The present invention relates to monitoring combustion of solid fuel in a boiler and to on-line determining of a calorific value of the solid fuel currently combusted in the boiler, in particular in thermal power plants.
Thermal power plants produce electricity as a result of energy conversions. The main component of a thermal power plant is a steam boiler, wherein fuel is combusted (usually fossil fuel—coal or natural gas, biomass, biogas or waste). The thermal energy from the steam boiler is used to heat, evaporate and superheat steam that feeds the turbine. The steam-powered turbine generates mechanical energy to drive a shaft of an electric generator. Large power plants may be equipped with several power blocks, wherein energy production processes are carried out such that they are at least partially separate (or usually independent of each other). These processes are carried out usually by means of independent elements, such as boilers, turbines, condensers, pumps, exchangers, generators and the like.
Typically, thermal boilers have an efficiency in the range of 70 to 94%. The efficiency of the boiler results from the applied solutions, wear and tear of devices, irreversibility of thermal processes and process losses resulting from imperfect control and process errors. These losses get worse along with the lifetime of the boiler, which can be up to several decades. Thus, various types of monitoring systems are used in thermal power plants. The monitoring systems are used to monitor the operation of the power plant, including the boiler, and to generate information on how to optimise the operation of the power plant.
There are known Distributed Control Systems (DCS) that collect engineering and technical information from individual points in the power plant in order to automate and control the operation of the blocks. Separate systems, such as boiler management systems (often based on neural networks) are typically used to automate the boiler operation.
Typically, DCS-based automation systems are used with implemented design process characteristics of boiler operation, obtained at the time of commissioning of the power plant or partially corrected after major overhauls. These characteristics become less and less useful as the service life and associated operational and technical changes progress. In addition, there is a lack of support for control systems with key real-time information on the calorific values of the fuel that is currently combusted in the boiler, as well as on the content of combustible parts in ash and slag. Information about the LHV (Lower Heating Value) of the fuel is necessary to accurately optimise the operation of the boiler, but in typical systems, fuel quality analysis is carried out with a significant delay, making it impossible to use the results of this analysis in real time. Possible solutions require an additional investment to upgrade the boiler infrastructure. In the case of boilers which have been in operation for several decades, solutions which do not interfere with the plant's infrastructure are preferred over new investments.
Therefore, there is a need to develop a system that monitors and determines, on-line, the calorific value of a solid fuel currently combusted in a boiler, such as to achieve these objectives without interfering with the infrastructure of the facility.
Information about the current calorific value of the fuel is critical to determining the amount of energy input to the boiler. Without this information, it is not possible to optimise the combustion process on-line. For example, for a coal-fired power plant, fuel quality varies by around 20% (even if the coal comes from the same mine). Therefore, it is important to know the calorific value of the fuel that is currently combusted.
The ability to achieve the required power in the block depends on the chemical energy reserves of fuel available at the solid fuel mills. Currently, the block operator has no knowledge of the energy potential available at the mills that prepare the solid fuel fed to the boiler. Information on the current calorific value would allow the determination of energy reserves both on the currently operating mill units, as well as on units that are currently shut down but ready to be switched on in case of the need to reach high loads of the power block.
Moreover, in typical known systems, the operator has no information about the quality of the fuel that is currently combusted, nor about the current efficiency of energy production. This leads to a limited ability to respond to adverse conditions by not being able to detect those adverse conditions. This also results in the possibility of suboptimal control decisions due to a lack of knowledge of the exact amount of energy input to the boiler.
The systems offered on the market require hardware investment and interference with the technological set-up of the power plant.
The system according to the invention solves the problems described above. The solution according to the invention enables precise on-line management and optimisation of the boiler operation, as well as significantly increases the operational awareness of boiler operators.
The object of the invention is a method for on-line monitoring and determining a calorific value of a solid fuel that is currently combusted in a boiler that comprises a combustion chamber with a steam production system, to which the solid fuel is fed from at least one mill connected to a hopper. The method comprises measuring, on-line during the operation of the boiler, operational data of the boiler, and operational data of at least one mill. The operational data of the boiler are measured by means of sensors and comprise at least one of: temperature, pressure, steam flow; wherein the operational data of the at least one mill are measured by means of sensors and comprise at least one of: mill power, air pressure upstream of the mill, solid fuel feeder revolutions, air temperature upstream of the mill, temperature of the dust-air mixture downstream of the mill. The method further comprises collecting historical data of measurements of the calorific value of the solid fuel and the operational data of a power block, wherein the operational data of the power block include at least one of: lower heating value, mill characteristics, fuel flow rate and boiler efficiency, operational parameters of turbine, including flows, pressures and temperatures for live steam, superheated steam and secondary steam, operational data of the boiler, operational data of at least one mill, composition of exhaust gases, power of the block. The method also includes calculating energy balances of the steam production system, based on the collected historical data and depending on the amount of thermal energy input to the turbine generator set divided by the boiler efficiency. Further, the method includes iteratively determining an efficiency of the boiler based on the historical data by: determining sets of mill characteristics depending on a calorific value of the solid fuel and operational data of the mill while combusting that solid fuel, wherein the mill characteristics include at least one operational parameter selected from the group consisting of: mill power, air pressure upstream of the mill, solid fuel feeder revolutions, air temperature upstream of the mill, temperature of the dust-air mixture downstream of the mill; determining a fuel mass flux based on the set of mill characteristics; and determining the actual calorific value of the fuel for the historical data. Next, the method includes training a model based on artificial intelligence algorithms to predict the calorific value using the historical data of fuel calorific value and measured operational data of the boiler; and determining in real time, using the trained model, the calorific value of the solid fuel that is currently combusted.
