using Type II bricks.
The physical properties and chemical requirements for Type I, Type II, and Type
III brick, as defined by ASTM C980, Standard Specification for Industrial
Chimney Lining Brick, are presented in Table 3-3.
Table 3-3
Physical Properties and Chemical Requirements Of Acid-Resistant Brick1
Brick liners use potassium silicate mortar that conforms to the requirements of
ASTM C466, Standard Specification for Chemically Setting Silicate and Silica
Chemical-Resistant Mortars. These inorganic mortars are resistant to most of the
strong acids present in the scrubbed flue gas from coal-fired power plants (except
for significant concentrations of acid fluorides or hydrofluoric acid). Potassium
silicate mortars are more resistant to sulfation than sodium silicate mortars or
other types of silicate-based cements.
Brick liners have been widely used by the power-plant industry. These liners
generally require the lowest initial capital-cost expenditure in comparison to
3-22
other types of liners. However, maintenance for a brick liner can generally be
higher than that for an alloy or FRP liner. Typical maintenance for a brick liner
would include repair of brick cracks, repair or replacement of bands, maintenance
of the pressurization fans, and repair of expansion-joint seals at the rain hood and
breeching.
Careful attention must be paid to the quality of mortar joints in a brick-lined wet
stack. All joints must be struck smooth with the brick surface in order to
eliminate (to the extent possible) horizontal discontinuities on the liner surface.
Mortar protuberances and depressions will act as sites for liquid collection and
re-entrainment back into the gas flow.
Sufficient space should be provided between the inside of the concrete column
and the outside of the liners to allow for inspection and maintenance over the full
height of the stack. A minimum annular space of 2 ft 6 in (0.76 m) is
recommended. If platforms, ladders, and an elevator are located on the interior of
the stack, sufficient annular space needs to be provided for these items. The size
of the annular space should account for differential movements that may occur
between the concrete column and the liner as a result of wind, seismic, or thermal
expansion. Damage to platforms or the liner may occur if sufficient space is not
provided. Access and adequate clearance for clean-out doors and continuous-
emissions-monitoring equipment also needs to be considered. Ports should be
accessible and provide sufficient clearance between the column and liner to insert
EPA test probes. To minimize annular-space requirements, doors can be
provided in the column. Monorails can be used to assist in installation of the
probes. In order to ensure personnel safety, the annular space should be well-
ventilated, especially when an interior access system is used.
Because of the porous characteristics of brick and mortar, brick liners operating
under WFGD conditions should use an annulus-pressurization system. Annulus
pressurization is not needed for other liner materials. An annulus-pressurization
system consists of fans that provide ambient air under positive pressure into the
annular space of the stack, ensuring that permeation of the flue gas and liquids
through the liner and liner cracks is minimized. The pressure created by these
fans should exceed the maximum anticipated positive pressure inside the liner by
a minimum of 1 in Wg (249 Pa). Flue gas and liquids that permeate the liner
3-23
create a highly corrosive environment and can cause damage to the liner bands
and concrete column.
Airtight seals are required at all openings in the stack and liner to minimize air
leakage from the pressurization system. Air-locking chambers should be provided
at door locations to provide safe passage into and out of the chimney.
Pressurizing fans typically have a 30,000–70,000-cfm (14–33-m3/s) flow rate and
a 3–4-in Wg (747–1245-Pa) rise for a 500–650-MW unit.
An adjustable damper can be provided at the top of the chimney for use when
reduced-pressurization pressure and flow rate are acceptable. Excessive annulus
pressurization could lead to air leakage through cracks in the brick into the inside
of the liner and cause increased liquid condensation in the flue gas.
A target wall or target lining provides protection to the brick liner from the wet
flue gas. Target walls or target linings can be constructed partially or fully around
the inside circumference of the brick liner, and they should extend from the
bottom of the liner to 1 or 2 liner diameters above the breeching entry.
A target lining is constructed directly against the inside surface of the brick liner.
The lining can be constructed using an elastomeric coating or a borosilicate-glass
block with an adhesive membrane, which provides a good moisture- and
chemical-resistant barrier.
Another method that has been considered to reduce the direct impingement of
wet gases exiting the breeching onto the interior surface of the liner is providing a
bottom entry into the brick liner. This can be accomplished by providing an alloy
breeching-thimble section that extends below the bottom of the brick liner.
Target walls may be needed for good liquid collection and reduced erosion of the
brick liners in the stack-entrance region.
3-24
3.9.1.1.4 Liner Bands
3.9.1.2 FRP/GRP
The most common material currently used for wet stack liners is fiberglass-
reinforced plastic (FRP). This material is also referred to as glass-reinforced
plastic (GRP). FRP is a composite material made of glass reinforcement and a
thermosetting resin. FRP is a lightweight laminated product that provides good
service in cool, wet, dilute acid environments. Because of size and shipping
restraints, these liners are usually filament-wound in sections on-site.
FRP is suitable for the low temperatures that are characteristic of wet-scrubbed
conditions and is not recommended for bypass conditions or temperature
excursions. Exposure to bypass conditions will result in loss of strength,
shortening the life of an FRP liner. An inlet-water spray-quench system is
recommended to reduce the effects of bypass temperature excursions. FRP liners
downstream of FGD systems that do not have bypass capability do not need a
quench system. FRP liners should be designed, fabricated, and erected in
accordance with the recommendations of ASTM D5364, Guide for Design,
Fabrication, and Erection of Fiberglass Reinforced Plastic Chimney Liners With Coal-
Fired Units [7].
3-25
material on the inside of the liner should be minimized to reduce the potential
for creating horizontal discontinuities on the liner surface, from which droplets
may be re-entrained back into the gas flow. The surface of the joint material
must be tapered back to the base-liner material with a minimum 6:1 taper (10:1
preferred).
3.9.1.3 Alloy
On average, chloride levels in the new FGD systems will likely be much higher
than earlier FGD systems because of the requirement for zero-discharge water
systems. Designs specifying chlorides above 15,000 ppm have been fairly
common, and some designs have anticipated sustained operation above 30,000
ppm. Closed-loop operation causes chloride levels to increase, thereby increasing
the possibility of pitting and/or crevice corrosion of stainless steel. Stainless steels
that have been used successfully in scrubbers may not perform well in FGD
outlet ducts or stack liners. These locations are wetted by essentially unbuffered
mist and/or condensate. Absorption of residual SO2 can cause the pH to drop to
below 2. Because of the potential for high chlorides and low pH in the absorber
outlet duct and stack, stainless steels are not recommended. For these areas, a
nickel-alloy material such as Alloy C276 or Alloy C22 is recommended.
Although several different nickel alloys may be adequate for FGD applications,
Alloy C276 (ASTM B575, UNS N10276) and Alloy C22 (ASTM B575, UNS
N06022) have been shown to provide the best overall corrosion-resistance
characteristics. Alloy C276 contains 16% molybdenum and 15.5% chromium.
Alloy C22 contains approximately 13% molybdenum and 22% chromium. These
alloys have performed well in numerous WFGD environments and offer
approximately the same level of corrosion resistance. The two products have
successfully withstood a wide range of acid concentrations and extremely high
chloride levels, in conditions ranging from 130°F (54.4°C) saturated flue gas to
full system bypass.
3-26
3.9.1.3.1 Solid Alloy
Alloy C276 and Alloy C22 is produced in bar stock, plate, and sheet. Liners
constructed using this material could be fabricated from solid-alloy plate, from
carbon-steel plate with an alloy-sheet lining, from roll-clad plate, or from
Resista-Clad plate. Although liners fabricated from all of these applications are
highly corrosion resistant, liners fabricated from solid Alloy C276 plate offer the
most corrosion resistance. Because welding between the alloy material and carbon
steel is a potential source of dilution and contamination, the use of solid-alloy
plate eliminates this concern. However, the use of solid-alloy plate also requires
the highest initial capital cost.
Stiffeners on the exterior of the liner can be fabricated from carbon steel because
this material is not in contact with the flue gas. Any internal stiffening, such as
bracing in the ductwork, should be fabricated from alloy material.
Alloy-sheet lining involves the welding of thin alloy sheets, usually 1/16-in (1.6-
mm) thick, to a carbon-steel liner. This approach has commonly been referred to
in the industry as a "wallpaper lining." The sheet lining is installed with lapped
joints. The joints exposed to flue gas must be fully seal-welded to ensure
protection of the carbon-steel liner surface. The sheets are attached to the liner
with plug welds and intermittent fillet welds. The plug welds should be covered
with cap plates to eliminate any concerns about dilution. From a design
standpoint, only the carbon-steel portion of the liner should be considered
structurally effective in supporting the liner.
This lining process can be installed on a new or existing carbon-steel liner. If the
lining is to be installed on an existing liner, the liner-support steel should be
evaluated to accommodate the additional load of the sheet lining. Alloy C276
sheet lining has been utilized in the stacks at a number of plants. It has been
reported that after several years of operation, the material is performing well.
However, buckles in the lining sheets have developed throughout the liner as a
result of thermal stress.
Alloy-clad plate consists of alloy sheet, usually 1/16-in (1.6-mm) thick, that is
roll-bonded to a thicker carbon-steel backing plate. The two metals are mill-
rolled under heat and pressure until they are integrally bonded over the entire
interface. Clad plates are readily joined by welding. However, on the clad side, it
is important to minimize dilution to maintain adequate corrosion resistance of
the weld metal.
3.9.1.3.4 Resista-Clad
3-27
fabrication technique that uses a patented process in which a relatively expensive,
thin sheet of corrosion-resistant metal cladding is attached to an inexpensive
substrate. The Resista-Clad plate process is capable of cladding carbon steel to
both weld-compatible metals, such as nickel-based alloys and stainless steels, and
nonweld compatible metals, such as titanium. This technique allows the cost-
effective use of both relatively high-cost alloy metals, for corrosion resistance, and
relatively low-cost carbon steel, for structural support. In this technique, 1/16-in
(1.6-mm) alloy sheet is bonded to the carbon-steel backing by the use of
resistance welding. During liner fabrication, the carbon-steel plates are welded
together, and then a batten strip of alloy is laid over the joints and seal-welded to
the alloy lining.
The horizontal weld beads on alloy liners can cause a localized liquid re-
entrainment in the stack above a velocity of approximately 55 fps (16.8 m/s). The
height of the weld bead should be the minimum possible and not exceed the
standard of 1/8 in (3 mm) for good weld quality Vertical weld seams in a wet
stack, including the choke, are also typically limited to 3/16 in (5 mm). Limiting
the size of the horizontal weld seams is more critical than that of the vertical weld
seams with regard to minimizing liquid re-entrainment. If the shape of the weld
bead is gradually rising and falling, liquid re-entrainment is reduced, and higher
liner-gas velocities can be used. To achieve liner maximum velocities for smooth
metal, horizontal weld beads must be ground flat and smooth.
3-28
Because of its high insulative properties and low thermal mass, borosilicate block
will minimize the quantity of thermal condensation within the liner during unit
startup. The block also provides some level of protection to the base-liner
material in the event of a stack fire. In such a situation, the lining system will
most likely need to be replaced, but the structural portion of the liner may be
undamaged.
Borosilicate-glass block is well suited for lining ductwork. However, because the
block can be easily damaged, areas that are susceptible to physical or mechanical
abuse should be protected with an abrasion-resistant coating. Internal bracing is
difficult to line with block. Membrane coatings or alloy materials are
recommended for internal braces.
3-29
BOROSILICATE
BLOCK
ATTACHED TO REINFORCED
INSIDE OF CONCRETE SHELL
SHELL
LIQUID
BRICK LINER
COLLECTION
REMOVED TO
GUTTER BETWEEN
THIS
LINER SECTIONS
ELEVATION
LIQUID COLLECTION
GUTTERS
EXISTING
BRICK LINER
DRAIN
CONCRETE
PIPES
PEDESTAL
PRESSURIZATION FOUNDATION
FAN
Figure 3-6
Borosilicate Block–Lined Upper Wind Screen
3-30
evaluate in such a system. The site-specific situation and risks involved should be
evaluated when considering this system for a utility wet stack.
Many existing units utilizing reheat and bypass liners have been constructed
using bare carbon-steel plate. This liner material is not acceptable for wet
applications. Carbon steel will corrode rapidly under wet acidic conditions.
Steel liners with an existing gunite lining are also not considered acceptable for
wet operation. Gunite is porous and tends to develop cracks through which liquid
can penetrate and attack the substrate material. Conversion to wet operation
requires removal of the gunite and relining with a corrosion-resistant material.
3-31
resistant than the polyester resins that have been used in older liner-coating
applications. This coating system should be applied in three layers. The first layer
is a primer coat, which is used to prevent abrasive blasted steel from developing
rust bloom. The lining is then trowel-applied in two 30–40 mil layers. Toweling
and subsequent rolling allows the glass-flake filler in each layer to be properly
oriented to the substrate and to achieve maximum resistance to water-vapor
permeation. In order to ensure adequate coverage, the two layers of resin can be
applied using different color pigments. Historical experience indicates that this
coating system may develop permeability, and liquid may eventually seep through
and reach the carbon-steel substrate. Coating systems other than the flakeline
resin systems have been utilized, but with only a limited degree of success.
Coatings have been used successfully in some wet stack applications and have
failed in others. There is some risk involved in using a coating system, and the
potential for failure should be realized. Maintenance to repair chips and blisters
should be anticipated. Total lining replacement is typically required after a life of
about 8–10 years. However, coatings can represent substantial savings, and they
have been included as an alternative here for cost-comparative purposes.
A wet stack with a flue gas temperature of 130°F (54°C) typically will not require
insulation on the exterior surface of an alloy or FRP liner, because the liner is
already operating in a wet condition. Insulation is installed on coated steel liners
to reduce the temperature gradient across the coating, which may help in
extending the life of the coating. Borosilicate-lined stacks are not insulated to
ensure that the temperature of the mastic/adhesive material between the block
and liner wall does not exceed the manufacturer’s recommendations.
3-32
At 130°F (54°C), the addition of 2 in (50 mm) of mineral-wool insulation
reduces the rate of liner-wall condensation by a factor of approximately four. The
addition of more insulation will reduce the condensation rate further, but with a
diminishing rate of return.
The gas velocity within the liner is a significant factor in minimizing liquid re-
entrainment into the gas stream. Liquid droplets, either carried over from the
mist eliminator or condensed on cold walls, are deposited on the ductwork and
stack-liner surfaces. As the droplets accumulate, they are pulled downward by
gravity, whereas the gas drags the liquid in the same direction as the flow of the
gas. When the force from the gas reaches or exceeds the forces of gravity and
surface tension, the liquid is sheared from the ductwork or liner walls. Liquid
then re-enters or is re-entrained back into the gas stream and is carried out of the
stack. When this occurs, the gas velocity is referred to as the critical re-
entrainment velocity.
Wet stack designers should select the liner diameter based on liquid-collection
considerations. Selecting the liner diameter so that the gas velocity is less than
the critical re-entrainment velocity (with a desirable margin for fabrication
inconsistencies and potential future plant up-rates) increases the opportunity for
liquid to be collected within the stack rather than being emitted with the gas
stream as SLD. The critical re-entrainment velocity varies depending upon the
liner's material, surface roughness, and quality of construction. Surfaces with a
high level of discontinuities and roughness (such as those of a brick liner) will be
more likely to re-entrain liquid, in comparison to smoother surfaces (such as alloy
or FRP liners). Therefore, the liner diameter will depend upon the liner material
selected. For example, brick liners will require a larger diameter than an alloy or
FRP liner for the same gas-volume-flow rate.
The recommended liner-velocity range for sizing the liner diameter when using
various liner materials was previously presented in Table 2-1 and is represented
in Table 3-4 below.
3-33
Table 3-4
Recommended Stack Velocity Range for Stack-liner–Diameter Sizing
Alloy 55 16.8
Weld bead height <= 1/8” (3mm)
* Laboratory testing of coating material is recommended to finalize liner velocity for favorable wet
operation.
The stack entrance is the last good place between the mist eliminator and the
stack outlet to collect and drain any liquid that enters the stack. The primary
techniques are intended to promote droplet impingement onto the surfaces by 1)
directing droplet trajectory to the far wall or a center baffle and 2) creating
a single or double gas-swirl pattern that will help deposit droplets on the liner or
baffle wall.
Although single entrances are easiest to work with to obtain good liquid
collection and drainage, a double-entrance stack with a special center baffle for
liquid collection and drainage can also be made to work satisfactorily.
3-34
Variations can be made in all of these parameters and still achieve a satisfactorily
low level of SLD. However, more extensive liquid-collector and drain systems
will be needed, and further steps may be needed to reduce condensation in the
stack if velocities are in excess of stack-liner design values.
Side-entry breeches can be used on liners of any material. Because the flow
gasses entering the liner must make a sharp 90° turn to vertical after passing
through the breech opening, strong secondary-flow vortices are generated, which
are required for effective liquid collection. These secondary flows are stronger in
a liner with a side-entry breech than in one with a bottom-entry elbow.
Additionally, the liquid-collection system in the lower liner of a unit with a side-
entry breech is less complex—and generally performs better—than that of a unit
with a bottom-entry elbow. For this reason, from the perspective of effective
liquid collection, a side-entry breech is preferred to a bottom-entry elbow for wet
operation.
For tall breeching openings, the vertical edges of the opening should be designed
to possess adequate stability as a column element. Multiple and single openings
under axial compression should be reinforced or proportioned to fully restore the
structural capacity of the entire cross section of the liner. Brick liners utilize brick
pilasters, and alloy liners utilize vertical jamb stiffeners, to provide vertical-edge
stability.
