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Basics of Supercritical Steam Generators

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Title: Basics of Supercritical Steam Generators


1
Basics of Supercritical Steam Generators
P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering
Department I I T Delhi
Thermodynamically Obvious Choice but . Why
Arent There More Supercritical Units?
2
Reheat Supercritical Rankine Cycle
3
5
2s
4
2
6
1
3
Double Reheat Ultra Super Critical Cycle
8
4
Historical Development in Steam Generators
Furnace Heat Release Rate
5
Effect of Boiler Steam Conditions on Net Plant
Efficiency
250bar 565/5900C
250bar 565/5650C
250bar 556/5650C
170bar 556/5560C
250bar 556/5560C
6
Towards Matured Sustainable SC Technology
7
Why So Late?
  • If supercritical units are more efficient
    supercritical the right answer for any new
    coal-fired unit?
  • First, there is history.
  • Most coal-fired plants in the World are
    subcritical.
  • Second, initial supercritical units suffered more
    from the rapid increase in unit size than from
    technology.
  • Supercritical systems demanded considerable
    advances in design and operation .
  • Heavy Slagging Undersized furnace and inadequate
    coverage by soot blowing system.
  • Circumferential cracking of waterwall tubes High
    Metal Temperatures.
  • Frequents requirement of acid cleaning.
  • Low Availability and Reliability.
  • Lower efficiency than expected.

8
Historical trend of furnace heat release rates
for coal-fired boilers
9
Expectations from Steam Generator for Higher
Efficiency
  • High Main Steam Pressure.
  • High Main Steam Temperature.
  • Double Reheat Higher Regeneration.
  • Metal component strength, stress, and distortion
    are of concern at elevated temperatures in both
    the steam generator and the steam turbine.
  • In the steam generators heating process, the
    tube metal temperature is even higher than that
    of the steam, and concern for accelerated
    corrosion and oxidation will also influence
    material selection.

10
Role of SG in Rankine Cycle
Perform Using Natural resources of energy .
11
Thermal Structure of A SG
12
The Basics of Flow Boiling.
13
Boiling process in Tubular Geometries
Water
14
Religious to Secular Attitude
15
Flow Boiling
16
Tube Wall Temperature Sub-critical Flow Boiling
Newtons Law of Cooling
17
Heat Transfer in Flow Boiling
18
Auto Control Mechanism in Natural Circulation
19
Religious to Secular Attitude
20
Tube Wall Temperature Super-critical Flow
Boiling
Newtons Invention
21
Heat Transfer in Liquid Region
  • The liquid in the channel may be in laminar or
    turbulent flow, in either case the laws governing
    the heat transfer are well established.
  • Heat transfer in turbulent flow in a circular
    tube can be estimated by the well-known
    Dittus-Boelter (subcritical ) equation.

22
Thermo physical Properties at Super Critical
Pressures
23
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24
Heat Transfer Coefficient
25
Actual Heat Transfer Coefficient of SC Water
26
Specific heat of Supercritical Water
27
Pseudo Critical Line
28
Study of Flow Boiling
29
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32
Selection of Flow rate in Flow Boiling
  • This process may either be forced convection or
    gravity driven.
  • At relatively low flow rates at sufficient wall
    superheats, bubble nucleation at the wall occurs
    such that nucleate boiling is present within the
    liquid film.
  • At high qualities and mass flow rates, the flow
    regime is normally annular.
  • As the flow velocity increases, convection in the
    liquid film is augmented.
  • The wall is cooled below the minimum wall
    superheat necessary to sustain nucleation.
  • Nucleate boiling may thus be suppressed, in which
    case heat transfer is only by convection through
    the liquid film and evaporation occurs only at
    its interface.

33
Pressure drop Religious to Secular Attitude
Dphydro Dpfriction
Dphydro Dpfriction
34
Pressure Drop in Tubes
  • The pressure drop through a tube comprise several
    components friciton, entrance loss, exit loss,
    fitting loss and hydrostatic.

