Title: Cause-Effect Analysis of Steam Generator
1Cause-Effect Analysis of Steam Generator Rule
Based Design
- BY
- P M V Subbarao
- Associate Professor
- Mechanical Engineering Department
- I I T Delhi
Observation Experience based methods for
design of complex systems ..
2Cause Effect Analysis
- Combustion is a cause
- Steam Generation is an effect
- Heat transfer is a mediation.
- Combustion caused generation of flame heat in
side furnace volume and finally produces high
temperature gases. - These high temperature gases will initiate
Radiation and convection heat transfer. - Heat Transfer carries heat to furnace wall.
- Furnace wall transfer heat to steam tubes.
- Steam tubes transfers the same to steam by means
of Heat Conduction. - A relatively cold exhaust leaves the furnace.
- This is final effect in the furnace!!!!!!!
3Analysis of Primary Cause
- Combustion caused generation of flame heat in
side furnace volume and finally produces high
temperature gases. - This cause can be defined as combustion in an
adiabatic furnace.
CXHYSZOK e 4.76 (XY/4Z-K/2) AIR Moisture
in Air Ash Moisture in fuel ? P CO2 Q H2O R
SO2 T N2 U O2 V CO W C Ash
Adiabatic furnace to increase the enthalpy of
gas
4Temperature of gasses coming out of an adiabatic
furnace is called as Adiabatic (Flame)
Temperature. Adiabatic Flame Temperature is A
primary Cause.
Furnace with absorbing walls or boiler tubes.
5Furnace Exit Gas Temperature
- The temperature of products of combustion at the
exit of the furnace is called FEGT. - An important design parameter.
- Defines the ratio of furnace heat absorption to
outside heat absorption. - High FEGT Compact furnace Large secondary
section - FEGT lt Ash Deformation Temperature.
- Generally FEGT Ash Softening Temperature 100.
- General design conditions.
- FEGT lt 1100 0C Strong slag (Molten Ash).
- FEGT lt 1200 0C Moderate slag
6General Rules for Rule based Design
- The furnace should provide the required physical
environment and the time to complete the
combustion of fuel. - The furnace should have adequate radiative
heating surfaces to cool the flue gas
sufficiently to ensure safe operation of the
downstream convective heating surface. - Aerodynamics in the furnace should prevent
impingement of flames on the water wall and
ensure uniform distribution of heat flux on the
water wall. - The furnace should provide conditions favoring
reliable natural circulation of water through
water wall tubes. - The configuration of the furnace should be
compact enough to minimize the amount of steel
and other construction material.
7Basic Geometry of A Furnace
8Determination of Furnace Size
- What is the boundary of a furnace?
- The boundary of a furnace is defined by
- Central plane of water wall and roof tubes
- Central lines of the first row super heater
tubes. - ? 30 to 50O
- ? gt 30O
- ? 50 to 55O
- E 0.8 to 1.6 m
- d 0.25 b to 0.33 b
9Design ConstrainsHeat Release Rate
- Heat Release Rate per Unit Volume, qv, kW/m3
- Heat Release Rate per Unit Cross Sectional
Area,qa, kW/m2 - Heat Release Rate per Unit Wall Area of the
Burner Region, qb, kW/m2
10Heat Release Rate per Unit Volume, qv
- The amount of heat generated by combustion of
fuel in a unit effective volume of the furnace. - Where, mc Design fuel consumption rate, kg/s.
- V Furnace volume, Cu. m.
- LHV Lower heating value of fuel kJ/kg.
- A proper choice of volumetric heat release rate
ensures the critical fuel residence time. - Fuel particles are burnt completely.
- The flue gas is cooled to the required safe
temperature.
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12Heat Release Rate per Unit Cross Sectional Area,qa
- The amount of heat released per unit cross
section of the furnace. - Also called as Grate heat release rate.
- Agrate is the cross sectional area or grate
area of the furnace, Sq. m. - This indicates the temperature levels in the
furnace. - An increase in qa, leads to a rise in temperature
in burner region. - This helps in the stability of flame
- Increases the possibility of slagging.