For brick liners, the width of the breeching opening may dictate the diameter of
the liner. The ASTM C1298 brick-liner design guidelines recommend that the
opening width not exceed one- half the internal diameter of the liner at the
opening elevation.
3-35
3.9.3.3 Liner-Floor Geometry
Stack-liner floors must be designed to promote the drainage of liquid that will
collect in the bottom of a wet stack. Steel and alloy liners can utilize conical
hoppers or floors sloped toward the breech side of the liner. FRP liners
traditionally utilize a 90° mitered elbow, and liquid is collected in a drain at the
base of the elbow. Brick liners use a built-up sloped brick floor with a drainage
system. Floors or conical hoppers should be located a sufficient distance below
the breeching sill to prevent the liquid that has been collected on the stack
bottom from being re-entrained. EPRI Report CS-2520, Entrainment in Wet
Stacks, recommends that the hopper for liners with side-entry breeches be located
a minimum of 1/2 liner diameter below the sill of the breeching—both to prevent
flue gas from sweeping liquid from the floor up the liner wall and to reduce the
potential for generation of flow vortices on the liner floor that could re-entrain
liquid back into the gas flow [1]. This distance can be reduced to about 4 ft for
cost reduction, but the draining liquid may have to be protected from the gas
flow by a floor grating or by covers over the drain locations. Flow modeling can
define whether protective grating or baffles are needed and what their geometry
should be.
For alloy or FRP liners, the conical hopper, sloped-floor, or elbow material
should be the same material as the liner. Sloped floors in brick liners are
supported from an elevated support structure or by the concrete foundation.
Brick-liner floors consist of multiple layers of materials that provide corrosion
and thermal protection to their support structures. These floors should be
constructed of the following layers of materials: lead pan over asphaltic-
impregnated felt, acid-resistant mortar fill sloped to the drains, and a minimum
of two layers of acid-resistant brick and mortar. The lead pan should be returned
up the side of the brick liner to provide protection to the wall.
Most recent alloy and FRP liners with side-entry breeches have incorporated a
sloped liner floor. This floor can is commonly incorporated into the liner wall, or
it can be bottom-supported within the liner (Figure 3-7). Flow-model studies
performed on numerous installations have shown the advantage of a sloped liner
floor, both for a reduction in system-pressure losses as well and for the generation
of robust secondary-flow vortices in the lower liner for enhanced liquid
collection. With a sloped liner floor, the secondary flows were found to be
stronger and more robust over a wider range of plant operations than those
generated in liners without a sloped liner floor. The design of the sloped liner
floor also results in the formation of a small, quiet sump area below the breech
entry for the collection and drainage of liquid from the liner. The final design of
the sloped liner floor should be optimized as part of the liquid-collection
physical-flow-model study.
3-36
SLOPED LINER WALL
SUPPOERTED OFF OF
LINER FLOOR
STACK LINER STACK LINER
6-8” GAP
TO WALL
~1/3 BREECH
HEIGHT
BREECH
BREECH
SLOPED LINER
FLOOR INTEGRATED
INTO LINER WALL
DRAIN
DRAIN
~1/4 LINER
QUIET SUMP
DIA.
AREA
Figure 3-7
Sloped Liner–Floor Arrangements
A good starting point for material-estimating purposes is to assume that the top
point of the sloped floor impacts the rear wall of the liner at a point 2/3 of the
way up the height of the breech opposite the opening, and that its bottom point
terminates 1 ft (0.3 m) below the floor of the breech at a point approximately 1/4
of the way across the diameter of the liner. Allowing the bottom edge of the
sloped floor to extend below the floor of the breech opening ensures that the
bottom edge of the incoming gas stream will not be peeled off and directed into
the sump area, thus ensuring that the sump remains aerodynamically quiet for
effective drainage. The sloped liner floor can be fabricated as part of the liner
wall, or it can be fabricated separately and supported off of the flat liner floor. In
the latter case, it is recommended that a 6–8 in (150–100 mm) gap be provided
between the sloped floor and the liner wall, both to allow for differential
expansion and to allow liquid flowing down the liner wall to pass into the quiet
area behind the sloped portion of the floor.
Incorporating the sloped liner floor into the liner wall will reduce the quantity of
liner material required. This consideration can be important if the liner is being
fabricated from an expensive material such as an alloy.
3-37
3 MITER CUT ELBOW 4 MITER CUT ELBOW
Figure 3-8
Miter-Cut Bottom-Entry Elbow Arrangements
It is well understood that, for FRP liners, bottom-entry elbows are a less
expensive approach. Although side-entry breeches are preferred for wet
operation, bottom-entry elbows with a properly designed liquid-collection system
can be just as effective. Their main disadvantage is that, because of the curvature
in the elbow, the liquid-collection system will require more complex shapes and
the existence of strong gas-recirculation zones exactly in the place where a key
liquid-collection ring must be located. If the ring is not properly designed, these
recirculation zones can strip liquid out of the collector back into the gas flow.
Bottom-entry elbows are commonly used on FRP liners because the elbow
segments can be fabricated from additional liner cans fabricated on site. Care
must be taken when fabricating elbows to ensure that the sections remain round.
As with liner joints, every effort should be made to minimize the joint material
on the inside of the elbow and to taper this material back to the base-liner/elbow
material with a minimum 1:6 taper (10:1 preferred) . Discontinuities in the
diameters of adjacent sections can create sites for significant levels of liquid re-
entrainment back into the gas flow.
3-38
feeding into the liner will need to be taken out of service. Multiple units
operating within a common liner will also have additional design considerations
that will need to be addressed, such as gas-temperature differentials, variable-
flow rates, chaotic flow patterns within the liner, and continuous emissions-
monitoring-system certification. In order to monitor readings from individual
units, the continuous-emissions-monitoring system for a liner serving multiple
units would need to locate its equipment in the upstream ductwork rather than in
the stack. Another concern would be that, with one unit off-line, low-load
operations would result in a low exit velocity, causing potential downwash
problems. For good liquid collection, a one-breeching-duct-per-liner design
configuration is recommended. However, if multiple entries into a single liner
exist (or are required) consideration should be given to 1) placing one breech
opening directly above the other or 2) using a division wall within the lower liner
as a means of separating the lower liner into two separate aerodynamic zones that
can be optimized for liquid collection.
A division wall is a wall within the lower liner designed to separate the lower
liner into two (or more) separate aerodynamic zones. The objective is to decouple
the operation of the individual units feeding into the liner from each other so
that the flow patterns and liquid collection in each zone can be optimized
independently from the others.
Division walls typically extend vertically to a point at least one liner diameter
above the roof of the highest breech opening. The sides of the wall are typically
attached to the liner wall, although some designs provide a gap between the
division wall and the liner wall to allow for pressure equalization between the two
zones. The division wall must be able to withstand the full force of the gas jet
entering the liner through the breech openings. As such, it needs to be designed
to withstand the full pressure of the jet, even if the opposite equalizing breech is
out of service.
A significant quantity of liquid will be deposited on the division wall opposite the
breech opening, and provisions must be made to collect the resulting liquid film
and direct it to the liner wall and floor for drainage from the system. Liquid
collectors will also be required along the top edge of the division wall to prevent
the re-entrainment of liquid back into the gas flow. The wall can be placed
perpendicular to the incoming gas flow, or at an angle to it, to promote the
motion of any collected liquid films from the division wall to the liner wall for
drainage.
The design, placement, and orientation of a division wall and its associated
liquid-collection system must be optimized in a physical-flow model of the
subject unit.
3-39
3.9.3.8 Stack-Entry Pressure Losses
The total and static pressure of flue gas inside the stack is a function of the
following:
Ambient temperature and barometric pressure
Total pressure losses in the stack entrance
Total pressure frictional losses through the liner
Total pressure losses across expansion joints, corbel joints, and other stack-
liner breeching openings, expansions, or contractions
Total pressure loss associated with the liner-inlet geometry
Pressure variation with height (stack effect)
Static-pressure changes across area expansions or conical contractions and
chokes
Total pressure loss from the stack breeching duct to the stack discharge plume is
the value needed for determining the ID-fan requirements for the stack. The
maximum differential static pressure between the flue gas and the stack annulus
at the same elevation is the pressure needed to design the fans for the annulus-
pressurization system with brick stack liners. For a wet stack–conversion project,
flue gas pressure data should be collected and, after correction to saturated
nonreheat conditions, compared to model study and calculated values.
Some stacks incorporate changes in the diameter over the height of the liner.
These can be gradual, such as in the case of a tapered brick liner. Or they can be
abrupt, such as in the case of a brick liner with multiple corbels, or in a liner in
which the top sections have been removed so that the upper section of the shell
can be used as the flue. A number of brick stacks have recently been
commissioned in which the lower breech-entry sections were fabricated from
alloy to allow for effective liquid collection, which then discharged into a larger-
diameter brick liner. The transition between these two sections incorporated a
ring collector to prevent any liquid flowing down the brick portion of the liner
from entering into the lower alloy portion of the liner.
Abrupt changes in the liner diameters are typically associated with a sudden
increase in the diameter of the flue. The transition from one section to another is
3-40
an ideal location for liquid re-entrainment back into the gas flow. In these
situations, the transition should incorporate a liquid-collection gutter to drain
away the liquid from the upper section before it flows down into the higher-
velocity lower section. One notable exception to this rule of thumb is the stack-
outlet choke, which incorporates a rapid decrease in the liner diameter in the
direction of the gas flow. Stack chokes are unique in purpose and are discussed in
detail in Section 3.9.6.2.
Ideally, stacks should be smooth and clear over their entire height. However,
reaching this ideal is not possible, because of the need to incorporate the many
structures necessary for the proper operation of both the liner and the plant.
Access into the liner in the form of ports for such purposes as testing, continuous
emissions-monitoring, and expansion joints must be incorporated into the liner.
Every effort must be made to minimize these structures, and their placement
should take into account their potential impact on the fluid-dynamic and liquid-
collection performance of the liner.
Alloy and FRP liners sometimes incorporate expansion joints within the liner if
required by the liner-suspension method. These joints are often located at a point
less than one liner diameter above the roof of a side-entry breech or are placed at
the outlet of a bottom-entry elbow. These locations are not favorable for wet
operation because they lie in the region where most of the liner liquid-collection
occurs. Liner-expansion joints are typically longer than their ductwork
counterparts—ranging from 2–5 ft (0.6–1.5 m) in length and 6–12 in (150–300
mm) in radial depth.
The liquid condensing along the stack liner flows down on the liner surface when
gas velocities are below the liquid flow-reversal velocity. This liquid will flow
downward until it encounters a liner-expansion joint. If an expansion joint is
encountered, this surface discontinuity will cause all of the downward-flowing
liquid to re-entrain back into the gas flow by the gas recirculation in the
expansion-joint cavity. Most of these re-entrained droplets will be discharged
from the stack, and many will be large enough to reach the ground before
evaporating. For this reason, the liner should ideally be designed so that liner-
expansion joints are not needed. If an expansion joint is required, it should be
located at least 1 to 2 liner diameters above the roof of the breech duct or the
inlet roof of the bottom-entry elbow. This arrangement will ensure that the
surface of the lower liner, where a significant amount of the liner liquid-
deposition occurs, is free from discontinuities that would lead to liquid re-
entrainment. The expansion joint should be protected from the downward-
flowing liquid through the installation of a liner-ring collector above the joint, or
the joint should be equipped with liquid collectors especially designed for liner-
expansion joints. Laboratory flow modeling should be used to design and develop
liner expansion-joint collectors that are effective at all operating loads for a given
unit.
3-41
3.9.5.2 Observation Ports, Test Ports, Man-ways
A few plants have incorporated large 2 x 2-ft (0.6 x 0.6-m) access doors in the
liner, typically above the breech opening. The doors to these man-ways must be
flush with the inside of the liner wall. Both because of their size and of their
potential for disturbing a significant quantity of the liner’s downward liquid-film
flow, these man-ways should incorporate liquid-diversion gutters to direct the
downward-flowing liquid film around the opening on the liner wall.
To the extent possible, structures extending into the liner-gas flow should be
discouraged; liquid collected on these structures will be re-entrained back into the
gas flow, with little opportunity to be recollected before discharging from the
stack as SLD. The liners should be designed so that all structural supports are on
the outside of the liner.
Unless absolutely necessary, turning vanes, vortex breakers, and other flow-
control devices in the entrance region of the liner should be avoided, because
these devices will act as locations for liquid collection and re-entrainment back
into the gas flow. Droplets generated from this location will have little
opportunity to be recollected before exiting the top of the stack as SLD.
3-42
3.9.6 Stack-Exit Design
For most modern installations, the stack exit is simply the end of the liner. If the
liner velocity is within the recommended range for the liner material used, no
special attention needs to be given to this area. If the liner velocity is near or
above the liquid flow-reversal gas velocity, the outlet of the liner should
incorporate a method for collecting the upward-moving liquid film. Details of
stack-outlet liquid collectors are presented in Section 3.11.10.
Liner extensions are typically not insulated so that they will remain above
freezing during the winter months, and ice will not form on them. This situation
will only apply if the liner is operating at or below the recommended velocity for
the liner material used because, during the winter, the condensation rate in the
uninsulated extension will increase significantly as it is exposed to the cold
environment. A liner operating at or below the recommended gas velocity should
be able to easily handle the increased condensate load on the liner wall.
If the liner is operating above the recommended gas velocity, the extension
should be insulated to minimize the increase in condensed liquid on, and
potential droplet re-entrainment from, the liner wall. Heat-tracing may be
required to control icing on the exterior of the extension and stack roof.
3.9.6.2 Chokes
Stacks that operate with a low discharge velocity sometimes have problems with
downwash or insufficient plume rise. To reduce these problems, a choke can be
incorporated at the top of the liner. Chokes are designed to increase the gas-exit
velocity by decreasing the discharge diameter. It must be noted that the use of a
choke, which constitutes a "dispersion technique" under EPA stack-height
regulations, cannot result in a relaxation of the emission limitation for the
facility. Chokes will increase draft losses, and the fan-pressure rise should be
selected accordingly. Chokes will also cause a positive pressure inside the liner
and increase the leaching problems for a brick liner. Chokes can be fabricated
from corrosion-resistant alloys and FRP. If a choke is installed on a wet stack
liner, a choke liquid collector will be needed at the top of the choke, because the
choke discharge velocity usually exceeds the liquid-reversal velocity for the choke
surface material. The choke surface material for recent choke designs is nickel
alloy or FRP, even for brick liners.
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In stacks that have chokes, some of the fine droplets entrained in the gas flow
will be deposited on the choke surface, and the liquid collected on the choke will
lead to SLD if the local gas velocities in the choke are high enough to exceed the
flow-reversal velocity. The gas velocity on the choke increases from the liner
velocity, up to an 80–120 fps (24.4–36.6 m/s) exit velocity, which is the usual
design range for chokes. The choke exit velocity normally exceeds the flow-
reversal velocity. Flow-reversal velocity is the flue gas velocity at which the flow
of the liquid on the stack walls is reversed from down- to up-flow.
The magnitude of the liquid discharge is a function of the choke geometry, the
gas-velocity variation through the choke, the droplet-size distribution, and the
spatial variation of the different-sized droplets. Flow-reversal velocity is in the
range of 70–90 fps for common liner materials [1]. Therefore, liquid film will be
flowing upwards over a large percentage of the choke surface for most choke
geometries. The liquid must be collected at the top of the choke and drained out
to reduce the SLD.
The stack rain-hood shape is designed to cover the gap between the shell and the
single liner. A hood is typically installed on a stack in which the shell to liner-
diameter ratio is small. Personnel access to this area will usually be limited. A
stack cap should be fabricated from a corrosion-resistant material such as FRP
and be angled downward away from the liner to promote drainage. Stack hoods
or caps are engulfed by wet stack gas all along their perimeter, and icing will
occur in cold climates. The amount of icing can be both minimal or large and
dangerous.
Hoods are typically left over from the dry stack design and are not favorable for
wet operation. A liner extension above a shell with a roof is favorable.
A stack roof is used on stacks in which the shell to liner-diameter ratio is large
and the liner extends above the roof. In such a case, the annulus is larger, and
personnel access is allowed to the roof. For this reason, a stack roof is structurally
stronger, and it incorporates a guard rail or parapet around its perimeter. Roofs
should be provided with a slope toward drains, leading the collected liquid to the
ground.
Typically, roofs and caps are not insulated, so that heat from the annulus can be
used to eliminate icing from this area.
EPA 40 CFR Part 60, Appendix A, Method 1 states that the flow condition is
unacceptable if the average yaw angle is greater than 20°. If potential flow-
measurement problems are significant, it is recommended that a 3-D traverse be
performed to more accurately determine the flow characteristics of each unit.
These characteristics must be discussed with the regional EPA to determine
acceptability. If unacceptable, an evaluation of flow-straightening must be done.
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Although typically undesirable from a wet-operation point of view, such an
evaluation could include the addition of straightening vanes near the monitor
location and/or a modification of the deflection plates at the base of the stack.
Any modifications would probably require a three-dimensional flow-model
study.
The CEM-system requirements for wet stack applications are generally the same
as for unscrubbed applications, with the exception of monitoring opacity. Opacity
monitors will not function properly in a wet stack because water droplets will
result in high opacity readings. The EPA has exempted wet stack units that are
otherwise affected by the acid-rain program from monitoring opacity. However,
no such exemption has been granted for new source performance standard units.