Exact prediction of wall temperature, it is
important to know the pressure Variation along
the flow
35
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38
Selection of Steam Mass Flow rate
  • A once-through forced circulation furnace with
    high mass flow
  • If any tube receives more heat than the average,
    then it will accept receives less flow.
  • This can result in further increasing
    temperatures, potentially leading to failures.
  • Thus the mass flow per tube must start very high
    to ensure adequate remaining flow after the heat
    upsets.
  • Designs with medium mass flow
  • These were attempted in once through forced
    circulation boilers with moderate success.
  • These exhibit worse consequences than the high
    mass flow designs.
  • When the mass flow is degraded during load
    reduction in a tube receiving more heat than the
    average, the remaining flow will have less margin
    to provide acceptable cooling.
  • Medium mass flow designs can experience heat
    upsets and/or flow excursions that result in
    flows in individual tubes that are lower than the
    low mass flow design.

39
Destructive Mechanisms in Forced Circulation/Onec
through
40
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42
  • Both the multi-pass and the spiral designs use
    high fluid mass flows.
  • High fluid mass flow rates result in high
    pressure losses as well as a once-through .
  • Means that strongly heated tubes have a reduction
    in fluid mass flow and a correspondingly high
    increase in fluid and therefore metal temperature
    which can result in excessive tube-to-tube
    temperature differentials.
  • This type of behavior is sometimes referred to as
    a "negative flow characteristic.
  • In the Vertical design, the furnace enclosure is
    formed from a single, upflow pass of vertical
    tubes.

43
  • The tube size and spacing is selected to provide
    a low fluid mass flow rate of approximately 1000
    kg/m2-s or less.
  • With low mass flow rates, the frictional pressure
    loss is low compared to the gravitational head,
    and as a result, a tube that is heated strongly,
    i.e., absorbs more heat, draws more flow.
  • With an increase in flow to the strongly heated
    tube, the temperature rise at the outlet of the
    tube is reduced which limits the differential
    temperature between adjacent tubes.
  • This is known as the "natural circulation or
    "positive flow" characteristic.
  • Minimize peak tube metal temperatures.
  • To minimize peak tube metal temperatures,
    multiple pass and spiral types designs use high
    fluid mass flow rates to achieve good tube
    cooling.
  • This results in the "once-through characteristic
    noted above.

44
The State of the Art The Market
  • In the past both the multi-pass and the spiral
    designs were using high fluid mass flows.
  • High fluid mass flow rates result in high
    pressure losses as well as a once-through.
  • Means that strongly heated tubes have a reduction
    in fluid mass flow and a correspondingly high
    increase in fluid and therefore metal temperature
    which can result in excessive tube-to-tube
    temperature differentials.
  • This type of behavior is sometimes referred to as
    a "negative flow characteristic.
  • In the Vertical design, the furnace enclosure is
    formed from a single, upflow pass of vertical
    tubes.

45
  • The tube size and spacing is selected to provide
    a low fluid mass flow rate of approximately 1000
    kg/m2-s or less.
  • At low mass flow rates, the frictional pressure
    loss is low compared to the gravitational head.
  • A tube that is heated strongly, i.e., absorbs
    more heat, draws more flow.
  • With an increase in flow to the strongly heated
    tube, the temperature rise at the outlet of the
    tube is reduced.
  • This limits the differential temperature between
    adjacent tubes.
  • This is known as the "natural circulation or
    "positive flow" characteristic.
  • Minimize peak tube metal temperatures.

46
Heat Transfer Deterioration
  • At optimal mass flow heat flux the wall
    temperature behaves smoothly and increases with
    increasing bulk temperature.
  • The difference between wall temperature and fluid
    bulk temperature remains small.
  • At high heat flux the wall temperature increases
    sharply and decreases again.
  • This large increase in temperature is referred to
    Heat Transfer Deterioration.
  • There is no unique definition for onset of Heat
    Transfer Deterioration.
  • This puts a great challenge to boiler water wall
    design.

47
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48
Supercritical Benson Steam Generator
  • Supercritical units use a once-through design,
    also referred to as the Benson cycle.
  • In a once-through boiler the fluid passes through
    the unit one time, and there is no recirculation
    as takes place in the water walls of a typical
    drum-type boiler.
  • Since there is no thick-walled steam drum, the
    startup time and ramp rates for a once-through
    unit can be significantly reduced from that
    required for a drum-type unit.

