Liquid heaters and vaporizers – Separators – Boiler circulation
Reexamination Certificate
2001-02-20
2002-06-25
Wilson, Gregory (Department: 3749)
Liquid heaters and vaporizers
Separators
Boiler circulation
C122S491000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06408800
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a separator for separating water and steam, having a steam-side outlet conduit and having a water-side outlet conduit and having a separating chamber between a number of inlet conduits and a swirl breaker disposed upstream of the water-side outlet conduit. The invention also relates to a water/steam separating apparatus, in particular for a continuous-flow steam generator, having at least one such separator that is connected to a water-collecting tank.
German Published, Prosecuted Patent Application 1 081 474 discloses a centrifugal-force water separator in which the ratio of diameter to height is intended to be approximately one to six or more (>1:6). Furthermore, the article by Jürgen Vollrath, entitled “Dampfabscheidung bei Siedewasser und Siedeüberhitzerreaktoren, [Steam separation in boiling-water and boiling/superheating reactors],” in
Technische Überwachung
9 (1968), No. 2, pp. 46-50, teaches to select a ratio of the diameter of a steam-side outlet conduit of a separator to the internal diameter of the separator of fifty-two percent (52%). In addition, JP 1-31 23 04 A discloses a water/steam separating apparatus in which a water-collecting tank is disposed at a vertical height which is determined by the vertical height of the separator. This water-collecting tank is connected to the separator on the water side. A separator of the generic type is known, for example, from GB-A-1164996.
A separator known from, German Published, Non-Prosecuted Patent Application DE 42 42 144 A1, which is owned by the assignee of the instant application is usually used in the evaporating system of a steam generator, in particular of a continuous-flow steam generator. Depending on the steam-generator capacity, usually a plurality of separators disposed in parallel are connected, within a water/steam separating apparatus, to a common water-collecting tank. In particular, during start-up operation of such a continuous-flow steam generator, large quantities of water are generally produced in the evaporating system. Each separator serves here for separating water and steam, the water being guided back into the evaporator circuit and steam, as far as possible free of water droplets, being directed into a superheater.
Because, in contrast to a natural-circulation steam generator, a continuous-flow steam generator is not subjected to any pressure limitation, and live-steam pressures high above the critical pressure of water (P
crit
=221 bar) are thus possible, modern steam power plants can be operated with high steam pressures of 250 to 300 bar. High live-steam pressures are necessary in order to achieve high thermal efficiencies and thus low carbon-dioxide emissions. A particular problem here is the configuration of the pressure-carrying parts because such high steam pressures require large wall thicknesses, which, in turn, can reduce considerably the heat transfer.
In a continuous-flow steam generator, the separators are particularly affected by reduced heat transfer. Because, in the case of load changes in variable-pressure operation, in which the steam pressure and thus also the boiling temperature in each separator changes linearly with the load, the separators are subjected to considerable changes in temperature. As a result, during start-up and in the case of load changes, the reliable temperature-change speed is significantly limited. This, in turn, may produce undesirably long start-up times with correspondingly high start-up losses and a low load-change speed, which, in turn, restricts the particularly high flexibility of the continuous-flow steam generator at least during operation with high steam pressures.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a separator for a water/steam separating apparatus that overcomes the hereinafore-mentioned disadvantages of the heretofore-known devices of this general type and which, with simultaneously low pressure loss and a high degree of separation as well as the smallest possible wall thickness, is particularly thermoelastic.
With the foregoing and other objects in view, there is provided, in accordance with the invention, a separator for separating water and steam. The separator includes a number of inlet conduits each having a flow cross section defining an overall flow cross section equaling a sum of said flow cross sections. A separating chamber between the inlet conduits has a length, a separating chamber inner diameter, and a ratio. The ratio equals a ratio of the overall flow cross section to a square of said separating chamber internal diameter. The length is at least five times the separating chamber internal diameter. The ratio is between 0.2 and 0.3. A steam-side outlet conduit is connected to the separating chamber. A water-side outlet conduit is connected to the separating chamber. A swirl breaker is disposed upstream of the water-side outlet conduit.
In accordance with another feature of the invention, the steam-side outlet conduit has a steam-side outlet conduit internal diameter equaling 40% to 60% of the separating channel internal diameter.
With the objects of the invention in view, there is also provided a water/steam separating apparatus including a separator as described above for separating water and steam and a water-collecting tank. The water-collecting tank is connected to the water-side outlet conduit of the separator. The water-collecting tank has a top end located beneath said midpoint of the length of the separator.
In accordance with another feature of the invention, the steam-side outlet conduit has a steam-side outlet conduit internal diameter equaling 40% to 60% of the separating channel internal diameter.
With the objects of the invention in view, there is also provided a method of operating a water/steam separating apparatus. The method includes providing a separator for separating water and steam. The next step is setting a throughput M through the separator at least equaling six hundred thirty times a square of the internal diameter.
In accordance with another mode of the invention, the method includes operating a continuous-flow steam generator including the separator at a maximum flow load.
In accordance with another feature of the invention, the method includes sizing a steam-side outlet conduit internal diameter of the steam-side outlet conduit between 40% and 60% of the separating channel internal diameter.
A further object of the invention is to specify a suitable method of operating a water/steam separating apparatus for a continuous-flow steam generator having a number of such separators.
Regarding the separator, the object is achieved by lengthening the separating chamber of the separator to at least five times (5×) the internal diameter of the chamber. In this case, the length of the separating chamber is defined by the distance between the inlet plane, which is determined by the inlet conduits of the separator, and the top edge of the swirl breaker located therebeneath. The ratio of the overall flow cross section of the inlet conduits to the square of the internal diameter of the separating chamber is between two tenths and three tenths (0.2-0.3).
The invention is based here on the finding that, surprisingly, in the case of a separator, in particular in the case of a cyclone separator, having a swirl breaker, the pressure loss in the separating chamber is comparatively high, whereas pressure losses caused by the steam-side outlet conduit are low. While this behavior is not represented in the literature, it was possible to confirm it mathematically. In the case of a cyclone separator without a swirl breaker, the considerable pressure losses occur at the inlet into the steam-side outlet conduit and in the outlet conduit itself. And, only minimal pressure losses occur in the separating chamber.
From this discovery, the invention applies the following property. By virtue of the specific configuration of the separator, the pressure-loss components in different section
Schmidt Holger
Wittchow Eberhard
Greenberg Laurence A.
Mayback Gregory L.
Siemens Aktiengesellschaft
Stemer Werner H.
Wilson Gregory
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