In addition, there may be local requirements for monitoring opacity.
According to EPA test methods for gas sampling (EPA 40 CFR Part 60
Appendix A), flow monitors should be located a minimum of eight stack or duct
diameters downstream, and two diameters upstream, from any flow disturbance.
If necessary, location of two stack or duct diameters downstream, and one-half
diameter upstream, from a flow disturbance may be employed. The purpose is to
make sure that the flue gas–sample data obtained are precise enough that the
total emissions can be accurately calculated.
Minimum testing requirements are satisfied if the EPA criteria for port locations
are adhered to and if no cyclonic or stratified-flow conditions exist.
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protection during the winter months. For personnel working in enclosed
conditions, adequate ventilation should be ensured.
Gas-exit velocities on WFGD stacks should be designed for a lower velocity than
for reheat or bypass stacks. Consequently, plume rise on the gas exiting a wet
stack is not as high. With the gas velocity low and heavily saturated with liquid,
it is common for the flue gas to come in contact with the upper portion of the
stack. This condition is called downwash. As the gas comes in contact with the
concrete shell, liquid condenses on the concrete. Over time, this condensate can
cause the deterioration of unprotected concrete on the upper portion of the
stack.
A stack that is located adjacent to and downwind of another stack may be subject
to the corrosive effects of flue gas impinging on its concrete surface. If the
upwind stack is significantly shorter than the downwind stack, the potential for
concrete corrosion is increased. This is a common occurrence in retrofit WFGD
installations, which incorporate new shorter stacks close to the old original stack.
The potential for plume impingement on a taller adjacent stack can easily be
estimated using a computational flow-model study and can usually be
incorporated into the plume-downwash study being performed for the new stack.
For a stack with a brick liner, flue gas may enter the annular space of the stack if
the liner is leaking or if the annulus-pressurization system is not performing
adequately. This condition can be severe enough to result in corrosion of the
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interior surface of the concrete shell. Additional protection should be provided by
applying two coats of an acrylic-emulsion coating system (or its equivalent) to the
interior concrete surfaces.
The rain hood at the top of the stack is exposed to flue gas, so the rain-hood
material must be able to withstand this corrosive environment. Liquid re-
entrained in the flue gas is deposited on the rain-hood surface. In addition, the
continuous cycle of evaporation and deposition increases the acid content of
liquids deposited on the rain-hood surface.
Accordingly, the rain-hood material must resist higher acid concentrations than
the liner. FRP is an excellent choice, because this material is lightweight and
corrosion-resistant.
Stainless steels have been used on occasion for rain hoods, but most stainless
steels cannot resist the high acid concentrations that may occur at these locations.
Stacks with multiple liners use a roof instead of a rain-hood system at the top of
the stack. Roofs should be provided with a minimum slope of 1/4 in/ft to permit
adequate drainage. Roof materials consistent with those referenced for rain hoods
should be used. In addition, concrete roofs can be utilized. Type V sulfate-
resistant cement is recommended for the concrete. A coating system can be
applied to the top of the concrete to provide additional protection.
Because most of the items associated with the lightning-protection system are
located at the top of the stack, materials of construction for these items must
provide adequate corrosion resistance. The air terminals should be fabricated
from a solid rod made of Alloy C276. Conductors, attachments, and fasteners
located within the top 25 ft (8 m) of the stack should be lead-covered.
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3.10.7 Platforms and Ladders
All rigid steel conduits and accessories within the top 100 ft (30 m) on the
exterior of the stack should be installed with a bonded PVC jacket. Conduit
located within the top 100 ft (30 m) on the exterior of the stack should be
supported with Type 316 stainless-steel unistruts, clamps, and fasteners. Because
of corrosion resistance and weather-tight requirements, all electrical boxes
located within this area should be NEMA 4X.
Saturated gas flow and condensation on the surfaces are normal operating
conditions for ducts and wet stacks. Some mist-eliminator liquid carryover, and
the liquid condensed from the large amount of water vapor present in the gas,
will also increase the liquid load in the ducting and in the stack liner. Liquid-
collection devices and drains are necessary to collect and drain the liquid in the
absorber-outlet ductwork and in the stack before it exits the chimney. Liquid
collectors and drains are therefore an important design consideration in a
duct/stack system used for wet operation. The basic behavior of gas and liquid
flows are described in Section 2, "Wet Stack Design Fundamentals," whereas the
guidelines for selecting the duct and stack geometries suitable for wet operation
are discussed in Section 3.6, “Ductwork Design,” and Section 3.7, “Stack-liner
Design,” respectively.
The following sections of the Revised Wet Stack Design Guide provide an update
as well as additional detail for the basic liquid-collection designs previously
presented in [1] and [2].
The successful design and operation of a wet stack liquid-collection system starts
with the mist eliminators and includes all elements of the absorber duct,
breeching duct, stack entrance, stack liner, and stack outlet. Each element along
the gas-flow path is important.
The liquid collectors collect all the deposited and condensed liquid from the duct
and stack surfaces and direct it to drains for removal from the system. The type,
size, geometry, and location of liquid collectors are selected to utilize the system’s
gas-shear and gravitational forces to move and collect the liquid on the duct and
liner surfaces and drain it out of the system before re-entrainment can take place.
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The actual design and optimization of the liquid collectors and drains is site-
specific work, and it depends on the absorber type, the duct/stack geometry, the
planned operating-system operating conditions, and the gas-velocity levels.
Because the resulting three-dimensional gas- and liquid-flow patterns are unique
for each unit, the liquid-collection system must be optimized for each specific
unit. A flow-model study should be performed by a flow-modeling company
experienced in state-of-the-art wet stack design to determine the optimum
location and configuration of flow controls, liquid-collection devices, and drains.
Liquid collectors and drains will be required on any unit operating with wet ducts
and a wet stack. Because the collected liquid is acidic, the material selection for
liquid collectors and drains must be evaluated. The most common material for
liquid collectors are corrosion-resistant alloy materials and FRP.
The amount of vapor and liquid carryover from the mist eliminator is the same
for both new and retrofit applications. However, in many retrofit applications,
the gas velocities will be 5–10% lower than before conversion. Nevertheless, these
velocities are still usually higher than the gas velocities that would be selected for
the design of a new wet stack for the same gas-flow rate.
Because of the amount of liquid condensation and deposition on the duct and
stack surfaces and the relatively high gas velocities, design of liquid collectors and
drains is an important part of the retrofit process.
Some units undergoing conversion to wet operation may have turning vanes or
other flow-control devices in the gas path between the absorber outlet and the
stack. These devices are common on units with multiple absorption modules and
interconnecting outlet ducting. If this is the case, liquid-collection devices will
probably need to be installed on them to minimize the potential for re-entraining
deposited liquid back into the gas flow.
The following sections discuss the basic liquid collectors typically found in most
effective wet stack installations. These discussions are designed to provide
engineers who are considering wet stack operation a basic understanding of the
design, location, and installation details of these collectors, as well as a basic
understanding of their purpose and operation. Although exhaustive, this list is by
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no means complete, because many units often require custom-designed collectors
to address local gas- and/or liquid-film flow issues unique to the unit under
consideration. With the information provided in the following sections in hand,
engineers should be able to understand the operation of the overall liquid-
collection system. They should also have enough information to estimate, with
some degree of accuracy, the quantity and types of materials required for a liquid-
collection system, along with their fabrication and installation costs.
Good liquid collection in the ducts means reduced liquid load in the stack and a
reduced potential for SLD. In horizontal rectangular-duct sections, simple
slanted side-wall collectors can be used to direct the liquid film flowing on the
duct wall to the floor. These collectors are usually L-shaped in cross section, and
their sizes range from 2 x 2 in to 6 x 6 in (0.05 x 0.05 m to 0.15 x 0.15 m),
depending on duct geometry, gas velocity, and expected level of liquid and solid
carryover from the absorber. The L-shape faces into the gas flow to form a
collection gutter. Side-wall gutters typically start at the roof of the duct and are
sloped 10–15° in the direction of the gas flow (high side into the flow) to
promote drainage toward the floor. These gutters can also be placed vertically if
they are being used to keep the liquid film on the wall from encountering an area
where re-entrainment is likely to occur—such as immediately upstream of a duct-
expansion joint or at the edges of the breech where they meet the stack liner. The
side-wall gutters typically terminate 6–8 in (15–200 mm) above the floor of the
duct to promote drainage and prevent pluggage.
Round ducts also need to be equipped with liquid collectors. Round ducts usually
require fewer collector elements, but they are more difficult to fabricate and
install because they need to follow the curved surface contour inside the duct.
These collectors are in the form of a ring that can go completely around the
perimeter of the duct with a drain at the base. Alternatively, a 10–20° section at
the bottom of the ring can be removed to allow the collected liquid to flow along
the floor of the duct toward a drain point. Similar to the basic side-wall gutter, a
round-duct wall-ring collector will be sloped 10–15° in the direction of the gas
flow (high side into the wind) to promote collection and drainage to the bottom
of the duct. Because the ring will be at an angle, and not perpendicular to the axis
of the circular duct, the resulting ring will be in the form of an ellipse. Circular
duct liquid-collection rings are usually L-shaped in cross section, and their sizes
range from 2 x 2 in to 6 x 6 in (50 x 50 mm to 150 x 150 mm), depending on
duct geometry, gas velocity, and expected level of carryover from the absorber.
The L-shape faces into the wind to form a collection gutter.
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To be effective, the side-wall and ring gutters must be sealed to the duct wall
along their entire length. Details of basic side-wall and round-duct ring collectors
are presented in Figure 3-9.
SEALED TO
DUCT WALL
2-6” (50-150mm)
ANGLE
DUCT WALL
LIQUID FILM
SECTION AA
FLOW
PATTERNS
A A
A A
10-20°
LOCAL GAS
FLOW
DIRECTION
6-8" (150-200mm)
GAP TO FLOOR
20°
GAP OPENING
RECTANGULAR CIRCULAR
DUCT DUCT
Figure 3-9
Side-Wall and Round-Duct Liquid-Collection Gutters
Liquid will also condense and deposit on the roof of the duct. This liquid film
will flow in the direction of the local gas flow. The resulting liquid-film thickness
will increase as the film moves toward the liner until the droplets fall from the
roof. Many of these droplets may re-entrain back into the gas flow. To prevent
this from happening, gutters are attached to the roof of the duct to direct the
moving liquid film to the side-wall, where it will then flow onto the wall and
then down to the floor. Ceiling gutters are very similar to side-wall gutters in
size, shape, and orientation with respect to the local gas-flow direction. To be
effective, the gutter must be sealed to the duct roof along its entire length.
Depending on the local gas-flow patterns, a ceiling gutter either can be a straight
gutter running at a 10–45° angle from one side-wall to the opposite wall, or it can
be configured in the shape of a “V,” with the point of the “V” upwind. This
arrangement directs the collected liquid film to both side-walls simultaneously
(Figure 3-10).
As detailed in Figure 3-10, the ends of the ceiling collectors are trimmed back at
a 30° angle where they attach to the duct side-walls. This cutback provides a
means for any gas collected in the gutter to leak out of the gutter in a controlled
3-51
manner as the liquid is directed onto the side-wall, minimizing the potential for
the scouring of the collected liquid back into the gas flow.
10-45°
10-20°
DUCT ROOF
DIRECTION OF
SEALED TO
LOCAL LIQUID
DUCT ROOF
FILM FLOW
B
B
SECTION AA
DIRECTION OF DIRECTION OF
LOCAL LIQUID
A LOCAL LIQUID DIRECTION OF
FILM FLOW A FILM FLOW LOCAL LIQUID
FILM FLOW
2-6” (50-150mm)
DETAIL 1 ANGLE
SECTION BB
DIRECTION OF 30°
LOCAL LIQUID
FILM FLOW
DIRECTION OF
LOCAL LIQUID
FILM FLOW
DETAIL 1
Figure 3-10
Ceiling Liquid-Collection Gutters
In some instances, the local gas velocity may be opposite to the direction of the
bulk gas flow. This phenomenon is a common occurrence along the roof of
vertical transitions, particularly in the transition connecting the absorber-outlet
ducting to the stack breech. If the vertical expansion is abrupt, a region of flow
separation will be formed along the roof of the transition, and liquid collected
and/or condensed on the roof of the transition will flow downward back toward
the absorber. In such a situation, a ceiling “V” collector would need to be
installed, with the point of the “V” aiming up the slope of the roof. This “V”
collector will prevent the collected liquid film from reaching the bottom of the
transition roof, where it would be completely re-entrained back into the gas flow.
By orientating the “V” uphill, the downward-flowing liquid film will be directed
to the duct side-walls, where it will ultimately be directed to the duct floor for
collection
The size, shape, and location of ceiling collectors can only be accurately
determined through a flow-model study of the unit.
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3.11.3 Floor Gutters
In most modern WFGD installations, the absorber is located close to the stack,
with a short duct connecting them. This ducting is typically sloped 1–1.5° either
toward the liner or back toward the absorber to enhance liquid drainage—mainly
during unit shutdown. For these arrangements, floor gutters are typically not
required. For older units and/or units with long and/or complicated duct runs
between the absorber and the stack liner, floor gutters may be required to control
the flow of collected liquid along the duct floor—usually toward a drain. A
trench or scupper installed across the duct in the floor with a drain is also
effective. Floor gutters are also used to prevent liquid from flowing into ducts
that are connected to the floor of the absorber-outlet duct, as is common for
units converting from reheat operation.
Floor gutters are typically angled to the gas flow to promote liquid flow to a
specific location such as a drain. The gutters are usually L-shaped in cross
section, and their sizes range from 2 x 2 in to 6 x 6 in (50 x 50 mm to 150 x 150
mm), depending upon duct geometry, gas velocity, and expected level of
carryover from the absorber. The L-shape faces into the wind to form a
collection gutter. To be effective, the gutter must be sealed to the duct floor
along its entire length.
Many new and retrofit WFGD installations will have, or will require, turning
vanes located in the wet gas path between the mist eliminator and stack outlet.
Liquid condensed and deposited on these devices will be dragged to the
downwind or trailing edge of the device, at which point the collected liquid film
will detach, re-entraining liquid back into the gas flow.
In horizontal ducts, turning vanes and baffles are very effective for promoting
deposition of suspended droplets of all sizes and are frequently recommended if
additional droplet deposition is needed. In many instances, the additional cost of
these devices may be justified by the combined effect of reduced pressure loss and
the additional liquid collection generated. On the other hand, horizontal to
vertical turning vanes in the stack entrance should be avoided, because droplets
re-entrained from these devices will have little opportunity to be collected before
exiting from the top of the liner.
If turning vanes or other types of flow-control devices are present in the system
(or are required), liquid collectors will be necessary to minimize the potential for
liquid re-entrainment back into the gas flow. These collectors are typically
located on the trailing edge of the pressure side of the vanes. However,
depending upon the orientation of the vanes, collectors may be needed on the
back or low-pressure side of the vanes as well.
Like the side-wall gutters discussed previously, trailing-edge liquid collectors are
L shaped and range in size from 2 x 2 in to 3 x 3 in (50 x 50 mm to 75 x 75 mm),
depending on duct geometry, gas velocity, and expected level of carryover from
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the absorber. The L-shape faces into the wind to form a collection gutter. The
gutters are typically placed on the vane or a vane extension in a slanted
orientation, angled 5–30° relative to the perpendicular of the gas flow. This
arrangement will direct the collected liquid film to the side-wall or the floor of
the duct, where it can drain onto the wall or floor and, ultimately, to the duct
floor. To be effective, the gutter must be sealed to the turning vane along its
entire length. Similar to the ceiling gutters, the ends of the flow-control
collectors are trimmed back at a 30° angle where they attach to the duct side-
walls. This orientation provides a means for any gas collected in the gutter to leak
out of the gutter in a controlled manner as the liquid is directed onto the side-
wall. This arrangement minimizes the potential for the scouring of any collected
liquid back into the gas flow.
The gas- and liquid-film flow patterns in and around turning vanes can be very
complicated, and the development of effective liquid collectors is difficult. It is
highly recommended that a flow-model study be performed to develop and
optimize these collectors.
To the extent possible, all structural supports should be located on the exterior of
ducts used for wet operation. Internal bracing is often installed in rectangular
ducts on retrofit units that originally operated dry. Horizontal bracing is also
commonly found supporting the tall side-walls of breech openings on FRP liners
with side-entry breeches. These internal support structures are generally not
favorable for wet operation because they provide additional impingement surfaces
and re-entrainment sites for liquid droplets. Details of internal truss-support
designs for wet operation were previously discussed in Section 3.6.1.3.
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10-12”
(250-300mm)
DIA DISK
DUCT WALL
6-12”
(150-300mm)
OFF WALL GAS FLOW
Figure 3-11
Horizontal Brace with Liquid-Re-entrainment–Prevention Disk
Expansion joints (although required for duct design) are not effective for wet
operation, because they form discontinuities on the duct surfaces (wall, ceiling,
floor), from which the flowing liquid film can be re-entrained back into the gas
flow. The liquid films approaching an expansion joint should be collected and
directed to the duct floor by appropriately designed liquid-collection gutters
upstream of the joint. It is recommended that expansion joints in horizontal
ducting be drained. Liquid will naturally collect in the bottom cavity of these
joints, and they are ideal locations for eliminating collected liquid from the
system. Depending upon the design of the joint, the drain connection can be
made through the rubber boot or through a side structural member of the joint.