49
Circulation Vs Once Through
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51
Special Features of Supercritical Steam
Generators
  • Wall thicknesses of the tubes and headers need to
    be designed to match the planned pressure level.
  • At the same time, the drum of the drum-type
    boiler which is very heavy and located on the top
    of the boiler can be eliminated.
  • Once-through boilers can be operated at variable
    steam pressure.
  • Once-through boilers have been designed in both
    two-pass and tower type design.
  • Large once-through boilers have been built with a
    spiral shaped arrangement of the tubes in the
    evaporator zone.
  • The latest designs of once-through boilers use a
    vertical tube arrangement.

52
Examples of Once-through Boilers
53
BENSON BOILER ARRANGEMENTS
  • Benson boilers are designed and constructed in
    two basic arrangements, the two-pass or tower
    type.
  • Both perform equally well.
  • The selected arrangement is generally driven by
    customer preference and site-specific factors.
  • Some particular advantages of the two-pass design
    are
  • Small plant profile (height)
  • Lower cost construction
  • More optimized heating surface size because of
    decoupling back-pass from furnace section
  • Smaller stack height requirement, depending on
    regulations.
  • The tower arrangement also has certain
    advantages. They are
  • Small plant footprint, especially if fitted with
    SCR
  • Even flow distribution of flue gas and
    particulates
  • Lower flue gas velocity and erosion potential
  • Direct load transmission to the boiler roof and
    free expansion
  • No temperature differences between adjacent wall
    systems
  • Ease of extreme cycling operation.

54
1000MW BABCOCK-HITACH
55
Main Specifications
56
Once Through SG Furnace Arrangements
57
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58
Furnace Arrangements
  • In a rectangular furnace, the heat flux imposed
    upon the furnace walls is not evenly distributed
    as shown below.
  • To accommodate the differences in heat flux
    around the periphery of the furnace and the
    upsets inherent in the combustion process,
    sufficient fluid flow must be provided to each
    tube to maintain tube temperatures within
    acceptable limits over the load range.

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60
Vertical Tube Furnace
  • To provide sufficient flow per tube, constant
    pressure furnaces employ vertically oriented
    tubes.
  • Tubes are appropriately sized and arranged in
    multiple passes in the lower furnace where the
    burners are located and the heat input is high.
  • By passing the flow twice through the lower
    furnace periphery (two passes), the mass flow per
    tube can be kept high enough to ensure sufficient
    cooling.
  • In addition, the fluid is mixed between passes to
    reduce the upset fluid temperature.

61
Spiral Tube Furnace
  • The spiral design, on the other hand, utilizes
    fewer tubes to obtain the desired flow per tube
    by wrapping them around the furnace to create the
    enclosure.
  • This also has the benefit of passing all tubes
    through all heat zones to maintain a nearly even
    fluid temperature at the outlet of the lower
    portion of the furnace.
  • Because the tubes are wrapped around the
    furnace to form the enclosure, fabrication and
    erection are considerably more complicated and
    costly.

62
Riffled Tubes
  • The advanced Vertical technology is
    characterized by low fluid mass flow rates.
  • Normally, low fluid mass flow rates do not
    provide adequate tube cooling when used with
    smooth tubing.
  • Unique to the Vertical technology is the use of
    optimized rifled tubes in high heat flux areas to
    eliminate this concern.
  • Rifled in the lower furnace, smooth-bore in the
    upper furnace.
  • The greatest concern for tube overheating occurs
    when the evaporator operating pressure approaches
    the critical pressure.
  • In the range 210 to 220 bar pressure range the
    tube wall temperature required to cause film
    boiling (departure from nucleate boiling DNB)
    quickly approaches the fluid saturation
    temperature.

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64
  • DNB will occur in this region and a high fluid
    film heat transfer coefficient is required to
    suppress the increase in tube wall temperature.
  • Standard rifled tubing will provide an
    improvement in heat transfer.