Preferably, the historical data of the calorific value of the solid fuel are determined by means of laboratory measurements carried out cyclically or by measurement systems operating continuously, for the solid fuel prior to putting the solid fuel to the hopper.
Preferably, the method further comprises measuring, on-line during the operation of the boiler, data of ambient conditions, wherein the data of ambient conditions are measured by means of a sensor and comprise at least one of: ambient air temperature, ambient air pressure, ambient air humidity.
The determined calorific value for the fuel that is currently combusted is stored in a database or the determined calorific value is directly used in other computational, analysis or advisory modules in order to optimise the boiler operation. If a plurality of mills are used, the available energy potential at the individual mills can be determined in the manner described herein.
In particular, the energy balances take into account the amount of energy received by the live steam and the secondary steam from the boiler (for the calculated secondary steam flow).
The boiler efficiency is determined by an indirect method (based on boiler losses) or by a direct method (known mass of the fuel entering the boiler).
The mill characteristics are built using current data for established historical periods prior to their use in the calculations. The mill characteristics are selected so as to minimise the error in the amount of energy supplied to the boiler.
Based on the determined energy balances, the boiler efficiency and the mill characteristics, the calorific value of the fuel is determined at particular time intervals.
The invention also relates to a system for on-line monitoring and determining a calorific value of a solid fuel that is currently combusted in a boiler that comprises a combustion chamber with a steam production system to which the solid fuel is fed from at least one mill connected to a hopper. The system comprises an interface to sensors (15-1, 15-2, 15-3, 15-4, 13-1, 17-1) for measuring operational data of the boiler and operational data of at least one mill. The operational data of the boiler comprise at least one of: temperature, pressure, steam flow. The operational data of the at least one mill comprise at least one of: mill power, air pressure upstream of the mill, solid fuel feeder revolutions, air temperature upstream of the mill, temperature of the dust-air mixture downstream of the mill. The system also comprises an archive module for collecting historical data of solid fuel calorific value measurements and operational data of the power block, wherein the operational data of the power block include at least one of: lower heating value, mill characteristics, fuel flow rate and boiler efficiency, operational parameters of turbine, including flows, pressures and temperatures for live steam, superheated steam and secondary steam, operational data of the boiler, operational data of at least one mill, composition of exhaust gases, power of the block. The system further comprises a module for calculating energy balances of the steam production system on the basis of the historical data collected in the archive module. The system also comprises a module for iterative determination (207-212) of boiler efficiency on the basis of historical data, configured to: determine sets of mill characteristics depending on a calorific value of the solid fuel and operational data of the mill while combusting that solid fuel, wherein the mill characteristics include at least one operational parameter selected from the group consisting of: mill power, air pressure upstream of the mill, solid fuel feeder revolutions, air temperature upstream of the mill, temperature of the dust-air mixture downstream of the mill; determine the fuel mass flux on the basis of the set of mill characteristics; and determine the actual calorific value of the fuel for historical data. The system also comprises a model based on artificial intelligence algorithms for predicting calorific value, that is trained using historical data of fuel calorific value and measured operational data of the boiler, and once trained, configured to determine in real time the calorific value of the solid fuel that is currently combusted on the basis of the currently measured operational data of the boiler.
In certain specific embodiments, the solution according to the invention provides the possibility to accurately optimise the combustion process by knowledge of the amount of energy input to the system, by implementing even more precise automatic control systems or operational decision support systems.
Moreover, in certain specific embodiments, the solution according to the invention provides the possibility of assessing the energy potential of the solid fuel mills and thus obtaining information on the ability of the power block to achieve the planned power at the currently operating mill units.
Moreover, in certain specific embodiments, the solution according to the invention provides the possibility to accurately assess on-line (i. e. on an ongoing basis) the quality of the operation of the power generation process, by determining on-line the efficiency of the boiler, and thus provides the possibility for the operator to eliminate areas that generate losses. This leads to maximising the use of the existing technical potential of the power plant.