A 2–3-in (50–75-mm) drain pipe should be sufficient. The drain piping will
need to pass through a seal pot or run directly back to the absorber reaction tank
to a point below the lowest liquid level to prevent gas from back-flowing up the
drain pipe, potentially resulting in liquid re-entrainment back into the gas flow.
If the expansion joint is not drained, it will fill with liquid. And any liquid
flowing along the duct floor will flow over the joint as it is pushed by the gas flow
toward the liner. Duct misalignments, or a rubber boot protruding into the gas
path, may be sufficient to generate regions of flow separation that could scour
liquid from an undrained joint back into the gas flow.
As described previously, in Section 3.6.1.4, units with internal duct supports will
typically have a brace located on either side of the expansion joint. If the truss
support attaches to the duct floor upstream of an expansion joint filled with
liquid, the recirculation zone formed on the downwind side of the attachment
gusset will scour the collected liquid out of the joint back into the gas flow. To
prevent this, a cover plate should be placed over the joint, extending
approximately 2 ft (0.6 m) on either side of the attachment gusset.
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3.11.6 Stack-Entrance Collectors – Side-Entry Breech
The liquid-film flow patterns in a wet stack can be defined by two basic
aerodynamic zones: the lower zone, typically extending from the liner floor to a
point approximately 1.5 to 2 liner diameters above the roof of the breech inlet,
and the upper zone above this point (Figure 3-12). The lower region of the liner
is defined by complex multidimensional gas- and liquid-film flow patterns,
whereas the upper zone is defined by generally well-behaved flow patterns. Most
liner-liquid collectors are located in the lower zone.
Arrows Show
Liquid Film Flow
Patterns
Upper Aerodynamic
Zone
Lower Aerodynamic
1-2 Liner Zone
Diameters Above
Roof of Breech Main Droplet
Impact Zone
Breech
Figure 3-12
Upper and Lower Stack-liner Aerodynamic Zones
The stack liner opposite the breech opening on a side-entry liner and along the
outer radius of stacks with a bottom-entry elbow generally receives more liquid
deposition than any other area downstream of the absorber. Effective liquid
collection in the stack-entrance zone is therefore critical for both inlet
arrangements. As described previously, when gas flows though a 90° turn, higher
gas velocities are experienced along the outer radius of the turn, and two counter-
rotating secondary vortices are generated at the outlet of the turn. Similar gas-
flow patterns are generated in the entrance region of liners as the gas flow turns
vertically up the stack. These gas-flow patterns both drag the deposited liquid
vertically up the liner and also push them circumferentially around the inside of
the liner back toward the breech opening.
3-56
The liquid-collection systems in the stack-entrance region of liners with a side-
entry breech or a bottom-entry elbow are basically similar, but they have a
number of geometry-specific differences.
To prevent the circumferentially moving liquid film from re-entraining back into
the gas flow along the sides of the breech opening, two large “wing” collectors are
located on either side of the breech, running from the breech-top gutter to the
bottom of the drain pipes (Figure 3-14). These wing collectors are generally L
shaped, but have sides of 8 in (200 mm) and 18–24 in (450-600 mm). The
collectors are positioned such that the 8-in (200-mm) leg is attached and sealed
to the liner wall adjacent to the breech opening, and the 18–24-in (450–600-
mm) wing is roughly parallel to the liner wall—angled slightly so that the
resulting opening or gap to the liner wall at the opposite edge of the wing is 4–6
in (100–150 mm) wide. The gap to the liner wall is maintained by support rods
or straps located approximately every 4 ft (1.2 m) up the height of the gutter.
This gutter is designed to collect the liquid film flowing circumferentially around
the inside of the liner from the main droplet-impact zone on the rear wall of the
liner back around toward the breech opening. In many wet stack installations,
the breech-top gutter-drain pipes will be located inside the channel formed by
this gutter.
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3.11.7 Stack-Entrance Collectors – Bottom-Entry Elbow
A “T”-shaped ring collector, shown in Figure 3-15 as the lower ring collector, is
used to separate the upper and lower regions of the liner and to help direct the
circumferentially flowing liquid film in the lower section around to the front wall
of the liner. When a liner-expansion joint is used, a second vertically facing L-
shaped gutter, referred to as the upper ring collector, will be necessary
immediately above the joint to prevent any down-flowing liquid from
encountering the expansion joint. When the liquid reaches the region of low gas
velocity above the elbow inlet, it will naturally flow downward because of the
reduced vertical gas velocity in this area. Because a breech-top gutter cannot be
used, a second (or lower) ring collector is located along the uppermost angled
miter cut of the elbow. This upward-facing lower ring, typically 6 x 6 in (150 x
150 mm), directs the collected liquid to a location on the outer radius of the
elbow—where the vertical gas velocities are not high enough to push the liquid
vertically. Discharged at this point, the collected liquid will drain downward to
the floor of the inlet elbow. Similar to the side-entry breech arrangement, the
upper ring is drained into the lower ring through a drain box connecting the two
rings.
Because of strong gas vortices formed along the inner radius of the elbow in the
vicinity of the lower ring, numerous vertical tabs may be required in the lower
ring collector to prevent these vortices from scouring liquid out of the ring back
into the gas flow. If the vortices are strong enough, the ring may need to be
partially covered in these regions. The extent of scour protection required can
only be determined by a flow-model study of the unit.
3-58
UPPER RING
COLLECTOR
UPPER RING
COLLECTOR
EXPANSION
JOINT
A A
LOWER RING BREECH TOP SECTION AA
DRAIN BOX
COLLECTOR GUTTER
DRAIN BOX
DRAIN BOX
BREECH TOP
GUTTER
B B
SECTION BB
BREECH
WING WING
COLLECTOR COLLECTOR
C C
LINER SUMP
BREECH TOP
GUTTER DRAIN LINER DRAIN
SECTION CC
PIPE
Figure 3-13
Typical Side-Entry Breech Liquid-Collection System
Breech Top
Gutter 4-6” (100-150mm)
Open Gap to Wall
Wing
Horizontal Section Through Wing Collector Horizontal Section Through Wing Collector
and Breach Top Gutter Below Breach Top Gutter
Figure 3-14
Side-Entry Breech Wing-Collector Design
3-59
UPPER RING COLLECTOR
(ONLY WITH EJ IF NEEDED)
C D
DRAIN BOX EXPANSION
W/SLIDING
CONNECTION
JOINT
A A
DRAIN BOX ELBOW RING
COLLECTOR ANTI-
SCOUR TABS
LOWER RING
COLLECTOR ELBOW RING
ELBOW RING
B B COLLECTOR
COLLECTOR
ELBOW RING
ELBOW RING COLLECTOR
COLLECTOR DRAIN BOX
SECTION CC DRAIN BOX SECTION DD
LINER DRAIN
C D
ELBOW RING
BREECH TOP COLLECTOR ANTI-
GUTTER DRAIN SCOUR TABS
PIPE
SECTION AA SECTION BB
Figure 3-15
Bottom-Entry Elbow Liquid-Collection System with Liner-Expansion Joint
The gas- and liquid-flow patterns in the stack-entrance region of a liner are
complex. In the upper portion of a liner, the gas-flow patterns are typically well
behaved, and liquid condensing within the stack liner in this zone will flow
downward if liner-gas velocities are below the liquid-reversal velocity. The lower
ring collector described in the previous sections is designed to separate these two
zones. The upper portion of the gutter collects the downward-flowing liquid
film, whereas the downward-facing portion of the gutter is used to direct the
moving liquid film in the lower liner to the quiet region above the liner-breech
opening. This ring collector is typically angled 5–10° from horizontal to promote
drainage, with the low point of the ring located on the front wall of the liner.
Liquid collected in this ring is directed to the breech-top gutter on units with
side-entry breeches, and to the lower ring collector on units with bottom-entry
elbows, through a drain box attached to the liner wall. The entrance to this drain
box should incorporate a debris screen to prevent pluggage.
3-60
Upward Facing
Ring Collector
10°
Liner Expansion
1.5-2 Liner Joint
Diameters Above
Roof of Breech Downward Facing
Ring Collector
Breech
Figure 3-16
Liner-Expansion-Joint Placement and Incorporation Within Ring Collectors
Downward
Liquid Film
Flow
Flue Expansion
Gas Joint Boot
Flow
Drain
Figure 3-17
Liner-Expansion-Joint Liquid-Collector Concept
3-61
Only laboratory flow-modeling can be used to design and develop liner-
expansion-joint collectors that are effective at all operating loads of a given unit.
In some units, the secondary gas vortices in the lower liner may not be
sufficiently strong to push the liquid collected on the rear wall of the liner
circumferentially around to the front wall of the liner. This phenomenon can
occur in units with either side-entry breeches or bottom-entry elbows and is
typically associated with units in which the gas flow entering the liner has a
significant vertical-velocity component. (In other words, it is not horizontal when
entering the liner.) If this situation occurs, the deposited liquid film on the rear
wall of the liner will not drain properly. And as more liquid is deposited, the
resulting liquid-film thickness will increase until droplet re-entrainment occurs
off of the film’s surface. To prevent this, one or more large “V” collectors are
placed either in and/or slightly above the droplet-impact zone on the rear wall of
the liner (Figure 3-18). These collectors are made of “L”-shaped material and are
typically 6 x 6 in (150 x 150 mm), with the gutter opening facing downwards.
These “V” collectors (sometimes referred to as “V” diverters) use the vertical
motion of the liquid film to mechanically push it circumferentially away from the
rear wall of the liner to a point where the secondary gas flows are strong enough
to continue pushing the film around to the front wall of the liner. A gap opening
and cover plate are provided at the bottom of the “V” to prevent re-entrainment
of any liquid collected on the inside of the “V” back into the gas flow.
All liquid collectors in the stack liner will need to be sealed to the liner wall along
their full length to prevent leakage and possible re-entrainment of liquid back
into the gas flow.
“V” Diverter
Bottom
Opening
Main Cover Plate
Droplet
Impact Zone
Liquid Film
Flow Pattern
Figure 3-18
Liner Rear-Wall “V” Diverter
3-62
3.11.9 Sloped Liner Floor
A sloped liner floor mitigates these issues, creating a small, quiet sump area for
effective drainage, eliminating the formation of floor vortices, and creating stable
well-defined lower liner gas- and liquid-film flow patterns across a wide range of
boiler loads. A sloped liner floor also reduces the stack-entrance pressure losses.
These benefits associated with the sloped liner floor justifies the additional cost
in most installations. A typical sloped liner floor was previously presented in
Figure 3-7. Although the optimal design is unit-specific, a good starting point
for estimating purposes would locate the high point of the floor on the back wall
of the liner at a point 2/3 of the way up the height of the breech opening. The
bottom point of the sloped floor would be located approximately 1/4 of the way
across the liner from the breech opening, with a sump depth of 6–10 ft (1.8–3
m). If the sump depth is 4 ft (1.2 m) or less, the top of the sump opening should
be covered with a grating to help prevent the flue gas from flowing into the sump
and potentially scouring collected liquid back into the gas flow.
Chokes for a wet stack need to be equipped with an effective liquid collector to
prevent this liquid discharge. Some current stack and choke-outlet liquid
collectors incorporate a downward-facing gutter at the liner outlet to collect the
upward-moving liquid film (Figure 3-19). This design is only marginally effective
because the pressure drop through the collection system will be higher than if it
was just passing around the collector. Also, the gas flow will always follow the
3-63
path of least resistance. Because of these factors, a large quantity of liquid will
collect at the point where the upward-flowing gas separates from the liner to go
around the gutter. The quantity of liquid in this area will increase until it starts
re-entraining back into the gas flow. Some gas and liquid will be collected in the
downward-facing gutter as a result of the momentum of the gas, but some
bypassing of the gutter and the resulting SLD should be expected.
Reduced Gas
Velocity Within
Collector
Liquid Film
Build-up
DETAIL 1
STACK LINER
DRAIN DRAIN
GAS FLOW
Detail 1 Detail 1
Expected Actual
Figure 3-19
Stack-Outlet Liquid Collector
An alternative design is presented in Figure 3-20, in which it can be seen that the
outer top edge of the liner has been sharpened to a knife edge. This arrangement
allows the liquid film to flip over the top edge of the liner outlet before it has a
chance to re-entrain back into the gas flow. Although effective, this collector
design is susceptible to fouling, and such a collector needs to be cleaned on a
periodic basis to ensure that deposits are not formed from which liquid could be
re-entrained.
3-64
SHARPENED COLLECTION
GUTTER
EDGE
DETAIL 2
DETAIL 1
STACK LINER
DRAIN
INSIDE LINER
GAS FLOW
DETAIL 1
Figure 3-20
Alternate Liner-Outlet Liquid-Collector Detail
3.11.11 Drains
Liquid collected within a wet duct/stack must ultimately be drained from the
system. In general, drains can be installed in the horizontal absorber-outlet ducts,
duct-expansion joints, stack floor, liner-expansion-joint collectors, and choke
collectors. The preliminary wet stack design should plan an adequate drainage
system by considering the drainage needs discussed in this section. The final
number of drains needed and their optimum location are specified as one of the
results of the laboratory flow modeling.
Duct-floor drains may be required at locations where liquid pools can build up
and water re-entrainment from the pool may take place. The best locations of the
floor drains are specified by the wet stack flow model.
Drains located on a flat liner floor may need to have a solid cover positioned at
8–12 in (200–300 mm) above the drain opening to provide a quiet area
underneath for effective liquid drainage. These covers are typically 3 x 3 ft (1 x
3-65
1m) and are supported over the drain opening by legs (not unlike a table). All
drainage points should incorporate a wire cage (or equivalent) over their inlet to
prevent plugging by flaking solid scale and other debris.
Drains connect points of different static-pressure levels inside the ducts and liner.
To prevent the possibility of gas back-flowing through the drain pipes—possibly
resulting in droplet re-entrainment back into the gas flow—they must all be
individually pressure-balanced through loop seals or drain pots with good on-line
cleaning capability.
Because the liquid is acidic, the material selection for the drain line and the
means of final disposal must be evaluated. FRP pipe is commonly used for wet
FGD drain-line applications. FRP pipe provides good chemical resistance to
these acids, and is more economical and more readily available than stainless steel
or nickel-alloy pipes. Drain lines are sized to prevent pluggage and for ease of
cleanout. To accommodate the potential for solids plugging, drains lines should
be sized to handle a larger liquid-flow capacity than necessary. Main liner-floor
drains should be 10–12 in (250–300 mm) in diameter, because these are the final
drain points in the system. As such, they are points of possible single-point
failures. Seal pots or siphons should be provided as needed. These devices will
prevent air inflow under negative pressure, which would prohibit liquid discharge
through the drain line or cause droplet re-entrainment back into the gas flow.
Different drain lines can be connected only if the static pressure at the flue gas
end is the same; in other cases, pressure-loop seals or drain pots are required.
Chimney-drain lines should use pipe crosses, tees, or “Y”s with bolted blind
flanges for cleanout. To reduce pluggage, the drain lines should slope without
horizontal sections. Access to cleanout connections should be provided.
Outdoor FRP drain lines should have a steep-enough slope to prevent freezing.
For long, relatively flat horizontal runs of drain line, the pipe should be heat-
traced and insulated.
Stacks with a roof instead of a rain hood are relatively flat so as to serve as a
walking surface. Because of the tendency for liquid-fallout accumulation in this
area, discharged liquid and rainwater sometimes freeze on the roof during cold
weather. Ice formation at drain locations may prevent liquid from entering the
drains. In order to prevent this occurrence, roof slopes should be sufficient to
prevent liquid from pooling, and multiple drains are recommended. The roof
drain should be separate from the liner or choke liquid-collector drains because of
pressure differences and different disposal methods.
Liquid collected from within the ductwork or stack can be routed to the waste
sump or returned to the FGD-system process. Liquid routed to the waste sump
does not re-enter the process and is eliminated. Liquid returned to the process
can be routed to the absorber reaction tank. Liquid returned to the process may
be of sufficient volume and pH level that it could change the operational
characteristics of the FGD process. The volume and pH of the liquid returned to
the process should be considered to compensate for any operational changes that
may be needed.
3-66
A single stack liner that serves multiple FGD modules may produce large
volumes of liquid for disposal. Drainage-pipe diameters need to be sized
accordingly. If the liquid collected from multiple FGD modules is returned to
the FGD process, the volume of liquid may be too large to be returned to a single
FGD module without significant changes to its operational characteristics.
Laboratory flow-modeling provides the following benefits for wet stack design:
1. Estimation of the total liquid load on the liner surface as a result of thermal
and adiabatic condensation. This estimate is based on the liner and shell
geometry, thickness, materials of construction and the flue gas–flow rate and
properties over a range of expected plant-operating conditions and worst-case
ambient weather conditions.
3-67
2. Design and optimization of liquid collectors in the absorber-outlet hood,
absorber-outlet ducts, stack-liner entrance region, and if necessary, stack-
liner outlet to prevent SLD. The collectors collect liquid from duct and stack
surfaces, prevent re-entrainment, and guide the liquid to locations where it
can be drained out of the system. This development work is conducted on a
scale model of the wet duct and stack system, from the outlet of each
absorber’s mist eliminator to approximately four stack-liner diameters above
the top of the breech or inlet duct. Model scales typically range between 1:8
and 1:16. Even though the absorber-outlet-duct region is not a part of the
chimney design, the liquid-collector designs should be developed here and
provided to the owner so that an integrated complete system of liquid
collectors can be developed for the unit. Typical wet stack physical-flow
models are shown in Figure 3-21.