65
High main steam temperature even at part loads
  • Main steam temperatures in the once through
    boiler are independent of load.
  • This results in a higher process efficiency for
    the power plant over a wide load range.
  • The fuel/feed water flow ratio is controlled in
    the once through boiler such that the desired
    steam temperature is always established at the
    main steam outlet.
  • This is made possible by the variable evaporation
    endpoint.
  • The evaporation and superheating surfaces
    automatically adjust to operating conditions.
  • In dynamic processes, desuperheaters support
    maintenance of constant main steam temperature.

66
  • Minimum output in once-through operation at high
    main steam temperatures is 35 to 40 for furnace
    walls with smooth tubes and is as low as 20 if
    rifled tubes are used.

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68
Fuel Flexibility
  • Compare the behavior of a natural circulation
    boiler and a Benson boiler with a hypothetical
    10 deviation of furnace heat absorption due to
    varying combustion and slagging characteristics.
  • In the natural circulation boiler, the result of
    reduced furnace heat absorption is an increased
    furnace exit gas temperature and a higher steam
    attemperation rate.
  • In the case of enhanced furnace heat absorption,
    the attemperation rate is gradual reduced to zero
    and the superheater outlet temperature drops.
  • In contrast, the Benson boiler balances
    differences in heat absorption via the variable
    evaporation end-point.
  • The allocation of the evaporative and superheat
    duties to the various surfaces may vary according
    to differential heat absorption of the furnace as
    well as with changing load.
  • By controlling the firing rate according to final
    steam temperature, rather than to drum pressure,
    the Benson boiler achieves the desired steam
    temperature, at nearly constant attemperation
    rate, largely independent of shifts in heat
    absorption of the heating surfaces.

69
Fuel Flexibility
70
Furnace Design Vs Ash Content
Ash Content
71
Issues with High Ash Coals
  • Severe slagging and/or fouling troubles that had
    occurred in early installed coal fired utility
    boilers are one of the main reasons that led to
    their low availability.
  • Furnace dimensions are determined based on the
    properties of coals to be burned.
  • Some coals are known to produce ash with specific
    characteristics, which is optically reflective
    and can significantly hinder the heat absorption.
  • Therefore an adequate furnace plan area and
    height must be provided to minimize the slagging
    of furnace walls and platen superheater sections.

72
  • The furnace using high ash coal need to be
    designed such that the exit gas temperature
    entering the convection pass tube coils would be
    sufficiently lower than the ash fusion
    temperatures of the fuel.
  • For furnace cleaning, wall blowers will be
    provided in a suitable arrangement.
  • In some cases as deemed necessary, high-pressure
    water-cleaning devices can be installed.
  • As for fouling, the traverse pitches of the tubes
    are to be fixed based on the ash
    content/properties.
  • An appropriate number and arrangement of steam
    soot blowers shall be provided for surface
    cleaning.

73
Countermeasures for Circumferential Cracking
  • There have been cases of waterwall tube failures
    caused by circumferential cracking in older
    coal-fired boilers.
  • It is believed that this cracking is caused by
    the combination of a number of phenomena,
  • the metal temperature rise due to inner scale
    deposits,
  • the thermal fatigue shocks caused by sudden
    waterwall soot-blowing, and
  • the tube wastage or deep penetration caused by
    sulfidation.
  • Metal temperature rise due to inner scale
    deposits can be prevented by the application of
    an OWT water chemistry regime.

74
7-year OWT experience in 1,000MWsupercritical
coal firing boiler in Japan
75
  • In high sulfur coal firing boilers, the tube
    wastage from sulfidation is to be controlled by
    applying protective coatings in appropriate areas
    of the furnace, as well as by the selection of
    optimum burner stoichiometry.
  • The sudden metal temperature change due to
    periodic de-slagging can be minimized by
    optimized operation of wall blowers or
    high-pressure water cleaning systems.

