Furnaces – With exhaust gas treatment means – Afterburning means
Reexamination Certificate
2002-03-18
2003-12-02
Lazarus, Ira S. (Department: 3749)
Furnaces
With exhaust gas treatment means
Afterburning means
C110S211000, C110S213000, C110S266000, C110S297000, C110S16500A
Reexamination Certificate
active
06655303
ABSTRACT:
FIELD OF INVENTION
The invention relates to the thermal techniques, namely, to furnaces fired with organic fuels. The invention may successfully be applied to firing pulverized fuels.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
When designing furnaces, much attention is paid to the completeness of fuel combustion what is one of the defining factors for increasing their economic and environmental numbers. It is well known that the increased completeness of fuel combustion may be achieved by thoroughly mixing fuel with air at the increased combustion temperature. However the increased temperature within the combustion region leads to the increased nitrogen oxide emission at the expense of the so-called “thermal” nitrogen oxides resulted from oxidation of nitrogen present in ambient air. Besides, the increased flame temperature causes the slag buildup at the heat absorbing wall tubes and other negative consequences. To reduce temperature in the combustion region a number of techniques is introduced, such as the combustion products recirculation into the furnace, introduction of coarsely pulverized fuel, etc. At present the most effective way is the introduction of vortex furnaces providing maximum combustion temperatures at a relatively low level by increasing residence time of particles within active combustion regions.
Well known is the furnace (SU, A, 483559) consisting of the combustion chamber and the wall-mounted burner used for the air-fuel mixture supply. Tilted walls of the lower combustion chamber region formed the prism-shaped ash hopper with slotted mouth. Below the ash hopper mouth the bottom airflow device is installed. This device is designed, for example, as an air nozzle. At operation of such furnace the air-fuel mixture is fed through the burner and air is fed from below through the slotted mouth. As a result of the interaction of two reversely-directed flows a vortex zone is formed in the lower furnace region whereas the upper furnace region will have a straight-flow zone. Fine particles burn within the straight-flow zone and zones adjacent to the burners where as the middle-sized and coarse particles are separated into the vortex zone. Within the vortex region these particles burn our as a result of repeated circulation. As a size of the coarse particles diminishes these particles are blown out of the vortex zone and burned out within the upper straight-flow flame zone. An intense in-furnace recirculation of air mixture results in a considerable decrease and uniform temperatures within the entire vortex zone. To prevent the combustion of main portion of particles near the burner region and to carefully use the advantages of vortex furnaces, different approaches may be introduced, such as coarsely pulverized fuel with low content of finely pulverized particles, increased burner tilt angles and raised velocity of air mixture fed through the burner to improve the fuel particle separation into the vortex zone. Reduced fuel combustion velocity caused by lowering maximum combustion temperatures and coarsely pulverized fuel are supplemented by increased fuel residence time in the low temperature zone, that is, in the vortex zone. At the same time a considerable part of the vortex zone is a reducing oxygen-deficient region. It enables to lower the nitrogen oxide emission at the expense of oxide reducing.
Industrial tests of a boiler equipped with such burner confirmed considerable temperature and nitrogen oxide reductions in flue gases. However in cases of coarsely pulverized fuel combustion and when coal mills are in unsatisfactory conditions a fuel drop-off into ash hopper may increase. This may be a partial result of the wall tube surface structure when walls of many boilers are panels consisting of vertically mounted tubes between which small slots may be present. These slots may accumulate fuel particles. Fuel particles create so-called “chains”. Having reached a critical mass and overcome the reverse airflow resistance, these chains drop into ash hopper. To fire the unburned fuel, the bottom airflow velocity should be increased. This causes higher maintenance costs for the forced and induced draft fans and intensification of the wall tube erosion. Besides, redundantly high velocities of the bottom airflow may distort the optimum vortex process aerodynamics that will result in higher unburned particle content in flue gas. More problems appear if wall tubes are not airtight. This is inherent to almost all older boilers. In this case the unburned particles pass between wall tubes and drop along the thermal insulation plates mounted behind the wall tubes down into ash hopper. In the ash hopper mouth the particles that have moved along that tilted wall where the bottom airflow nozzles are installed enter the flow injected from these nozzles. Some of them return to the active combustion region and the heaviest ones may drop off. It happens because the particles move in the direction counterwise to the bottom airflow direction. The process of returning fuel particles to combustion more effectively occurs when particles move towards the bottom airflow (for example, along a slanted surface). In this case the time required for air to react with a fuel particle and is quite sufficient in order to lower kinetic energy of the latter (the friction of a particle on the surface also contributes) and subsequently to direct it back to the combustion chamber. As for the particles that moved along the opposite slanted wall of ash hopper so they fully drop off. Heat losses resulted from the mechanical combustion incompleteness in the given furnace may considerably exceed the rated numbers. Therefore the economic numbers may be regretfully low. Also well known is the furnace described in the application PCT/RU93/00291. It was introduced to fire coarsely pulverized fuel. The furnace has a combustion chamber with slanted walls in the lower region forming the mouth below which there is the coarse particle treatment chamber equipped with the bottom airflow nozzle in its lower region. The coarse particle treatment chamber is a curved channel with the lower edge of the wall located opposite to the airflow nozzle and below the nozzle axis. The wall equipped with the bottom airflow nozzle has a region located above the opposite one. This region is directed toward the nozzle axis and the opposite wall. The wall opposite to the nozzle is curved and its upper edge is directed along the opposite slanted wall of the vortex chamber. At operation of this furnace the finely pulverized particles burn out near the burner itself and relatively coarse particles fall into the lower region of the vortex zone and enter the bottom airflow fed through the nozzle. The coarsest particles drop through the slotted mouth of ash hopper and, passing through the curved channel, reach the curved wall of the coarse particle treatment chamber. After the fuel particles have entered the curved channel its form provides the change in fuel particle movement in such a way that when caught by the bottom airflow, fuel particles are thrown toward the opposite wall, smashed and pulverized. Relatively fine particles resulted from such pulverization are fed with the airflow into the vortex zone where they burn out. Coarse particles again fall into the lower region and the cycle repeats itself.
Such furnace can be successfully introduced at firing fuel that is coarsely pulverized, highly moist or if a prolonged time for coarse fuel particle treatment is needed. In case when a finely pulverized and relatively dry fuel with low coarse particle content is used the above-mentioned furnace becomes inefficient since the costs for fan devices become unjustifiably high. Energy losses for repeated changes in airflow direction (including the cases of impacts on the opposite wall) are the main cause. In addition, if the fuels being used tend to form the slag buildup the presence of a long curved channel with relatively low cross-sections (necessary for the effective operation of the above-mentioned furnace) below the ash hopper mouth may cause some problem
Bakhtinov Yuriy Pavlovich
Finker Felix Zalmanovich
Kubyshkin Igor Borisovich
Fay Sharpe Fagan Minnich & McKee LLP
Lazarus Ira S.
Polytechenergo
Rinehart K. B.
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