3. Evaluation of the liner-material and liner-surface discontinuities that will be
produced by the construction technique. A laboratory test determines liquid
re-entrainment and drainage behavior over the expected range of unit
operating conditions and confirms or selects the stack-liner design velocity.
This step can be eliminated if sufficient reliable information already exists for
the selected liner material.
4. Evaluation of re-entrainment at liner-expansion joints in a laboratory test rig
and development of a unit-specific liquid-collector geometry to collect and
drain the liquid from the liner-expansion joints.
5. Development of an optimum choke geometry (if required), including liquid
collectors and drains to prevent re-entrainment and discharge of large
droplets from the top of the choke.
6. Performance of a computational 3-D fluid-dynamic-model study of the
upper third of the stack liner and shell to evaluate downwash of the wet
plume. Downwash could lead to stack-surface deterioration, unacceptable
ground-level concentrations of SO2, or icing problems at the top of the
stack. The final choices of the liner-extension height and the geometry of the
shape of the chimney cover will be specified as a result of this work.
3-68
Figure 3-21
Typical Wet Stack Physical-Flow Models
A number of powerful computer codes are available for the evaluation of three-
dimensional fluid flow and thermodynamic processes. The applicable programs
can be separated into two categories: 3-D and 2-D computer programs. How and
where these computer codes can provide help and information for the wet stack
designers is described briefly in the following sections.
3-69
3.12.1.1 3-D Computer Programs
The 3-D computer models are very useful for calculating the steady gas-flow
patterns in and around the ducts and stack. They are also very good at describing
the trajectories of liquid droplets of all sizes and at identifying their deposition
points in the wet duct/stack system when combined with the gas-flow
calculations and droplet-evaporation rates. Three-dimensional computer models
can also be used to predict condensation rates within the liner. However, 2-D
models can do this effectively without needing to model the entire geometry of
the wet stack system.
3-70
3.13 Plume Downwash and Icing
Designing liners for a low-velocity plume can decrease the amount of SLD.
However, having a low-velocity plume increases the potential for plume
downwash at elevated wind velocities. During downwash episodes, saturated flue
gas comes in contact with the liner extension, stack hood and stack shell. This
contact can lead to deterioration of the stack construction materials as a result of
exposure to acid in the flue gas. It also increases the potential for ice formation
on the top of the stack, which creates a potential danger to people and property
in the vicinity of the stack.
Details of the processes controlling the onset and extent of plume downwash
were previously presented in Section 2.9.1.
Liner Extension
Stack Shell
No Downwash onto Shell
Figure 3-22
Typical Plume-Downwash Study – CFD Model Results
3-71
A typical plume-downwash study starts with an evaluation of the "as-designed"
stack (baseline geometry) at plant-operating conditions corresponding to full and
minimum load and at atmospheric conditions corresponding to the worst-case
velocities and prevailing wind directions expected during a typical full year of
operation. Simulations are then performed to determine whether, and to what
extent, the chosen ambient wind conditions create plume downwash. The results
of the simulations performed for ambient temperatures below freezing will be
used to determine the potential for ice formation at the top of the stack.
For plants with multiple liners within a single stack shell, additional simulations
will need to be performed as a function of the prevailing wind direction.
For units with multiple liners, the potential for and extent of plume downwash is
substantially a function of the prevailing wind direction and the number and
arrangement of the liners within the windscreen.
3-72
If the prevailing wind direction is in line with the axis of a stack with two liners,
the extent of downwash will be significantly less than if the wind direction is
perpendicular to the axis of the liners (Figure 3-23). In other words, when the
wind is aligned with the axis of the liners, it is more difficult to push the
combined plumes over than when the wind is perpendicular to the axis and the
wind is acting on both plumes simultaneously. Therefore , it is important to
know the prevailing wind direction when developing the initial system design
and setting the relative locations of the liners.
Favorable Unfavorable
Liner Orientation Liner Orientation
Figure 3-23
Recommended Alignment of a Stack with Two Flues
Stacks with three or more liners will require multiple downwash calculations with
respect to the relative wind direction and individual liner-gas velocities to
establish the unit’s downwash potential.
If the actual or predicted cumulative duration and/or extent of downwash are not
acceptable, there are a limited number of methods available to reduce them:
The most common method of minimizing the potential for plume downwash is
to increase the distance between the top of the windscreen and the top of the
liner in the form of liner extensions. These extensions minimize the potential for
the plume to be pulled into the low-pressure region formed on the downwind
side of the windscreen. Typical liner-extension heights range from 0.5 to 1.5
liner diameters above the top of the stack shell. Within these heights, the
extensions should be self-supporting.
3-73
3.13.4.2 Chokes
Chamfering the top of the windscreen (on 2 sides) can reduce both the onset and
extent of downwash, particularly if the chamfering is aligned perpendicular to the
worst-case prevailing wind direction.
For smaller-diameter stacks without a windscreen, a disk placed around the stack
near the outlet has been shown to reduce the onset of plume downwash. This
disk can either be solid or in the form of a walkway made of grating. The
diameter of the disk and its position relative to the stack outlet must be
optimized by means of a plume-downwash study.
Potential approaches are highly site-specific and they should be evaluated as part
of the plume-downwash CFD evaluation.
Whether ice forms on the top of the stack depends on the temperature of the
surface, the temperature of the mixture of saturated flue gas and cold ambient
wind, and on whether water vapor will condense out of the mixture. Ice
formation is most likely at plants where below-freezing temperatures are
common and where they last for extended periods of time.
3-74
Icing usually does not cause serious ice buildups that can fall to the ground.
However, when the icing conditions are occurring, the platform near the top of
the stack, the railings, and possibly the roof, may be slippery.
The potential for icing can be reduced by employing the following steps:
1. Select a stack-liner discharge velocity that minimizes plume downwash over
the expected operating range of the unit at the existing local wind conditions
and that is consistent with other design objectives.
2. During cold ambient temperature conditions with high winds, run the unit at
near full load. Employing this operating procedure under such conditions
may be natural, because more power is consumed in below-freezing weather.
3. Use heated annulus air or electrical heating elements to heat the stack hood,
roof, or other areas where ice forms on the top of the stack.
4. Insulation is not required on sloped rain hoods constructed of a corrosion-
resistant material.
3-75
Section 4: Guide to Developing a
Specification for Wet Stacks
The designer of a wet stack system must follow a logical process to develop a bid
specification for a new or retrofit wet stack. This process involves evaluating
specific design issues that are important to wet stack design. The engineering
process that leads to a bid specification and the completion of a wet stack design
is discussed in this section.
The design of a new or retrofit wet stack may be broken down into two distinct
phases of work:
Phase I – Feasibility Study
Phase II – Design Process
Essentially all modern wet flue gas desulfurization (WFGD) systems will operate
with a wet stack. Therefore, the two major questions to be answered during the
Phase 1 feasibility study are:
2) If not, what will be the requirements for the new stack installation?
4-1
Establish liner-inlet options.
Determine liner-insulation requirements.
Perform operating conditions versus liner-design compatibility analysis.
Select design velocity limit to prevent liquid re-entrainment for each
candidate liner material.
Perform a preliminary economic analysis for liner material and inlet-
geometry options for wet stack operation.
Select liner material(s) for wet stack operation.
The feasibility study should address all considerations necessary to ensure that a
wet stack is allowable and that the proposed design will work. The study should
include permit considerations and plume-dispersion modeling as well as
preliminary design choices such as the absorber outlet-duct arrangement, choice
of inlet geometry, velocity limits for liner materials, and preliminary economics.
A detailed discussion of each issue that is important for new or retrofit wet stacks
is included in this section of the design guide.
4-2
4.1.1.2 Evaluation of Issues (Phase I)
During the wet stack Phase I feasibility study, several critical issues must be
evaluated. For example, what material will be used for construction of the stack
liner? The liner diameter is established on the basis of the liner material. Each of
the specific design issues identified in this section needs to be evaluated from a
technical and an economic standpoint to enable the wet stack designer to decide
how to proceed.
Economic evaluation of a new or retrofit wet stack should include the following
factors:
Capital costs
Operating costs
Maintenance costs
Outage costs
Capital costs for a chimney include the cost of the concrete shell, liner,
foundation, and of miscellaneous items such as access platforms, doors, elevator,
rain hood, pressurization system, drain system, protective coatings, and electrical
system.
Outage time does not apply to a new wet stack, because the unit has not yet been
placed into operation. For a retrofit wet stack, outage time depends upon how
long it will take to tie the new absorber-inlet duct to the existing ductwork and, if
applicable, reline or replace the liner within the existing stack shell. Outage costs
can be minimized by scheduling the ductwork tie-in to take place during a
normal maintenance outage. Outage costs per day will vary depending upon time
of year (energy demand), loss of revenue, and cost of replacement power.
The number of years considered in the economic analysis should encompass the
design life of the FGD system. Initial capital costs, periodic or annual
maintenance costs, and annual energy costs need to be converted to present value
to compare the options on an equal basis.
Table 4-1 describes Phase II, which is the process for the design of a wet stack.
This table provides a brief description of each step of the design process, a
designation of each step of the design process, a designation of responsibility, and
4-3
a reference to the section of this guide that provides the relevant background
information.
The design-process phase essentially takes the feasibility study and turns it into a
bid specification. During this phase, it is necessary to establish the design criteria,
define the stack and inlet-duct geometry, perform the flow-model study to
determine liquid-collection devices and drains, and prepare the bid specifications
and drawings.
Table 4-1
Phase II Wet Stack Design Process
Detailed designs of the chimney foundation, concrete column, liner, and access
platforms are normally provided by the chimney contractor. However, the
foundation is often designed by the owner’s or general contractor’s engineer. The
electrical power-feed design is usually performed by the owner’s or general
contractor’s engineer—based on information from the chimney electrical
engineer—because the electrical raceway system must be designed ahead of time
in order to be embedded in the chimney foundation. The chimney-related scope
of work is typically included in a separate contract. However, if schedule and site
constraints warrant it, the chimney may be included in the FGD system contract.
The preliminary duct and stack design is completed using the component-by-
component guidance outlined in Section 3, "Specific Wet Stack Design Issues."
Next, the complete wet duct and stack geometry is evaluated for wet operation as
4-4
an integrated system, in which the individual components operate together as a
unit.
The first objective of this evaluation is to review the preliminary duct and stack
design as a complete system for wet operation. How well will all the flow
passages work together as a system, from the absorber outlet to the top of the
stack? How suitable are they to be outfitted with liquid collectors to achieve
minimum SLD? If improvements are possible by means of modifications to the
duct and stack geometry, are the gains in reduced SLD worth the cost of the
geometry changes?
The combined wet duct and stack systems use a variety of design methods. The
best methods that have been developed are described in the following
subsections. The design methods and tools used to achieve these objectives are:
Preliminary design review based on experience
Laboratory flow-modeling – 3-D
Computer flow-modeling – 3-D
Computer program calculations – 2-D
These design methods are summarized in the first four subsections below.
The last two subsections are a discussion of the system tests and inspections
conducted after the unit is in operation to help identify how well the final
duct/stack geometry and the installed liquid-collection system are working. If
there are wet-operation problems, the tests and inspections can identify the
causes and practical solutions.
The preliminary duct and stack-liner design geometry for new construction must
be reviewed to assess how well all individual components will work together as an
integrated system. The second goal of the design modifications implemented at
this phase of wet stack design is to make the integrated geometry more suitable
for liquid collection. This review should be based on actual field experience with
liquid collectors designed for different power plants. This modified wet duct and
4-5
stack design is the starting geometry for the design of the liquid-collection
devices. It also optimizes gas-flow passages by experimental flow-modeling. It is
important to get the engineer and modeling company together to review the
preliminary design early in the design process, because simple changes made at
this point in the process can have a big impact on the liquid-collection
performance of the entire system.
A larger portion of the liquid flow on the liner surfaces is caused by condensation
than by deposition of the droplet carryover from the mist eliminators. The
condensation on the liner cannot be measured in a laboratory-scale model of the
stack. Therefore, analytical calculations are required to define the amount of
condensed-liquid flow rate in the stack.
The basic description of the adiabatic bulk condensation and the thermal-wall
condensation processes is given in Section 2.3, "Sources of Liquid in a Duct/Wet
Stack System." This section discusses the methods used to predict condensation
rates in the duct and the stack and also presents calculated condensation data for
typical sample stacks.
Liquid condensation occurs continuously on all wet duct and stack-liner surfaces
because the flow gas is saturated and the liner's inside surface temperatures are
lower than the gas dew-point temperature. But the rate of condensation per unit
surface area can vary significantly, depending on geometry, materials,
temperatures, and wind speed.
Numerous studies performed using these programs have drawn the following
conclusions:
The bulk condensation in the liner is a function of stack height.
For brick liners, the pressurizing-air leakage through the liner increases the
bulk condensation by additional cooling.
The wall condensation is directly proportional to the temperature difference
between the gas and the ambient air.
4-6
The liner material does not significantly affect the wall-condensation rate
because the thermal resistance of the liner is a small fraction of the total
thermal resistance between the flue gas and the ambient air.
The wall condensation may be reduced by a factor of about 4 to 5 by
insulating the outside of the alloy or FRP liners with a 2-inch (0.05-m)
fiberglass layer. Increasing the insulation thickness from 2 in (0.05 m) to 4 in
(0.1 m) will result in a small reduction in condensation rate. Therefore, more
than 2 in (0.05 m) of insulation is seldom required. Insulation does not
eliminate the liner condensation but can reduce it significantly.
A wind-speed increase from 20 to 40 mph (9 to 18 m/s) increases the
condensation rate by only a few percentage points because the convective-
heat transfer levels off above 20 mph.
Having more than two liners in a shell increases the total wall-condensation
rate by about 5%. This increase is mainly the result of a higher condensation
rate on the liner extension above the shell.
The results of the condensation calculation are used to design the liquid
collectors and to plan for the liquid-disposal system.
The estimated ranges of the liquid-flow rates in the wet duct and stack of the
typical 550-MW unit are listed in Table 4-2. These numerical values help the
stack designer to estimate the amount of liquid flow to be controlled and
accounted for in a wet duct/stack system.
4-7
Table 4-2
Estimated Ranges of Flows in the Wet Duct/Stack of a Typical 550-MW Plant
The geometry of the ductwork and the stack is inherited from the existing system
and cannot be altered in most conversion cases. For this reason, gas-flow passages
are less suitable for gas/liquid flow and for installation of liquid collectors than
optimized flow passages of new or retrofit units.
4-9
surface and geometry are evaluated, with the air and water flow simulating
the field conditions.
Design of duct and stack modifications to make the geometry more suitable
for wet operation. These modifications are limited to internal changes only.
Internal changes are inserts, target walls, turning vanes, and baffles that make
the flow more favorable for liquid collection and promote the deposition of
liquid droplets entrained in the gas flow.
Flow-modeling to decide if reheat-duct openings can stay open to the
isolation damper or whether they must be blanked off at the duct interfaces.
Evaluation of wet operation with existing internal trusses. Decide if they are
acceptable or if they need to be equipped with liquid-collection devices or
replaced with a more suitable truss design.
Design and development of liquid collectors. These collectors are
experimentally used where needed in the absorber-outlet ducts and stack-
liner entrance region to prevent large droplets from reaching the stack liner,
to collect liquid from duct and stack surfaces, to prevent re-entrainment, and
to guide liquid to locations where it can be drained out of the system.
Definition of the best location for drains, selection of possible drain locations
within the geometric limitations, and experimental evaluation of the final
drain system.
Evaluation of re-entrainment at liner-expansion joints in a laboratory test rig
and development of a liquid-collector design to collect and drain liquid from
liner-expansion joints.
Development of the optimum choke-liquid collectors and drains to prevent
re-entrainment and discharge of large droplets from the top of the choke (if
there is a choke in the existing liner).
Measurement of pressure losses in the model, scaling them to field-operating
conditions, and comparing them to the available pressure rise of the existing
ID fan. Reduction of pressure losses if needed.
Wind-tunnel tests to evaluate downwash of the wet plume that could lead to
stack-surface deterioration, unacceptable ground-level concentrations of
SO2, or icing problems at the top of the stack. The final geometry of the
chimney-cover shape and the extension of the liner will be specified as a
result of this work.
Use of a model of the absorber-outlet ductwork, stack-liner breeching duct,
and stack liner up to two liner diameters above the CEM elevation.
Measurement of the gas-velocity profile and swirl angles for comparison to
EPA requirements at the CEM station.
The use of computer programs for computational fluid mechanics has been
increasing during the last 20 years. How and when computer programs can
provide help and information for wet stack designers is briefly described here.
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The applicable programs can be separated into two categories: 3-D and 2-D
computer programs.
The 3-D computer models are useful to calculate steady gas-flow patterns in the
duct and stack. They are good for major flow patterns, but they become complex
and slow-running programs when small details are included that require larger
computers (for example, the flow in the expansion-joint cavity, the flow around
trusses, and the flow near liquid collectors). The 3-D computer models are very
good at describing the trajectories of liquid droplets of all sizes and their impact
on deposition points in the duct system when combined with the gas-flow
calculations. These codes can be used to calculate deposition on the choke-cone
surface with assumed points of droplet origin. Some of the codes come with
trajectory subroutines that yield very detailed quantitative results.
The condensation on the liner of a wet stack can be described by a 3-D computer
code. But because the process is basically two-dimensional, 2-D analytical codes
are effective and are easier to use.