76
Closing Remarks on Super Critical Steam Generators
  • Critical to the design of a supercritical
    once-through boiler is the design of the furnace
    steam/water evaporator circuitry, the associated
    start-up system.
  • How they are integrated with the firing and heat
    recovery area (HRA) systems.
  • To provide safe and reliable operation of a
    once-through supercritical
  • boiler requires minimizing peak tube metal
    temperatures and limiting the temperature
    differential between adjacent enclosure tubes.
  • The Vertical boiler addresses these issues in the
    following unique and effective ways

77
  • Limit tube-to-tube temperature differentials.
  • In a once-through boiler which operates at
    supercritical pressure, there is no distinction
    between liquid and vapor phases, and there is a
    continual increase in fluid temperature.
  • Radial unbalances in heat absorption occur due
    to,
  • tube geometric position,
  • burner heat release pattern,
  • Furnace cleanliness,
  • variations in flow rate, caused by
  • hydraulic resistance differences from
    tube-to-tube,
  • All the lead to variations in tube temperatures
    occur.
  • High differential temperatures induce high
    thermal stresses, which, if not limited, can
    result in tube failure.

78
  • Historically, this issue has been addressed in
    two different ways
  • In units with multiple passes in the furnace
    evaporator, the differential temperature is
    limited by the fact that each pass picks up a
    fraction of the total evaporator duty.
  • This limits the magnitude of the unbalance and
    intermediate mixing occurs before the fluid is
    distributed to the next downstream pass.
  • However, with multiple passes, the furnace must
    operate at supercritical pressure throughout its
    load range to avoid the difficulties of uniformly
    distributing a steam-water mixture to the down
    stream passes.

79
  • In units with a spiral tube configuration, the
    unbalance issue is addressed by having each
    inclined tube pass through the varying heat
    absorption zones so that each tube absorbs
    approximately the same amount of heat.
  • With a single up-flow pass, the spiral design can
    operate with variable pressure steam, which
    minimizes part load auxiliary power requirements
    and allows matching of steam and turbine metal
    temperature for extended steam turbine life.
  • However, the spiral tube evaporator configuration
    requires a special support system for the
    inclined tubes, which are not self-supporting.

80
Present Status of Technology
  • Many of the "supercritical-related" problems with
    the early supercritical units have been resolved
    with new designs.
  • New units are also designed to operate with
    sliding pressure, which improves load change
    characteristics.
  • Once-through design is now available with faster
    responding controls and adaptive tuning over the
    entire load range.

81
Sliding Pressure Operation
P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering
Department I I T Delhi
High Efficiency at Part Loads
82
Sliding pressure operation
  • Variable pressure operation (sliding pressure
    operation) is desired in many modern power plants
    because it provides more efficient part load
    operation.
  • The loss due to constant pressure operation at
    low load is always a concern for the utility.
  • The vertical tube supercritical boiler can
    provide variable turbine pressure operation to
    gain the thermodynamic advantage of variable
    pressure.
  • Since the boiler furnace must be operated in the
    supercritical region, this is accomplished by a
    pressure-reducing valve located between
    superheater stages.
  • Thus the turbine efficiency advantages are
    obtained but without the savings in boiler feed
    pump power associated with true variable pressure
    operation.

83
  • The spiral tube furnace design can be operated in
    the subcritical region thus also providing the
    pump power savings.
  • The advanced SC boiler with vertical internally
    ribbed tube furnace design may also be operated
    in the subcritical region.
  • This provides the same pump power savings in
    variable pressure operation plus the advantage of
    a lower full load pressure loss for additional
    power savings.
  • Temperature changes occur in the boiler and in
    the turbine during load changes.
  • These can cause thermal stresses in thick walled
    components.
  • These are especially high in the turbine during
    constant-pressure operation. They therefore limit
    the maximum load transient for the unit.

84
  • By contrast, in sliding pressure operation, the
    temperature changes are in the evaporator
    section.
  • However, the resulting thermal stresses are not
    limiting in the Once through boiler due to its
    thermo elastic design.

In fixed pressure operation , temperature change
in the turbine when load changes, while in
sliding-pressure operation ,they change in the
boiler
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86
  • The enthalpy increase in the boiler for
    preheating, evaporation and superheating changes
    with pressure.
  • However, pressure is proportional to output in
    sliding pressure operation.
  • In a uniformly heated tube, the transitions from
    preheat to evaporation and from evaporation to
    superheat shift automatically with load such that
    the main steam temperature always remains
    constant.