13A
14Heat Release Rate per Unit Wall Area of the
Burner Region
- The burner region of the furnace is the most
intense heat zone. - The amount of heat released per unit water wall
area in the burner region. - a and b are width and depth of furnace, and Hb is
the height of burner region. - This represents the temperature level and heat
flux in the burner region. - Used to judge the general condition of the burner
region. - Its value depends on Fuel ignition
characteristics, ash characteristics, firing
method and arrangement of the burners.
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16Furnace Depth Height
- Depth (a) to breadth (b)ratio is an important
parameter from both combustion and heat
absorption standpoint. - Following factors influence the minimum value of
breadth. - Capacity of the boiler
- Type of fuel
- Arrangement of burners
- Heat release rate per unit furnace area
- Capacity of each burner
- The furnace should be sufficiently high so that
the flame does not hit the super heater tubes. - The minimum height depends on type of coal and
capacity of burner. - Lower the value of height the worse the natural
circulation.
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18Performance of Analysis of Furnace
- Get Fuel Ultimate Analysis.
- Compute Equivalent Chemical Formula.
- Select recommended Exhaust Gas composition.
- Carry out first law analysis to calculate
Adiabatic Combustion Temperature. - Total number of moles of wet exhaust gas for 100
kg of fuel nex.gas PQRTUV - 100 X CV of fuel Snex. Gashf,gas
- Calculate Adiabatic Flame Temperature.
- Calculate total heat transfer area of furnace,
Afur
19Furnace Characterization Criteria
- G Furnace quality factor
- M Temperature Field Coefficient
- Tad Theoretical combustion temperature
- Tout Furnace Exit Gas Temperature
- Afur Total surface area of furnace
- mf Flow rate of fuel
20Furnace Exit Gas Temperature
- FEGT AST 100
- FEGT lt 1100 0C Strong slag
- FEGT lt 1200 0C Moderate slag
- FEGT lt 1250 0C -- Weak slag
- Any design procedure can be used but it should
satisfy the requirements of FEGT.
21Effect of Coal Quality on Furnace Size
22Role of SG in Rankine Cycle
Using Natural resources of energy.
23Steam Generator Super Heating Surfaces
- BY
- Dr. P M V Subbarao
- Mechanical Engineering Department
- I I T Delhi
A highly sensitive zone to recover the energy
from hot gases..
24Super heaters
- Super heater heats the high-pressure steam from
its saturation temperature to a higher specified
temperature. - Super heaters are often divided into more than
one stage. - Divisional Panel Super Heater.
- Platen Super Heater.
- Pendent Super Heater.
- Horizontal Super Heater.
- The enthalpy rise of steam in a given section
should not exceed - 250 420 kJ/kg for High pressure. gt 17 MPa
- lt 280 kJ/kg for medium pressure. 7 Mpa 17 MPa
- lt 170 kJ/kg for low pressure. lt 7 MPa
25Thermal Balance Equation for SH
Steam in
Steam out
- Energy given out by flue gas
- Energy absorption for a SH
Gas in
Gas out
26Mechanism of Heat Transfer Generalized Newtons
Law of Cooling
- Rate of heat transfer from hot gas to cold steam
is proportional to - Surface area of heat transfer
- Mean Temperature difference between Hot Gas and
Cold Steam.
27Thot gas,in
Thot gas,out
Tcold steam,out
Tcold steam,in
Thot gas,in
Thot gas,out
Tcold steam,out
Tcold steam,in
28Log Mean Temperature Difference
- Rate of Heat Transfer
- U Overall Heat Transfer Coefficient, kW/m2.K
29Thermal Structure of A Boiler Furnace
30Platen Superheater
- Platen Superheater Flat panels of tubes located
in the upper part of the furnace, where the gas
temperature is high. - The tubes of the platen SH receive very high
radiation as well as a heavy dust burden. - Mechanism of HT High Radiation Low convection
- Thermal Structure
- No. of platens
- No. of tubes in a platen
- Dia of a tube
- Length of a tube
31Geometry of Thermal Structure Platen SH
- The outer diameter of platen SH is in the range
of 32 42 mm. - The platens are usually widely spaced, S1 500
900 mm. - The tubes within a platen are closely spaced,
S2/d 1.1. - The number of parallel tubes in a platen is in
the range of 15 35. - Design Problem To find out
- Length of tubes.
- Number of PSHs.
- Design Constraints Max. allowable steam flow
rates.