Several available 3-D computer codes are written for dispersion-modeling only.
The degree of complexity and accuracy of these codes varies a great deal as they
account for the terrain and atmospheric conditions over large distances from the
stack. Computerized modeling, verified by field-dispersion measurements, is the
best tool available at this time to predict the plume-dispersion process. Plume
downwash at the top of the stack could be predicted by an elaborate 3-D
computer model with a high degree of accuracy.
After the wet stack is placed into operation, the effectiveness of mist eliminators
and downstream liquid-collection devices should be tested to verify that design
objectives have been met. EPRI Report CS-2520, Entrainment in Wet Stacks,
evaluates various methods for making carryover measurements and presents
recommendations for obtaining accurate results [1].
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Effective operation of the liquid-collection devices and drainage systems should
also be verified during an off-line inspection of the liner system. Gas and liquid
flow on the liner and around the liquid collectors can be determined by observing
the pattern of residue on the internal surfaces. If heavy solids buildup or deposits
are found and are causing SLD, necessary improvements can be defined on the
basis of this inspection.
Additional in-place testing at the CEM level can measure the effectiveness of the
liquid-collection system. These tests can be performed as needed to establish the
liquid-flow in the stack. The following liquid-flow measurements are not
mandatory tests performed as part of the CEM system; however, they would be
beneficial in furnishing some or all of the following information:
Measurements of entrained droplet-size distribution using video droplet
analyzer (VDA) or similar methods
Qualitative amount of liquid near the wall by impingement methods
Liquid-flow direction on wall (up, down, or slanted) by observations at the
ports covered by a Plexiglas cover
Qualitative droplet sizes, using a suitable impingement probe exposed to the
flow for a few seconds
Wherever there is a large amount of entrained liquid, the droplets may interfere
with the CEM system velocity and angle measurements. This situation shows
that liquid collection and drainage must be improved, even though the SLD is
acceptable.
Outage time is the amount of time necessary for an existing unit to be out of
service because of repairs, maintenance, or modifications. The outage may be
caused by an emergency (unscheduled), or it may be routine (scheduled). Outage
time applies only to an existing, operating unit. Therefore, the designer does not
need to consider outage time for a wet stack on a new unit. For a retrofit FGD
project, outage time is the time it takes to tie the new FGD-system ductwork
into the existing ductwork.
Outage time for retrofit wet stacks should be minimized for economic reasons.
Depending on unit size, energy demand, loss of revenue, and cost of replacement
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power, outage time can be very expensive. To minimize the outage time required
for a retrofit wet stack project, the ductwork connections or tie-ins should be
made during a scheduled maintenance outage.
Once the decision has been made to utilize wet stack operation, it is necessary to
prepare a bid specification for the wet stack. For a new or retrofit wet stack, the
chimney can either be covered in a separate contract or be part of the FGD-
system contract. This section of the guide addresses key issues that should be
included in a wet stack bid specification. These guidelines should not be used
without application of good engineering judgment and consideration of site
specifics.
Preparing a bid specification for a wet stack is a multi-step process. The design
criteria for a wet stack are determined on the basis of plant considerations,
applicable codes, and system-performance requirements. General arrangement
drawings that define duct and chimney geometry should also be included. A
flow-model study should be performed in order to optimize the absorber outlet-
duct arrangement and to design the necessary liquid-collection devices and
drains. At this point, the bid specifications can be prepared. Exhibit drawings
showing the wet stack arrangement and typical design details are included with
the specifications to define the scope of work and obtain competitive bids.
Minimum standards for design materials and construction are established in the
bid specifications. The chimney contractor is normally responsible for the design
of the wet stack to meet the specified operating conditions and any applicable
codes, such as the latest edition of the American Concrete Institute (ACI 307),
Code Requirements for Reinforced Concrete Chimneys, or ASTM D5364, Standard
Guide for Design, Fabrication, and Erection of Fiberglass Reinforced (FRP) Chimney
Liners with Coal Fired Units.
New stacks are typically designed in accordance with the latest wind and seismic
sections in the applicable steel-stack or concrete-chimney codes. Dynamic wind
loads should be evaluated in relationship to the chimney's critical wind velocity
and natural frequency. Wind effects from adjacent structures and nearby
chimneys should be considered. Closely spaced chimneys can cause an
amplification of the vortex-shedding wind loads for both the new and existing
chimneys. Spacing between adjacent chimneys can be increased in order to
decrease the amplification factor for the vortex-shedding wind loads.
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4.2.2 Define Absorber Outlet-Duct Geometry
To ensure favorable wet operation, the chimney shell and liner-inlet geometry
and the liner diameter should be defined as early as possible in the initial study
phase of a wet stack project. Some flexibility is required to accommodate the
different scrubber arrangements and sizes available. Refer to Sections 2 and 3 of
this design guide for more information on chimney-geometry requirements.
Special consideration should be paid to choosing a liner diameter that results in
liner-gas velocities favorable for the wet operation of the liner material under
consideration.
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4.2.6 Prepare Bid Specifications
The bid specifications can be generated once the feasibility study, preliminary
layouts, and material selections have been completed. The bid specifications
should be as detailed and complete as possible to ensure competitive bids and a
successful wet stack system. Major items included in the bid specifications are
discussed below in the subsection, "What to Specify in a Bid Document."
Drawings are prepared and included with the bid specifications in order to clearly
define the scope of work. At a minimum, the bid documents include a site plan,
chimney general arrangement, typical details, and electrical drawings.
A site plan included with the bid specifications conveys the arrangement of the
power plant in relation to the area for the proposed construction. These drawings
should include lay-down areas for material storage and prefabrication/assembly
activities. These drawings will allow the contractor to plan his construction
operations. It also indicates restricted or congested areas on the plant site with
which the contractor will have to contend.
A general arrangement of the chimney included in the bid documents gives the
bidders overall guidelines about the scope of work. Major features of the wet
stack are typically included on the chimney general-arrangement drawing. The
chimney general arrangement is only meant to serve as a guideline and is not
intended to provide final design information. The chimney inlet-duct elevation
may need to be adjusted, depending upon the absorber height.
Typical details that the owner or specifier wishes to incorporate into the final
design are included in the bid specifications. Typical details may include
platforms and handrails, rain hoods, expansion joints, duct supports, test ports
and probe-support jibs, insulation and lagging, lining systems, and liquid-
collection devices such as gutters.
4.2.7.4 Electrical
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4.3 What to Specify in a Bid Document
This section discusses items included in a bid specification for a wet stack.
The scope of work for the wet stack contract must be clearly defined in the bid
specifications. A complete description of the entire project may also be included
in the specifications. A new or retrofit wet stack, which involves constructing a
new stack, is usually designed, furnished, and constructed by a chimney
contractor who must comply with a performance specification that is usually
prepared by an architectural/engineering firm. A conversion to a wet stack, which
involves converting an existing stack to wet operation, is usually designed by an
architectural/engineering firm that produces a construction-contract
specification.
All work to be performed under a certain contract is clearly defined to avoid any
change orders or schedule delays later. The specification should also clearly state
that the contractor is responsible for furnishing and erecting all materials (if
applicable), and for providing the supervision, labor, tools, and transportation
required for construction of the work specified. Work by others is included in
multiple-contract projects, to assist the contractor with on-site coordination and
scheduling issues. A general work sequence may be helpful in avoiding
unnecessary construction delays. A list of contract drawings, reference drawings,
and reporting requirements is also helpful to the contractor performing the work.
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4.3.1.2.2 Access Roads
The bid specifications may include a section to provide and maintain vehicular
access, both to the site and within the site during construction. New access roads
may need to be constructed to perform the work. Restrictions should be imposed
on existing access roads which cannot support construction activities.
A provision addressing the need for a safety barrier around the base of the
chimney, which would protect personnel working below from falling objects, is
typically included with the specification. Chimney contractors usually require a
50-ft-wide safety zone around the base of the chimney during construction of the
concrete shell, exterior platforms, and ladders. A debris net on the outside of the
chimney shell is typically required to catch falling objects during construction.
This section alerts the contractor of any concurrent construction activities in the
chimney area. It allows the chimney contractor to make necessary provisions
regarding coordination of construction activities between different contractors
and/or the owner. For example, other construction activities within the safety-
barrier zone cannot take place while the concrete chimney shell is being
constructed.
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4.3.1.3 Project Meetings and Schedules
This section of the bid specifications includes requirements for the following:
Project meetings
Preconstruction conference
Finalizing schedules
Progress meetings and methods of submittal
Coordination conferences
Safety meetings
Schedules and reports
Initial coordination submittals
Work-progress schedule
Work-progress reports
4.3.1.4 Submittals
This section of the bid specifications includes minimum standards for design,
materials, and construction. The contractor is normally responsible for the
detailed design of the wet stack, whether it be new or a retrofit construction.
Specific design parameters for the piling, foundation, chimney shell, and liner
and/or lining material should be included in this section so the contractor can
perform the final design. The wet stack geometry can be included in this section
of the specifications unless indicated on the drawings. The operating conditions
for the unit, such as maximum gas-flow rate, maximum temperature, and gas exit
velocity at maximum gas flow, should be specified in this section. Specific site
conditions, such as the location of nearby structures and chimneys, are considered
for vortex-shedding wind loads on the new or existing chimneys.
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4.3.2 Site Work
A bid specification for a new or retrofit wet stack that involves constructing a
new stack includes excavation, backfill, and foundation piling (if necessary).
Modification of an existing stack (if converted to wet operation) may require the
designer to analyze the existing stack and foundation, including piling, for new
wind and seismic loads (depending on applicable code requirements). The
existing stack and foundation also need to be analyzed for additional dead load, if
the existing liner is revised or replaced.
A new stack will require excavation and backfill for the chimney foundation.
Dewatering requirements for the excavation during construction should be
addressed. Proper fill material and backfilling procedures are also typically
addressed.
This section addresses furnishing all the labor, equipment, and materials
necessary to install foundation piling or drilled shafts for the chimney structure
(if applicable).
4.3.3 Concrete
The concrete section of the bid specifications for a new wet stack includes such
items as formwork, reinforcement, concrete materials, and quality control. The
contractor submits the concrete-mix design, which should preferably be based on
field experience. However, when sufficient or suitable strength-test data is not
available, concrete shall be proportioned on the basis of a laboratory-trial mix
design.
4.3.3.1 Materials
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Slump
Air Content
4.3.3.2 Foundation
Foundation requirements for a new wet stack are included in the concrete section
of the bid specifications. In some cases involving a new stack, the chimney
contractor is responsible for designing the chimney foundation, including the
number and layout of piling (if required). However, the foundation is often
designed and supplied by the general contractor. Pile type and capacity is
generally determined by the architect/engineer.
The chimney column or concrete chimney shell may require special cement or
concrete additives in the mix design to facilitate rapid construction. Coatings are
usually used to withstand the potentially corrosive environment at the top of the
column. Construction tolerances for vertical alignment of center point, diameter,
and wall thickness for a new chimney column conform to ACI 307.
The liner support pedestals usually are specified to meet the same concrete
requirements as the chimney column.
4.3.4 Liner
4.3.4.1 Materials
Liner materials of construction for a new chimney liner are specified in the bid
documents. The material selected should conform to the respective ASTM
standards, unless specifically noted otherwise. Refer to Sections 2 and 3 of this
guide for liner-material discussions.
Strength requirements for various liner materials are dictated by the structural
design of the liner. For example, the yield strength of a steel or FRP liner and the
compressive strength of a brick liner should be specified.
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4.3.4.3 Construction Requirements
Construction requirements for the selected liner materials are typically included
in the bid specifications. These requirements are primarily based on good
construction practice, recognized and accepted throughout the industry. Unique
construction requirements are also included in the bid specifications.
The chimney inlet-duct and expansion-joint section includes provisions for the
contractor to design, fabricate, furnish, deliver, and erect these items. The
ductwork and expansion-joint section specifies the materials of construction,
design criteria, and fabrication and erection requirements.
Structural and miscellaneous metals are included in the metals section of the bid
specifications. Miscellaneous metals include such items as platforms and ladders,
liner or roof-support framing, test ports, and rain hood (if applicable).
The materials of construction for wet stack platforms and ladders are specified.
Carbon steel is typically specified for the entire ladder, except for the upper 50–
100 ft, which should be fabricated from a more corrosion-resistant material. The
ladder should also include a Saf-T-Climb device for personnel safety. Wet stack
platforms may be fabricated from carbon steel, with the exception of the upper
portion of the stack, in which case the material should be similar to the upper
portion of the ladder. The extent and type of corrosion-resistant materials
specified will depend on the environment to which the materials will be exposed
and the extent of downwash anticipated.
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4.3.7.1 Liner or Roof-Support Framing
Access doors are usually specified for the chimney liner at floor level or in the
chimney-inlet ductwork for cleanout and maintenance. Access doors may be
required in the chimney shell for annular platform and test-port access. Access
doors may also be specified for a brick-liner support pedestal (if applicable).
The size and location of the access doors may need to be evaluated and
determined by the flow-modeling company. Liquid collectors and/or liquid-film
diverters may be required around access doors to prevent droplet re-entrainment
from these areas.
Protective-coating systems for each particular component of the wet stack are
included in the bid specifications, if needed. Interior and exterior coating systems
may also be considered for the stack shell and liner. An exterior protective
coating may also be considered for the chimney inlet duct, if it is fabricated using
wallpapered construction or a clad-plate material.
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4.3.9.1 Shell Exterior/Interior
Protective coatings may be considered for the upper portion of the concrete shell
of a wet stack to protect it from the corrosive effects of saturated flue gas during a
plume-downwash event. The extent of coverage can be determined from a
plume-downwash study. Additional consideration is given to coating the exterior
of adjacent existing stacks, which may be subject to the corrosive effects of
saturated flue gas from the wet stack.
The coating system selected for structural and miscellaneous steel is evaluated on
the basis of the environment to which the steel is exposed, access requirements
for maintenance, the cost of the coating system, and performance history.
The bid specifications for a new wet stack may require furnishing and installing
an electric rack-and-pinion–drive personnel elevator. Design requirements, such
as conformance to applicable sections of ANSI, access to established platform
elevations, minimum lifting capacity, and minimum-design wind loads (for
exterior elevators) are typically included. If fabricated from carbon steel, the
exposed metalwork of the elevator and supporting structure should be galvanized
or protected with a coating system. For the upper 50–100 ft of the chimney, the
mast and rack is usually specified to be Type 316 stainless-steel material. The
electrical power supply and wiring also needs be specified.
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4.3.12 Mechanical
The following mechanical sections are typically included in the wet stack bid
specifications.
The specifications provide for all pipes, fittings, hangers, supports, and
accessories required to complete the chimney corrosive drain-piping systems
associated with the liquid-collection system. Specific piping material should be
specified for each application. FRP or alloy piping is normally specified for drain-
pipe material. Minimum piping-installation standards are usually also addressed.
Stack-liner liquid-collector drains should incorporate some easily accessible
method for monitoring or observing the drainage flow. This capability will be
useful for determining the performance (or nonperformance) of the liquid-
collection system.
This section of the bid specifications applies to a concrete chimney with an acid-
resistant brick liner. An annulus-pressurization system is required to keep flue
gases contained within the liner. The pressurization-system section should
include furnishing and installing the required number of fans, including drive
motors, controls, and accessories.
4.3.12.3 Louvers
The bid specifications include a section requiring the contractor to furnish and
install louvers to provide ventilation between the chimney liner and shell.
4.3.13 Electrical
The electrical section of the bid specifications includes provisions to furnish and
install all electric equipment, wiring (including plant-interface wiring),
grounding, and lighting necessary for a wet stack system.
4.3.13.1 Rounding
Grounding for all new electrical equipment is included in the bid specifications.
The grounding requirements for a new wet stack are similar to the requirements
for a dry stack. Any new electrical equipment used in a wet stack–conversion
project needs to be properly grounded.
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Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Advisory Circulars and
the National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA).
The electrical section of the bid specifications address plant-interface wiring, the
power panel, and the disconnect/lockout switch. The contents of this section are
usually similar to standard power-plant chimney electrical requirements.
4.4.1 Warranties/Guarantees
Normally, a one-year warranty is specified for material and labor (one year from
initial operation). If an unproven technology is being proposed by the
Contractor, an extended warranty would be needed.
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4.4.2.1 Chimney Foundation
Design calculations for the chimney foundation may also be required for
submittal. The following is a list of items to be included with this submittal:
Foundation layout and size
Foundation loads
Soil-bearing pressure load or pile loading
Factor of safety against overturning
Radial and tangential design moments
Radial and tangential reinforcing-steel requirements
Shearing-stress calculations
The concrete-shell calculations specify all design loads and operating conditions
used. Calculations are provided for representative elevations throughout the
height of the chimney. The following information is typically provided with these
calculations:
Wind analysis and resulting loads
Dynamic seismic analysis and resulting loads
Column geometry, including diameters and wall thicknesses
Column deflections
Thermal stresses
Reinforcing-steel requirements
4.4.2.3 Liner
Calculations are also typically submitted for the liner design. The design loads,
operating conditions, and material properties are specified. Load combinations
applicable to the liner material are addressed per the governing code
requirements.