87
  • While sliding pressure is beneficial for the
    turbine, it can cause difficulties for the
    boiler.
  • The following adverse effects can occur
  • As the pressure falls, the boiling temperature
    (boiling point) changes.
  • The boiler is divided into zones in which the
    fluid is expected to be entirely water, mixed
    steam / water or dry steam.
  • A change in the boiling point can change the
    conditions in each zone.
  • The heat transfer coefficient in each zone
    depends upon the pressure.
  • As the pressure falls, the heat transfer
    coefficient reduces.
  • This means that the steam may not reach the
    correct temperature.
  • Also, if heat is not carried away by the steam,
    the boiler tubes will run hotter and may suffer
    damage.

88
  • The heat transfer coefficient also depends upon
    the velocity of the steam in the boiler tubes.
  • Any change in pressure causes a change in steam
    density and so alters the steam velocities and
    heat transfer rate in each zone.
  • Pressure and temperature cause the boiler tubes
    to expand. If conditions change, the tubes will
    move. The tube supports must be capable of
    accommodating this movement.
  • The expansion movements must not lead to adverse
    stresses.
  • The ability to use sliding pressure operation is
    determined by the boiler

89
  • Boilers can be designed to accommodate sliding
    pressure.
  • When it is used, coal fired boilers in the 500 to
    1000 MW class normally restrict sliding pressure
    to a limited load range, typically 70 to 100
    load, to minimize the design challenge. Below
    this range, the boiler is operated at a fixed
    pressure.
  • This achieves an acceptable result because large
    units are normally operated at high load for
    economic reasons.
  • In contrast, when sliding pressure is used in
    combined cycle plant, the steam pressure is
    varied over a wider load range, typically 50 to
    100 load or more.

90
  • As stated, in coal-fired plant, sliding pressure
    is normally restricted to a limited load range to
    reduce design difficulties.
  • In this range, the boiler pressure is held at a
    value 5 to 10 above the turbine internal
    pressure. Consequently, the governor valves
    throttle slightly.
  • The offset is provided so that the unit can
    respond quickly to a sudden increase in load
    demand simply by pulling the valves wide open.
  • This produces a faster load response than raising
    the boiler firing rate alone.The step in load
    which can be achieved equals the specified margin
    ie 5 to 10.

91
  • The throttling margin is agreed during the
    tendering phase and then fixed.
  • A margin of 5 to 10 is usually satisfactory
    because most customers rely upon gas turbines,
    hydroelectric or pumped storage units to meet
    large peak loads.
  • The throttling margin means that the full
    potential gain of sliding pressure is not
    achieved.
  • Nevertheless, most of the throttling losses which
    would otherwise occur are recovered.

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93
Sliding Pressure
24.1 Mpa
6.9 Mpa
94
  • During such operation, the pressure is determined
    by the turbine system and the boiler is operated
    by fully opening the turbine inlet valve.
  • At constant-pressure operation, on the contrary,
    the turbine inlet pressure is controlled by
    throttling the turbine inlet valve, which results
    simultaneously in the control of the flow rate.
    This induces reduction in efficiency owing to the
    irreversibility of the throttling.
  • On the other hand the efficiency drop at partial
    load is small because of the nonexistence of
    throttle loss.
  • At loads of 100-77, the system pressures are in
    the supercritical region.
  • In contrast, at 77-25 loads, the system
    pressures are in the sub critical region and
    boiling occurs in the water-wall tubes, while the
    state of the fluid at the outlet of the water
    wall is superheated steam.

95
  • There are no operational limitations due to
    once-through boilers compared to drum type
    boilers.
  • In fact once-through boilers are better suited
    to frequent load variations than drum type
    boilers, since the drum is a component with a
    high wall thickness, requiring controlled
    heating.
  • A principle advantage of once through boiler is
    that it does not require circulating pumps or
    drums.
  • Energy required for circulation is provide by the
    feed pump.
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