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33Convective Superheater (Pendant)
- Convective super heaters are vertical type
(Pendant ) or horizontal types. - The Pendant SH is always arranged in the
horizontal crossover duct. - Pendant SH tubes are widely spaced due to high
temperature and ash is soft. - Transverse pitch S1/d gt 4.5
- Longitudinal pitch S2/d gt 3.5.
- The outside tube diameter 32 51mm
- Tube thickness 3 7mm
34Convective Superheater (Horizontal)
- The horizontal SH are located in the back pass.
- The tubes are arranged in the in-line
configuration. - The outer diameter of the tube is 32 51 mm.
- The tube thickness of the tube is 3 7 mm.
- The transverse pitch S1/d 2 3.
- The longitudinal pitch S2/d 1.6 2.5.
- The tubes are arranged in multiple parallel sets.
- The desired velocity depends on the type of SH
and operating steam pressures. - The outside tube diameter 32 51mm
- Tube thickness 3 7mm
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36Thermal Balance in Super Heater.
- The energy absorbed by steam
- The convective heat lost by flue gas
- Overall Coefficient of Heat Transfer, U
Platen SH, U (W/m2 K) 120 140
Pendent SH, U (W/m2 K) 120 140
Convective SH, U (W/m2 K) 60 80
37Reheater
- The pressure drop inside reheater tubes has an
important adverse effect on the efficiency of
turbine. - Pressure drop through the reheater should be kept
as low as possible. - The tube diameter 42 60mm.
- The design is similar to convective superheaters.
- Overall Heat Transfer Coefficient 90 110 W/m2
K.
38Economizer
- The economizer preheats the feed water by
utilizing the residual heat of the flue gas. - It reduces the exhaust gas temperature and saves
the fuel. - Modern power plants use steel-tube-type
economizers. - Design Configuration divided into several
sections 0.6 0.8 m gap
39Tube Bank Arrangement
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41Thermal Structure of Economizer
- Out side diameter 25 38 mm.
- Tube thinckness 3 5 mm
- Transverse spacing 2.5 3.0
- Longitudinal spacing 1.5 2.0
- The water flow velocity 600 800 kg/m2 s
- The waterside resistance should not exceed 5 8
. Of drum pressure. - Flue gas velocity 7 13 m/s.
42Thermal Balance in Economizer.
- The energy absorbed by steam
- The convective heat lost by flue gas
- Overall Coefficient of Heat Transfer, U
43Air Pre-Heater
- An air pre-heater heats the combustion air where
it is economically feasible. - The pre-heating helps the following
- Igniting the fuel.
- Improving combustion.
- Drying the pulverized coal in pulverizer.
- Reducing the stack gas temperature and increasing
the boiler efficiency. - There are three types of air heaters
- Recuperative
- Rotary regenerative
- Heat pipe
44Tubular Air Pre-Heater
45Design Parameters
- Tubes are generally arranged in staggered
pattern. - Steel tubes of Dia 37 63 mm.
- Transverse pitch S1/d 1.5 1.9
- Longitudinal pitch S2/d 1.0 1.2
- The height of air chamber1.4 4.5 m.
- Gas and Air flow velocity 10 16 m/s.
- Plate Recuperators
- Instead of tube, parallel plates are used.
- The gas passage is 12 16 mm wide.
- The air passage is 12 mm wide.
46Rotary or Regenerative Air Pre-Heater
47Rotary Plate type Pre-Heater
- Rotates with a low speed 0.75 rpm.
- Weight 500 tons.
- This consists of rotor, sealing apparatus,
shell etc. - Rotor is divided into 12 or 24 sections and 12
or 24 radial divisions. - Each sector is divided into several trapezoidal
sections with transverse division plates. - Heat storage pales are placed in these sections.
48Stationary-Plate Type Air Pre-Heater
49Stationary-Plate Type Air Pre-Heater
- The heat storage elements are static but the
air/gas flow section rotates. - The storage plates are placed in the stator.
50Design Considerations
51Thermal Balance in Air Pre-Heater.
- The energy absorbed by air
- The convective heat lost by flue gas
- Overall Coefficient of Heat Transfer, U
52Combustion Losses
C R losses
Hot Exhaust Gas losses
APH
Economizer
CSH
Pendent SH
Reheater
Platen SH
Furnace absorption