Moreover, in certain specific embodiments, the solution according to the invention provides information to professionals responsible for operating the power block about the current calorific value of the fuel that is combusted and its susceptibility to milling, which results in increased operational awareness and enables implementation of operating practices precisely configured to the current conditions.
Moreover, in certain specific embodiments, the solution according to the invention does not require use of additional metering and hardware investments.
The object of the invention is shown by means of an embodiment in the drawing, wherein:
The embodiment shown herein will be discussed based on an example of a boiler supplied with a solid fuel that is coal, but the method can be used in an equivalent manner for any other solid fuel, such as biomass.
Furthermore, ambient conditions are measured by at least one sensor 17-1 (i.e. a single sensor located at a designated point within the facility or a plurality of sensors located at specific locations) and comprise at least one of: ambient air temperature, ambient air pressure, ambient air humidity, i.e. data on atmospheric conditions.
A boiler drum 20 separates water from steam. Live steam having temperature T1, pressure P1 and flow F1 (measured, for example, as flow rate) is directed to a live steam superheater 30, wherein additional energy is supplied to the steam by raising its temperature and thus superheated steam having temperature T2, pressure P2 and flow F2 is fed to a high-pressure section 41 of a turbine, wherein it is subject to expansion, releases some of its energy and returns to the boiler as secondary steam having temperature T3, pressure P3 and flow F3. A secondary steam superheater 40 heats the steam and the superheated steam having temperature T4, pressure P4 and flow F4 is directed to a medium-pressure and then to low-pressure section 42 of the turbine, wherein it releases its energy. The values of temperature, pressure and flow of the steam are measured by means of corresponding sensors 15-1, 15-2, 15-3, 15-4.
In step 201, the boiler useful thermal power (Qin) is determined, which indicates the amount of energy transferred from the boiler 10 to the turbine 41, 42 in the form of steam. At this step, the calorific value of the fuel and the fuel mass flow rate are not known yet, therefore it is not possible to calculate the efficiency from the energy output of the boiler. The boiler useful thermal power (Qin) is determined based on the data on the flow of live steam, secondary steam, the parameters of this steam and other parameters, for example using the formula:
wherein:
In step 202, the initial efficiency of the boiler is determined on the basis of historical 24-hour—average laboratory data of calorific value and the composition of the fuel, according to the PN-EN 12952-15:2004 standard.
In step 203, processing of measurement data from the environment of the coal mills is carried out so as to remove erroneous indication values generated by currently deactivated mills 13, e.g. the error of negative revolutions of feeders of a non-operating mill 13.
In step 204, it is initially assumed that mill characteristics are identical for all of the mills 13, which corresponds to the assumption that each mill hopper 14 contains a fuel with the same properties.
Based on the data from steps 202, 203, 204, in step 205 the fuel mass flow rate is adjusted by selecting appropriate mill characteristics. The resulting fuel mass flux is related to the 24-hour-average laboratory calorific value, so that the balance of the amount of chemical energy of the fuel fed to the boiler is fulfilled. The balance relates to the amount of thermal energy input to the turbine generator set (Qin), divided by the boiler efficiency, according to the formula:
wherein:
In step 207, for the steady states of boiler operation provided in step 206, linear mill characteristics 1-4 are created as shown in
As a result, in step 208, a set of mill characteristics is obtained, i.e. individual characteristics for different fuel qualities, which are a measure of the coal's susceptibility to milling, as for example shown in
In step 209, the current mill characteristics are detected (individually for each mill) based on the measured operational parameters of the coal mill, such as mill motor power, pressure of air entering the mill, revolutions of mill feeders.
On the basis of a particular current mill characteristics, the mass flow of fuel fed by a particular mill is determined in step 210. The characteristic is selected depending on at least one currently measurement parameter of the mill (when the measured parameter is changed, another characteristic is selected).
Then, in step 211, the estimated LHV of the fuel is determined based on the energy balances and the determined boiler efficiency and it is reported as the result of the procedure.
wherein {dot over (m)}pal is the mass flow of fuel
In step 212, the boiler efficiency for the thus estimated LHV is determined according to the PN-EN 12952-15:2004 standard.
The boiler efficiency is determined on an ongoing basis (on-line) for a particular historical moment, e. g. for every minute. After updating the calorific value, the boiler efficiency is calculated again.
The LHV estimated in step 211 and the boiler efficiency estimated in step 212 are provided as input to step 207, allowing a more accurate determination of the set of characteristics.
Thus, steps 207-212 are performed iteratively until the boiler efficiency calculation error (i. e. the difference between successive iterations of steps 207-212) converges to a value below a predetermined threshold, for example of the order of 10−3. The calculation error is defined as |ηboiler
The process described in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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21461552.8 | Jun 2021 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2022/065842 | 6/10/2022 | WO |