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4.4.2.4 Pressurization-Fan Size
The Contractor is usually required to size the pressurization fans if a brick liner is
to be constructed or converted to wet operation. The information that the
Contractor is required to furnish is as follows:
Fan manufacturer and model number
Fan static pressure, including accessory losses at the design point
Fan-volume flow rate at the design point
Fan-motor manufacturer and type
Fan-motor horsepower rating
Fan-performance curves, including capacity versus static pressure, efficiency,
and shaft horsepower
Design basis for determining fan size and leakage values
Drawings of the fan housing and base frame
Material components of the FRP liner, such as resin and glass, are typically
certified for compliance with the appropriate ASTM standards and specification
requirements. All materials, prior to and during fabrication, as well as the
completed sections of the liner, may be subject to laboratory tests. Resin-batch
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numbers and shelf life are recorded for future reference. For each batch of
material, resin gel-time tests are performed in accordance with ASTM D2471,
and resin-viscosity tests are performed in accordance with ASTM D2393.
Material-certification reports are usually furnished for all alloy materials and for
the alloy-welding materials. Certification reports should verify that the chemical
composition of the material is in conformance with the ASTM or specification
requirements.
Mill certificates may be submitted for the cement being utilized to confirm its
conformance with ASTM C150 and to ensure that the correct type is being
furnished. Certifications are also required for the coarse and fine aggregate
(ASTM C33) and for any admixtures (ASTM C494) that will be utilized.
Concrete-mix design proportions and compressive-strength-test results
submittals are used to substantiate the proposed mix design.
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available, the most commonly used hot-weather concreting construction
techniques are:
Using ice or cold water in the concrete mix
Applying cold-water spray to aggregates
Placement of concrete during the coolest time of the day or evening
The Contractor may be requested to submit their hot- and cold-weather concrete
procedures for approval and be prepared to implement these procedures on short
notice, if needed.
Horizontal weld seams in a wet stack are typically limited to 1/8-in (0.003-m)
reinforcement or projection on the inside of the liner. Horizontal welds on the
inside of a choke are usually ground flush to prevent liquid re-entrainment.
Vertical weld-seam reinforcement in a wet stack, including the choke, is also
typically limited to 1/8 in (0.003 m). Limiting the size of the horizontal weld
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seams is more critical than the vertical weld seams with regard to minimizing
liquid re-entrainment.
For all welding processes, the Contractor prepares and submits for approval the
welding-procedure specification (WPS) and the procedure-qualification test
results (PQR). For carbon-steel welding, the welding-procedure specification
includes the nonmandatory information included in Appendix E of AWS D1.1,
in addition to the mandatory information listed in Appendix IV, Table IV-1 of
AWS D1.1. For alloy welding, the welding procedures typically address all
essential and nonessential variables of Section IX of the ASME Boiler and
Pressure Vessel Code. Only approved welding procedures are typically used.
Ongoing on-site testing and inspection are required throughout the project's
construction phase. Testing confirms that the materials of construction meet
contract requirements. Inspections verify that the Contractor is performing the
work in accordance with specification requirements.
4.4.5.1 Piling
Piling is often used to support the chimney foundation. Several types of piling
systems, such as steel H-piles or auger-cast concrete piles, are commonly used.
Tests and inspection applications for piling are as follows:
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4.4.5.1.1 Load Test
4.4.5.2 Foundation
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used, the connectors are capped off to provide protection from the wet concrete.
Mud or debris is removed from the rebar before placement of the concrete.
Dimensional tolerances for the concrete column are established by ACI 307.
Vertical alignment of the column’s center point is taken by plumbing down to a
reference point on the chimney foundation. The column's diameter is taped, and
measurements are taken for out-of-roundness tolerances.
Vertical reinforcing bars should be counted and bar sizes checked for each
concrete-lift height to confirm that the bar quantities match the design
requirements. Horizontal bars are checked for size and location. Splice lengths
and concrete cover should also be checked.
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4.4.5.3.4 Wall Thickness
Wall thicknesses are typically measured to verify conformance with the design
requirements.
Concrete testing is typically performed for each lift section (jump form) or for
each 8-hour shift (slip form) by a qualified laboratory-testing company. Testing
is normally performed in the bottom of the chimney at the point of discharge
from the concrete truck. The temperature, slump, and air content of the concrete
are measured and recorded. Concrete cylinders are taken to verify compressive
strength.
During construction of the brick liner, mortar cubes are taken daily for
compressive-strength tests. This testing is usually performed on-site by a
qualified testing laboratory. It is recommended that two sets of mortar-cube
samples should be tested: one set that is cured in the bottom of the stack to
represent actual in situ conditions during construction, and another set that is
cured under laboratory conditions in accordance with ASTM guidelines. Because
the mortar-curing process is heat-sensitive, compression-strength test results
from mortar cured in the bottom of the stack may indicate whether adequate heat
is provided during construction in cold weather.
Inspection during construction of the brick liner may be used to confirm that the
following recommended construction practices are maintained:
Projections on the inside face of the liner should not exceed 1/8 in (0.003 m).
The liner's vertical axis should neither be off the theoretical axis by more
than 0.1 percent of its height nor by 1 in (0.03 m), whichever is greater. Also,
the center of the liner should not vary by more than 1 in (0.03 m) in 10 ft
(3 m).
Neither the diameter nor the radius of the liner should differ by more than
2% from those specified.
During the liner's construction and curing period, a minimum temperature of
50°F (10°C) should be maintained in the shell's interior.
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4.4.5.5 Metal Liners
For carbon-steel welding, all welders must typically be qualified by passing tests
prescribed in the AWS D1.1 Standard Qualification Procedure. Welders should
have been tested within the past 12 months, and their qualifications may be
considered in effect unless the welder is not engaged in a given process of
welding for more than six months.
For alloy welding, all welders are typically being qualified in accordance with
Section IX of the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code. In addition, at a
minimum, the tests should meet the radiographic acceptance criteria of QW-191
of Section IX.
For alloy welding, all welds should be visually inspected by an AWS Certified
Welding Inspector (CWI), qualified per AWS Standard QC1. All alloy welds
that will be exposed to flue gas are tested using liquid-penetrant examination
according to Article 6 of ASME Section V. All liquid-penetrant testing is
performed by an ASNT Level II inspector. Certification verifying the
qualifications of the welding inspector should be submitted before welding
operations start.
The Contractor usually prepares and submits workmanship samples for approval
prior to the start of work. The workmanship samples are visually inspected and
liquid penetrant tested prior to submittal. The approved workmanship samples
are visibly displayed at the shop and job site for the benefit of the welders and
inspectors, as examples of acceptable weld surfaces.
Inspection and testing of an FRP liner is typically performed during the liner's
fabrication and installation.
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4.4.5.6.1 Physical Testing
Physical testing may be performed and submitted for representative wall samples.
The following tests may be performed as appropriate:
Resin/glass ratio for interior and exterior layers per ASTM D2584
Barcol hardness for surface cure per ASTM D2583
Tensile modulus per ASTM D638
Flexural modulus per ASTM D790
Compressive modulus per ASTM D695
Coefficient of thermal expansion per ASTM E228
Coefficient of thermal conductivity per ASTM C117 or C518
Specific gravity per ASTM D792
Chemical resistance per ASTM C581 or D4398
Heat-deflection temperature per ASTM D648
Flame retardancy per ASTM E84
For curing considerations, the air temperature in the work area is maintained at a
minimum of 50°F (10°C). All resins and FRP components are stored in
accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations. The resin temperature at
its point of use should typically be between 60°F (15°C) and 75°F (24°C).
For installation on steel liners, any existing fly ash buildup or coating should be
removed, and any abrupt contours or edges on welds should be rounded off
smoothly by grinding. The interior steel-substrate surface should be blast-cleaned
to white metal in accordance with SSPC-SP5.
For installation on brick liners, the condition of the inside surface of the liner
should be inspected. Fly ash buildup may require that the surface be cleaned by
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hydroblast or sandblast. Mortar joints should be inspected. Protruding mortar
should be chipped off.
The inside surface of the liner should be tested to confirm the removal of any
existing acids. Any existing acid on the steel should be neutralized with an
ammonia-water rinse followed by a light brush-blast cleaning in accordance with
SSPCSP7.
Inspection should be performed to ensure that the lining system is being stored
and installed under the proper temperature and humidity conditions. During the
installation of the lining, the Contractor should measure and record air
temperature, temperature of the surface being lined, moisture dew point, and
relative humidity. Inspection guidelines for these issues are:
Relative humidity in the working area where the lining system is being
installed should not be greater than 90%.
The substrate temperature in which the block lining is installed must be at
least 5°F (3°C) above the moisture dew point temperature.
Temperature of the substrate, ambient air temperature in the work area, and
curing temperature should be between 50°F (10°C) and 90°F (32°C).
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4.4.5.7.6 Visual
Visual inspection of the lining system should include the following items:
All joints must be full and of a 1/8-in (0.003-m) minimum in thickness.
No air voids should exist between the adhesive-coated block and the
adhesive-coated substrate.
The adhesive membrane is trowel-applied.
The interior surface of the liner should be inspected to ensure that surface
preparation is being adequately performed. The surface of the metal to be lined
should be blasted to obtain a white metal surface as defined in SSPC-SP5. The
sand or grit used for blasting should be clean and dry and produce a minimum
surface profile of 2.0 mils when measured with a Keane-Tator comparator,
Model No. 372.
After blasting, inspection should confirm that surface rust has not developed. All
surfaces to be coated, as well as coated surfaces requiring additional thickness,
should be primed. All sand, dust, or grit should be removed by brushing, air
blasting, or vacuuming before priming. The blasted surface must be primed
within the same work shift (8–12 h) and before any visible surface rusting
develops. In the event of surface rusting, the area must be reblasted.
4.4.5.8.4 Thickness
4-37
on a 6-ft (1.8-m) square grid pattern. Each measurement should consist of the
average of three random readings taken near the center.
Inspection should be performed to ensure that the coating system is being stored
and installed under the proper temperature and humidity conditions. During the
installation of the coating, the Contractor should measure and record air
temperature, substrate temperature, moisture dew point, and relative humidity.
Inspection guidelines for these issues are:
Relative humidity in the work area should not be greater than 90%.
Surface temperature must be at least 5°F (3°C) above the dew point of the air
in the work area.
Temperature in the work area should be 50–120°F (10–49°C), or it should be
within the manufacturer's recommendations.
The cured coating should be tested for discontinuities in accordance with NACE
RP0188-90, Standard Recommended Practice for Discontinuity (Holiday) Testing of
Protective Coatings. Pinholes should be repaired.
The Contractor usually conducts a load test of the personnel elevator, witnessed
by the Owner and Engineer. The Contractor should furnish the Engineer and
Owner a copy of the load-test procedure. The Contractor usually certifies in
writing that the elevator meets all the applicable local, state, and federal codes for
safety and performance.
Pressurization fans for brick liners will require on-site testing, as well as start-up
upon delivery to the job site. The Contractor is typically required to perform the
following procedures during the installation of the fans:
Level the fan to the foundation using shim stocks; grout and anchor.
Align the rotating assembly.
Check for proper rotation of motor.
Verify balance of fan.
Perform functional test of pressurization system.
4.4.5.11 Electrical
Completion of the electrical and grounding system is typically one of the last
items to be completed on a new chimney installation. Before demobilization of
4-38
the electrical subcontractor, all electrical and grounding components associated
with the chimney should be checked.
All obstruction lights should be inspected to verify that they are operational. If
strobe lights are used, the photocell should be checked to verify the correct
daytime and evening intensity levels. The alarm contacts should also be checked
to verify that the lights are not malfunctioning.
4.4.5.11.2 Grounding
The grounding system for the chimney should be checked for continuity. The
ground resistance should be measured and recorded at the ground-cable risers.
All physical connections between the ground cable and the air terminals should
be checked.
The electrical system for the chimney should be inspected. Examples of items
that should be inspected are as follows:
Confirm correct voltage level at the power panel.
Reset transformer taps, if required.
Test each ground-fault–interrupter receptacle to ensure proper operation
Check that all ambient lights are operational.
Verify proper position of disconnect switches and power-panel breakers.
Grounding and conduit components at the top of the chimney require additional
corrosion protection. A visual inspection should be performed to verify that all
grounding cables and fittings in this area are lead-covered. All conduits located at
the top of the chimney should also be inspected to verify that polyvinyl chloride
(PVC)-coated material was used.
4-39
Section 5: Wet Stack Experience
The original Wet Stacks Design Guide was issued in 1996. Since that time, this
guide has been used as the de facto standard for wet stack design and operation;
hundreds of wet stacks around the world have been designed using its
recommendations. Most of these units operate well, with little if any SLD
experienced under normal operating conditions.
This section of the Revised Wet Stack Design Guide reviews some of the
experience gained in the industry since the issuance of the original guide. To the
extent possible, experience from locations around the world has been
incorporated. Also included is a discussion of the steps that can be taken in-
house if a unit experiences an SLD issue—both regarding finding the source of
the issue and determining the information that should be collected before outside
help is engaged.
A survey of units utilizing wet stacks was performed, and for the most part, it was
found that the majority of them were running well. On occasion, some units
would experience SLD, but typically these events could be traced back to upsets
in the WFGD absorber, maintenance issues such as fouled mist eliminators
and/or plugged drains, or correlated with local weather conditions (for example,
high humidity/low wind).
Units experiencing SLD from the start were biased toward those that had been
retrofitted with WFGD systems but kept the original stacks. For these units, the
stack-liner velocities were not favorable for wet operation from the start, and
some level of SLD was not unexpected. Retrofit installations for units with
multiple absorber towers are also more likely to experience SLD issues, because
these units often have complex absorber-outlet-ducting arrangements and gas-
routing schemes requiring complex liquid-collection systems. To minimize costs,
it is not unheard of for utilities to limit the number of liquid collectors actually
installed to those nearest the stack. This practice is not recommended.
5-1
installation of the liquid-collection system or the overall quality of the liner
construction. In many instances, simple corrections to the errors in the liquid-
collection system installation were sufficient to correct the problem. For alloy
liners, construction-quality issues leading to an increased potential for SLD were
primarily related to the height of horizontal weld seams; for FRP liners, the
problems were related to the height and taper on the internal joints between liner
segments or misalignment/roundness between adjacent segments.
A more recent cause for the onset of SLD issues is related to increases in the
stack-liner velocity brought about by increases in the unit heat rate and, to a
lesser extent, by changes in the fuel source/type/ mix used at the plant. Similar to
the other issues described above, these latter issues occur at plants whose liners
were originally designed for the upper end of the recommended liner-gas
velocities for favorable wet operation.
A limited number of units had also underestimated the total volumetric gas-flow
rate used for the stack-liner design basis. This error resulted in liner diameters
that were too small, with the resulting liner-gas velocities above the
recommended design range for favorable operation.
Although they are only now being codified in this document, these slightly lower
liner-gas-velocity recommendations have effectively been in use over the past few
years. The result has been that significantly fewer units have been experiencing
SLD issues related to the system design and normal unit-operating conditions.
Issues at new plants are generally related to liquid-collection–system installation
errors or drain pluggage caused by absorber carryover and/or the buildup of
debris.
5-2
or recessed away from the main surface. These edges could act as sites for liquid
re-entrainment back into the gas flow. This is also true for the membrane
between the bricks, which must be struck flush with the liner surface. No issues
related to block misalignment have been reported, indicating the existence of
good quality control during the installation process. Very few issues have been
reported when borosilicate blocks have been used in new plants designed from
the start to use the system. Some retrofit applications have had SLD events
related to specific unit-geometry issues, liquid-collection-system drainage issues,
and of course, higher than recommended liner-gas velocities.
The United States was an early adopter of wet stack operation and, for the most
part, wet stack operation has only recently been accepted for use in other areas of
the world. These areas include the EU, countries hoping to join the EU, and
countries in which the plants are being funded by international agencies. As
experienced in the United States, the conversion of older, previously dry, stacks
to wet operation has resulted in a number of units experiencing SLD, primarily
because of unfavorably high liner-gas velocities. Because of this experience, most
new wet-scrubber installations also include a new properly designed wet stack.
These units are using the latest absorber and wet stack technologies, and if
operated according to prescribed procedures, they appear to be operating well.
SLD is not a regulated emission in the United States. As part of the Wet Stack
Design Guide revision process, efforts were made to determine if SLD was
regulated in other parts of the world. To the best of our knowledge, it is not.
However, as in the United States, it is considered a nuisance, and many
countries/regions recommend the installation of a liquid-collection system to
minimize the potential for SLD.
The European Standard for free-standing chimney design, EN 13084 Parts 1-8,
makes no mention of the need for liquid collection.
VGB PowerTech Instruction Sheet VGB-M 643 Ue, “Chimneys for Operation
without Flue Gas Reheating after FGD,” discusses the formation of a liquid film
5-3
on the liner wall and the need for an effective liquid-collection system, although
no specific design details or guidance are provided. As in the EPRI/CICIND
Revised Wet Stack Design Guide, recommendations for the maximum flue gas
velocities inside the liner as a function of the liner material are presented. These
velocities are similar to those recommended in this guide for FRP, alloys, and
coated surfaces; they are higher for acid-resistant brick and slightly lower for
borosilicate block. The need to minimize horizontal discontinuities, as well as to
control plume downwash, are also discussed in this document.
5.1.1.3 China
In 2006 and 2007, more than 100 GWe power-generation capacity was installed
in China. In 2008 through 2010, an additional 130 GWe of capacity was
installed. Many of these plants incorporated FGD systems, and the dominant
technology is wet scrubbers. Most of these units have wet stacks; however there is
no evidence that these plants have incorporated liquid-collection systems.
