Lecture 7 - Steam Generators
Lecture 7 - Steam Generators
Lecture 7 - Steam Generators
Lecture 7
Usually boilers are coal or oil fired. A boiler should fulfil the following requirements:
Types of boilers
There are two main types of boilers: fire tubes and water tubes. In a fire tube boiler, heat is directed
through metal rods that pass through the middle of the water vessel. The rods are arranged in banks so
that the heat can pass through the vessel many times before escaping through the chimney. The fire
tube system exposes the water to the maximum amount of heated surface and also has the maximum
amount of water storage space. In a water tube boiler, the heat is directed through metal rods near the
outside of the water vessel. Water tube boilers are vertical and have the ability to generate more units
of steam per hour but also provide less water storage than fire tube configurations.
Cylindrical shell
Its crown having a spherical shape.
Hemispherical furnace
Spherical shape requires least material for the volume
Spherical crown gives maximum strength to withstand
the pressure of the steam
Coal or oil can be used as fuel in this boiler
Coal is fed into the grate through the fire door
Formed ash is collected in the ash-pit and is removed
manually.
Oil burners are fitted below the fire door
Heat transfer to the water by convection
Water Tube Boiler is most common because of its ability to deliver large quantities of steam.
Water Tube Boiler looks very complicated.
Thousands of tubes are placed in strategic location to optimize the exchange of energy from
the heat to the water in the tubes.
The large tube like structure at the top of the boiler is called the steam drum.
The hundreds of tube start and eventually end up at the steam drum.
It is also called the forced circulation, Benson or universal pressure boiler. It is applicable to all
temperatures and pressures, but economically is suited to large sizes and pressure in the high
subcritical and supercritical range. In this type the feedwater goes through the economizer, furnace
walls and super heater sections in one continuous pass, so no drum is required and no water
recirculation takes place. It demands very high purity water because of the one through process and it
is the only type that can be used by supercritical pressure operation.
Steam Theory
Within the boiler, fuel and air are force into the furnace by the
burner.
There, it burns to produce heat.
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Lecture 7
From there, the heat (flue gases) travels throughout the boiler.
The water absorbs the heat, and eventually absorbs enough to change into a gaseous state –
steam.
The hot gases from the combustion process move from the bottom left to the top and then down the
right hand side of the boiler structure. As the hot gas moves through the boiler it loses energy to the
water and the gases becomes cooler as a result. There are various heat exchangers in the boiler which
extract energy from the hot gases and transfer it to water.
The following diagram shows the inner workings of a boiler. The numbers in the diagram are
described below.
0. Coal powder and air are blown into the boiler and combust to form a fireball.
1. Cool feedwater enters the boiler at the bottom right.
2. The feedwater is heated in the economizer by the warm exhaust gases exiting the boiler.
3. The warm feedwater is sent to the steam drum (6) where liquid water is separated from steam
formed in the waterwall. In a super critical coal plant steam is not created. Liquid water becomes a
supercritical fluid in the superheaters at a pressure of greater than 221 bar and a temperature of greater
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Lecture 7
than 400oC. Therefore there is no steam drum. In a supercritical boiler warmed feedwater passes
directly into the downcomers.
4. Liquid water flows down the downcomers on the
outside of the boiler to the bottom of the boiler.
5. Water flows up the tubes in the waterwalls of the
boiler and surround the fireball of burning coal. The
water in the tubes is heated by radiation from the
fireball. Some of the water in these tubes turns into
steam.
6. The steam and water in the waterwall tubes is sent
to the steam drum, where steam is separated from
liquid water. Liquid water in the steam drum flows
down the downcomers on the outside of the boiler.
7. Steam from the steam drum is sent to the primary
superheater.
8. Steam is super heated to a high temperature and
pressure in the primary superheaters and then moves
to the secondary superheaters.
9. In the secondary superheaters steam meets the
very hot gases exiting the top of the boiler. The
steam is heated to its final temperature and pressure
before leaving the boiler as main steam. The main
steam is sent to the high pressure steam turbine. The steam turbines drive a generator which produces
electricity.
10. Steam exiting the high pressure steam turbine is called cold reheat. It is reheated in the reheater
and sent back to the second steam turbine.
By the time the flue gas exits the boiler most of the energy in the coal will be transferred to the water
in the boiler. The hot gases are cleaned up before they are sent to a stack. Feedwater is generally
supplied by condensed steam from the low pressure steam turbine. Large amounts of cooling water
are used to condense this steam into liquid water in the condenser.
Boiler Calculations
Heat transfer required to form steam
The steam in the boiler is formed at constant pressure, so
Heat transfer required to form 1 kg of steam in the boiler ( )
( )
̇ ( )
( ̇ )
Where,
̇
̇
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Lecture 7
From this it determined the amount of water at 100oC which could be evaporated into dry saturated
steam at 100oC if supplied with this same amount of energy. This is then called the equivalent
evaporation of the boiler, from and at 100oC.
̇ ( )
The drum should stand the flow rate changes and prevent the carryover of water towards the supper-
heater which may lead to distortion or burnout.
Steam is separated in the drum by two methods:
a. Gravity separation b. Mechanical separation
Gravity Separation
Factors that affect the gravity separation are:
o Steam velocity
o Positions of the down comer and riser nozzle with respect to the steam outlet
o Operating pressure
Gravity separation is economical only for low-steam-capacity, low pressure service.
Mechanical Separation
It has three steps:
o Primary separation: removes most of the water from the steam and prevents the carry under of
steam with the recirculating water to down-comer and risers. Baffle plates and the bent or
corrugated plates are used for primary separation.
o Secondary separation, also called steam scrubbing or drying. It removes mist or fine droplets
and solids from steam. Screens, bent or corrugated plates and centrifugal separators are
considered types of the secondary separation.
o Centrifugal separation is used at high pressures and it is called cyclone or turbo separators.
Typical utility steam drums range in length to more than 100 ft in diameter to more than 15 ft long
and flow rate in terms of hundreds tons per hour.