Discussions with the China Electric Council have revealed that at present there
are no regulations in China controlling SLD from their plants. It is known that
SLD is an issue at many plants in China, and at present there is significant
interest—both at the governmental and the plant level—in the introduction of
liquid-collection technology to these plants.
5.1.1.4 India
Before a wet stack is brought on line, a number of reviews and inspections should
be performed to ensure that the liquid-collection and drainage system operates as
expected, with minimal potential for SLD when the unit comes on-line.
5-4
5.2.2 Field-Installation Inspection
During the pre-startup inspection, the gutters, ring collectors, and drains should
be inspected and cleared of any debris that might have collected in them during
the construction process. Debris can range from snack wrappers to plastic
sheeting to tools.
Some SLD may be observed during the first few weeks of operation, particularly
from new stacks. Such SLD is a normal occurrence and should be expected. After
fabrication, a new liner’s interior surface is often coated with a material that is
nonwetting. In alloy liners, this coating may be an oily film or scale from the
mill-rolling process; in FRP liners, it may be a separating medium or gloss
coating. Because these surfaces are initially nonwetting, the liquid film
condensing and depositing on the liner wall will form beads that are easily re-
entrained back into the gas flow. Over time, the weak acidity of the condensed
liquid will etch or season the liner surface, and it will become wetting—allowing
the formation of thin liquid films that bond to the surface via surface tension.
This seasoning process may take a number of weeks to occur, and during this
time some SLD may be experienced.
If any stack-emission incidence occurs during normal operation, the need for
inspection is obvious. If SLD is not experienced, it is still important to inspect
the liquid collectors to ensure satisfactory long-term operation.
5-5
detected. Modifications to the collection system can be designed for installation
during a scheduled or unscheduled outage. This post-startup inspection should
include the absorber outlet, outlet duct, stack liner, and choke/exhaust plane, if
accessible.
The liquid-collection system should be inspected during each outage, and all
drains and liquid-seal pots or loop seals should be cleaned. It is recommended
that a photographic record be kept of the inspections; this record will be
invaluable should an SLD issue arise.
The liquid-flow rate at each drain location should be monitored for the first six
months of the operation after startup. These records should show the quantity of
liquid collected from each of the drains, the unit load during the measurement,
and the ambient temperature at the time the measurements were taken. This
information will be very valuable should an SLD issue be encountered. If this
information is monitored on a continuous basis, trends can be detected and
corrective measures taken before an SLD issue is experienced.
5-6
Has the liquid-collection system drainage-flow rate changed?
This information will provide a basis for evaluation of the SLD issue. Hopefully,
it will provide the investigators with sufficient information to begin their
assessment of the cause of the issue and its elimination.
Specific actions can also be taken. The first should be to measure the liquid-flow
rate exiting the stack through the liquid-collection system drains. If these flow
rates are significantly lower than the baseline or calculated values, it is likely that
the drain system is plugged. An inspection of the liquid-collection system and
drains should be made at the earliest opportunity. The entire drainage path
should be inspected, but particular attention should be paid to areas where the
collected liquid is constricted. Such areas include drain ports; locations where
liquid enters a drainage pathway, such as found on internally drained ring
collectors; and (on units with side-entry breaches) the drains located on either
end of the breach-top gutter. Past experience has shown that debris tends to
collect in these areas. At some units experiencing unexpected SLD, these areas
have been found to be plugged with plastic sheeting; pieces of the plastic film
used as a separating media during FRP liner fabrication that was not fully
removed prior to startup; and sometimes even dead birds. These locations are the
first places that should be inspected if SLD is encountered.
During this inspection, the mist eliminators and the mist-eliminator wash system
should also be inspected for pluggage and damage. Plugged mist eliminators can
result in higher than design velocity values through the unit, which could lead to
liquid breakthrough and increased levels of droplets re-entrained in the flue gas
flow. Some droplets could also be re-entrained directly from the edges of the
plugged areas of the mist eliminator. Some of these droplets will not be collected
in the absorber-outlet ducting or liner and will pass through the unit, exiting
from the top of the stack.
The location of the droplets within the liner can often be related to the source of
their generation. Approximate droplet-size measurements and their spatial
distribution within a few feet of the liner wall can be estimated using a simple
droplet-impact probe made from a 10–12-ft long 2 x 4 board painted flat black,
the smoother the surface the better (Figure 5-1).
The probe should be oriented with the test side facing horizontally, then rapidly
inserted through a test port between 2 and 8 ft (0.6 and 2.5 m). The probe is
then quickly rotated 90° to place the test face directly into the upward-rising gas
flow, and it is left in this orientation for 3–4 seconds. The probe is then rotated
back to its original orientation and rapidly removed from the liner (Figure 5-2).
5-7
~2 ”
~24 ” 12 ”
Impact
Probe
Stack Linier
Figure 5-1
Droplet Probe
Test Surface
Gas Flow
Figure 5-2
Droplet-Probe Orientation
Droplet spots will be observed on the surface of the probe (Figure 5-3). The
probe exposure time may need to be increased or decreased, depending on the
number of droplets captured. The objective is to get enough droplets so that the
droplet spots do not overlap and that enough spots are obtained to have some
statistical significance. Tests should be repeated multiple times. The diameter of
the spots should be measured and their distribution on the probe noted. Large
droplets occurring in the area adjacent to the liner surface indicate that the issue
could be related to droplets being re-entrained from the liner surface. Large
droplets located farther from the liner wall are indicative of droplet carryover
5-8
from the mist eliminators or of droplet re-entrainment from somewhere in the
absorber-outlet ducting.
After each insertion, the probe should be wiped down and allowed to dry before
being reinserted into the liner.
Figure 5-3
Typical Droplet-Probe Test Results
The use of this probe technique is not intended to replace more sophisticated
evaluation methods. However it is a quick, cost-effective way to get a better
picture of what is going on within the liner during the initial stages of evaluating
the sources leading to SLD.
An additional test that can provide valuable insight into a stack experiencing
undesirable levels of SLD is to collect droplet samples downwind of the stack at
ground level. This test can be performed by placing metal collection pans, such as
a cookie sheet or a square piece of plywood covered in aluminum foil, on the
ground in the area where the droplets are hitting the ground. This approach can
be used to establish the number and size of droplets collected as a function of
distance to stack and unit load.
5-9
Section 6: References
1. Entrainment in Wet Stacks, EPRI, Palo Alto, CA: 1982. CS-2520.
2. Wet Stacks Design Guide. EPRI, Palo Alto, CA: 1996. TR-107099.
3. FGD Mist Eliminator System Design and Specification Guide. EPRI, Palo
Alto, CA: 1993. GS-6984.
4. Guidelines for the Fluid Dynamic Design of Power Plant Ducts. EPRI, Palo
Alto, CA: 1998. TR-109380.
9. VGB PowerTech Service GmbH, Chimneys for Operation without Flue Gas
Reheating After FGD. Instruction Sheet VGB-M 643-Ue. Essen, Germany,
February 2007.
10. Bernhardt Hertlein, ed., American Society of Civil Engineers, Chimney and
Stack Inspection Guidelines. Reston, VA, 2003.
11. Guidelines for FGD Materials Selection and Corrosion Protection. EPRI, Palo
Alto, CA: TR-100680, Vols. 1 and 2.
12. Acid Deposition on Ductwork. EPRI, Palo Alto, CA: 1983. CS-3240.
6-1
13. American Society for Testing and Materials, Standard Specification for
Design and Fabrication of Flue Gas Desulfurization System Components for
Protective Lining Application. (ASTM D4618-92), Philadelphia, PA, 2010.
17. American Society for Testing and Materials, Standard Specification for
Inspection of Linings in Operating Flue Gas Desulfurization Systems. (ASTM
D4619-96), Philadelphia, PA, 2004.
18. American Society for Testing and Materials, Standard Guide for Design and
Construction of Brick Liners for Industrial Chimneys. (ASTM C1298-95),
Philadelphia, PA, 2007.
19. N. J. Gardner and I. Owen, “The Behavior of Liquid Films and Drops in
Relation to Liquid/Gas Separators,” Proc. Institute Mechanical Engineers.
Vol. 211, Part E, 1997, pp. 53–59.
20. D. S. Miller, Internal Flow Systems. 2nd Edition, Gulf Publishing, Houston,
TX 1990.
21. Leaning Brick Stack Liners. EPRI, Palo Alto, CA: 1989. GS-6520.
6-2
Appendix A: Glossary
A.1 Definitions
absolute humidity - the weight (or mass) of water vapor in a gas water-vapor
mixture per unit volume of space occupied.
absorber - general term for those gas/liquid contacting devices designed primarily
for the removal of SOx pollutants, i.e., scrubber.
absorption - the process by which gas molecules are transferred to a liquid phase
during scrubbing.
air cubic feet per minute (acfm) - a gas-flow rate expressed with respect to
operating conditions (temperature and pressure).
annual outage - a scheduled period of time (generally four to six weeks) set aside
by the utility once per year to shut down the boiler and/or FGD system for
inspection and maintenance.
base load - a generating station that is normally operated to take all or part of the
normal load of a system and that, consequently, operates at a constant output.
British thermal unit (Btu) - the amount of heat required to raise the temperature
of one pound of water 1°F, averaged from 32–212°F.
bypass gas - flue gas that bypasses a scrubber for the purpose of raising wet flue
gas temperatures above the saturation temperature.
bypass reheat - a system that increases the temperature of the saturated flue gas
leaving an FGD system above dew point by ducting a slipstream of particle-
cleaned flue gas from the ESP exit duct past the FGD system to the absorber-
outlet duct or directly to the stack.
A-1
capacity factor - the ratio of the average load on a boiler for the period of time
considered to the capacity rating of the boiler (actual kWh produced/theoretical
kWh produced x 100).
carryover - entrained solids, slurry droplets, and/or liquid droplets that leave with
the flue gas stream exiting a particular stage of a scrubber or absorber.
chimney - a vertical structure at a power plant that encloses one or more flues
which exhaust combustion gases. A chimney is typically constructed out of
reinforced concrete.
closed water loop - the water loop of an FGD system is closed when the fresh
makeup water added exactly equals the evaporative water loss leaving via the
stack and the water chemically or physically bonded to the sludge product.
damper - a plate or set of plates or louvers in a duct used to stop or regulate gas
flow.
dew point - the temperature at which vapor contained in saturated flue gas begins
to condense.
A-2
expansion joint - a small section of ductwork or piping that is designed to
passively expand or contract as required by the flexing of more rigid duct runs,
piping, or pieces of equipment as such components are exposed to varying
external and internal temperatures.
flue gas desulfurization (FGD) system - an SO2 removal system that uses a wet
or dry process downstream of a boiler to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions.
fly ash - fine solid particles of noncombustible ash carried out of the boiler by the
exiting flue gas.
forced outage - the FGD system is taken out or forced out of service to make
necessary repairs or modifications regardless of boiler availability, such that the
system is unavailable for service.
heat exchanger - device used to transfer sensible and/or latent heat from one
stream of material to another to raise or lower the temperature of one of the
materials.
induced draft (ID) - a fan used to move an enclosed stream of gas by creating a
negative relative pressure in the stream to effectively draw the gas through the
system.
indirect hot air - a flue gas reheat system in which reheat is achieved by heating
ambient air with an external heat exchanger using steam at temperatures of 350–
450°.
in-line reheater - a heat exchanger installed in the wet flue gas duct downstream
of the mist eliminator, usually consisting of hot water or steam coils used to boost
the wet flue gas temperature above dew point.
liner - the flue located inside of a chimney or stack that exhausts combustion
gases.
load factor - the ratio of the average load in kilowatts supplied during a
designated period to the peak or maximum load in kilowatts occurring in that
period.
A-3
mist eliminator - a piece or section of pollution hardware used to remove a
dispersion of liquid particles from a gas stream.
megawatt (MW) - unit used to describe the gross or net power generation of a
particular facility. One watt equals one joule per second. One megawatt equals
106 watts.
new (as opposed to retrofit, for FGD systems) - the FGD unit and boiler were
designed at the same time, or space for the addition of an FGD unit was reserved
when the boiler was constructed.
opacity - the degree to which emissions reduce the transmission of light and
obscure the view of an object in the background.
open water loop - the water loop of an FGD system is open when the fresh
makeup water added exceeds the evaporative water loss leaving via the stack and
the water chemically or physically bonded to the sludge product.
outage - that period of time when the boiler and/or FGD system is shut down
for inspection and maintenance. Outages may be either forced or scheduled.
particulate matter - finely divided solid particles entrained in the gas stream (fly
ash, coal fines, dried reaction byproducts, etc.).
peak load - a boiler that is normally operated to provide power during maximum
load periods.
plume downwash - the phenomenon that occurs when the flue gas exits a stack
and the vapor plume drops below the top of the stack before evaporating or
dispersing into the atmosphere. Usually occurs on stacks that operate at a
relatively low exit velocity.
A-4
pressure drop - the difference in force per unit area between two points in a fluid
stream as a result of resistive losses in the stream.
rain hood - the component at the top of a stack that covers the annular space.
reheat - the process of increasing the flue gas temperature downstream of a wet
scrubber. Reheat can be supplied by in-line indirect hot air, direct combustion, or
by partial bypass of unscrubbed flue gas.
reheater - device used to raise the temperature of the scrubbed gas stream to
prevent condensation and corrosion of downstream equipment, avoid visible
plume, and/or enhance plume rise and dispersion.
relative humidity (also relative saturation) - the ratio of the weight (or mass) of
water vapor present in a unit volume of gas to the maximum possible weight (or
mass) of water vapor in unit volume of the same gas at the same temperature and
pressure. The term "saturation" refers to any gas-vapor combination, whereas
"humidity" specifically refers to an air-water system.
removal efficiency:
- particulate matter - the actual percentage of particulate matter removed
by the emission-control system (mechanical collectors, ESP, or fabric
filter and FGD) from the untreated flue gas.
- SO2 - the actual percentage of SO2 removed from the flue gas by the
FGD system.
- total unit design - the designed percentage of mass of SO2 or particulate
matter entering the stack to the mass of the material in the flue gas
exiting the boiler, regardless of the removal efficiency of an
individual component or the percentage of the exiting flue gas actually
being scrubbed.
retrofit - the FGD unit will be/was added to an existing boiler not specifically
designed to accommodate an FGD system.
saturated - the situation in which a gas or liquid is filled to capacity with a certain
substance. No additional amount of the same substance can be added under the
given conditions.
scale - deposits of slurry solids (calcium sulfite or calcium sulfate) that adhere to
the surfaces of FGD equipment, particularly absorber/scrubber internals and
mist-eliminator surfaces.
scheduled outage - a planned period of time periodically set aside for inspection
and maintenance of the boiler and/or FGD system.
A-5
scrubber - a device that promotes the removal of pollutant particles and/or gases
from exhaust streams of combustion or industrial processes by the injection of an
aqueous solution or slurry into the gas stream, i.e., absorber.
stack - a vertical structure at a power plant that encloses one or more flues which
exhaust combustion gases.
stack flue - the inner duct or liner in a stack through which the flue gas is
conveyed.
stack-exit velocity - the exiting velocity of the flue gas out the top of the stack.
stack liquid discharge (SLD) - liquid that is discharged from a stack and falls to
the ground prior to evaporating.
standard cubic feet per minute (scfm) - units of gas-flow rate at standard
conditions.
steel stack - a vertical structure at a power plant that exhausts combustion gases.
The primary supporting shell is made of steel.
superficial gas velocity - the area average flue gas velocity through a mist
eliminator or other component of an FGD system.
temperature, wet bulb (WB) - a measure of the moisture content of air (gas)
indicated by a wet bulb psychrometer.
total controlled capacity (TCC) - the gross rating (MW) of a unit brought into
compliance with FGD, regardless of the percent of flue gas treated at the facility.
turning vanes (i.e., vanes) - devices used in ductwork or chimney liners to control
gas-flow direction. Usually fabricated from flat or curved plates.
A-6
unit rating:
- gross - maximum continuous generating capacity in MW
- net - gross unit rating less the energy required to operate ancillary station
equipment, inclusive of emission-control systems.
video droplet analyzer (VDA) - uses on-the-fly video image analysis to detect
and measure the diameters of all in-focus droplets that are entirely within the
view of the camera in each video frame
water loop - all aqueous mass flows from inlet (e.g., seal water, quench water,
scrubber liquor) to outlet of an FGD system (e.g., evaporation via stack, pond
evaporation, waste disposal).
wet stack - a chimney, stack, or flue that exhausts saturated, completely scrubbed
flue gas. Wet stacks are located downstream from a wet FGD system. Wet stack
operation does not utilize any flue gas reheat system or partial bypass. Wet stacks
are equipped with corrosion-resistant liners for handling the wet, acidic flue gas
exiting the FGD system.
A-7
A.2 Units and Conversion Factors
To Obtain Multiply By
Cubic meters
per second Cubic feet per minute 0.0004719
Inches of mercury
@ 0°C Pounds per square inch 2.036
Kilograms per
square meter Pounds per square foot 4.882
Kilogram per
cubic meter Pound per cubic foot 16.01846
Temperature Conversions:
o o
F = 1.8 x C + 32
o o
C = ( F - 32)/1.8
A-8
Liquid Load Conversion:
6
(gal/min) = (grains/acf) x 17.24 x (acfm/10 )
2
(grains/acf) = (gpm/ft ) x (970.0/(ft/s))
3
(mg/m ) = 2,288 x (grains/acf)
A-9
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