The invention relates to a device for a directed supply of primary combustion air into the coking chamber of a coke oven of the “Non-Recovery” or “Heat-Recovery” type, wherein primary combustion air is ducted through one or several entry ports in the coke oven top or in the front-end or rear-end coke oven chamber wall, and wherein the entry port(s) is (are) equipped with devices through which the entry stream of primary air is directed so that the primary air is better distributed in the gas-filled space over the coke cake. The invention also relates to a method for operating a coke oven chamber or coke oven battery or coke oven bank, wherein the primary combustion air for coal carbonization enters through one or several entry port(s) in the top of a coke oven chamber or through one or several entry port(s) in the coke oven chamber wall of a coke oven or through one or several entry port(s) in the coke oven chamber door of a coke oven chamber into the gas-filled space above the coke cake, with the coking gas from coal carbonization utilized for combustion also being ducted into said gas-filled space, and wherein the primary air streams to the coke cake at an angle of less than 90° in vertical direction and at an angle of more than 0° in horizontal direction.
Production of coke from coal or carbonaceous materials is frequently performed in coke ovens of the “Non-Recovery” or “Heat-Recovery” type. With coke ovens of the “Non-Recovery” or “Heat-Recovery” type, coal is heated to high temperatures, and the evolving coking gas is combusted with an under-stoichiometric quantity of so-called primary air. In general, combustion with primary air is incomplete and occurs in a gas-filled space above the coke cake, which is called the primary heating space. Proceeding from this gas-filled space, the incompletely burnt coking gas is ducted into so-called “downcomer” channels into secondary air soles located beneath the coking chamber where secondary air streams in and where the incompletely burnt coking gas is completely combusted. In this manner, a more uniform heat distribution of the entire coke cake is achieved. With the “Heat-Recovery” type, the heat from combustion is additionally exploited to generate energy.
In general, the introduction of primary air into the primary heating chamber is accomplished through openings in the top of a coke oven chamber or in the vertical coke oven chamber wall which is located above the coke oven chamber door. In a frequently encountered layout, the coke oven chambers are closed by coke oven chamber doors which are mounted at the front-end coke oven chamber wall, which is also called pusher side coke oven chamber wall, as well as at the rear-end frontal coke oven chamber wall, which is also called coke side coke oven chamber wall, in order to allow for charging and cleaning of a coke oven chamber. To minimize heat losses during charging, the doors of coke oven chambers are so mounted that they only seal the coke oven chamber bottom section which is charged with the coke cake. The upper section of the coke oven chamber which in its interior encompasses the gas-filled space is covered externally at the frontal walls by the coke oven chamber wall. In a typical layout, this part of the coke oven chamber walls which is located above the coke oven chamber doors is comprised of openings which—in addition to the openings in the top of the coke oven chamber—are utilized for introducing primary air into the gas-filled space above the coke cake.
Likewise, there are prior art layouts for coke oven chambers, the frontal coke oven chamber door of which closes the entire coking space and, more particularly, the gas-filled space in the interior of the coke oven chamber towards the exterior. The coke oven chamber door then encompasses nearly the entire frontal coke oven chamber wall. This may be the case both on the pusher side and coke side frontal coke oven chamber walls as well as on both sides. Entry ports for primary air may also be located in the doors of these layouts.
The German patent description DE 102008025437.1 which has not yet been disclosed at the moment of this application describes a device which is utilized for a directed introduction of primary air into the gas space of a coke oven chamber, with said device being comprised of openings launched into the top of a coke oven chamber and with these openings having an opening-outwardly directed stream-out angle relative to a vertical plumb through the top, said angle being an opening angle and being greater than 0°. Owing to this shape, primary air is better distributed in the gas space above the coke oven so that the combustion of coking gas in this area is improved. Though the teaching allows for an intensified intimate mixing of primary air and coking gas in the area of the gas space lying over the coke cake and being near the entry port, there is some need for improvement relative to a further intensified intimate mixing of primary combustion air and coking gas in the gas space areas further away from the entry ports.
Opening ports for supply of primary air frequently are so designed that they admit primary air vertically onto the coke cake without any further distribution into the gas-filled primary heating chamber or horizontally without any further conduction or direction onto the coke cake, if the primary air streams in laterally. This causes a non-uniform distribution of primary air in the gas-filled space above the coke oven chamber whereby the partial combustion of coking gas with primary air takes a worse course and whereby the temperature distribution in the upper part of the coke oven chamber becomes non-uniform. This entails a substantially increased burden of gases containing nitric oxides of the NOx type on combustion of coking gas with primary air.
In some layouts of coke ovens, a fan is installed into the air supply openings for coal in order to support the air admittance of primary air into the combustion gas space. An example is taught by GB 341157 A. Other designs, in turn, utilize an air supply system that collects the air for a coke oven battery or a coke oven bank and feeds it in dosed quantities to each individual coke oven. For example, this can be accomplished by suitable control elements or regulating elements in the individual air supply ducts for the individual coke oven chambers. In this manner, the supply of air is made independent of weather impacts. An example is taught by EP 1893721 A1. However, the layouts and designs outlined hereinabove merely alter the efficiency of the outer air supply for coke ovens while they do not solve the problem of an insufficient air distribution in the opening-remote areas of the combustion space above the coke cake.
Now, therefore, it is the object to provide a device that allows for an improved air distribution for primary combustion air into the primary heating chamber in the area of the gas space above the coke cake. The device should take effect, if possible, in the interior area of the gas space superposing the coke cake in order to allow for an optimized combustion of coking gas over the entire area of the coke cake. By way of an improved air supply in the inner area of said gas space, too, it is possible to improve the area heating on the bed surface of the gas space where the heat of combustion can distribute itself over the entire coke cake. Furthermore, an optimized combustion will diminish the formation of contaminants, more particularly of gases containing nitric oxides that evolve from combustion.
It is an object of the present invention to allow for the admittance of air both over the top of the coke oven and through the coke oven chamber walls or through the coke oven chamber doors. Depending on the embodiment of the invention, it should also be possible to feed primary air optionally through openings in the top of a coke oven chamber as well as in the chamber walls or doors of the coke oven chamber. It is also an object of the present invention to allow for feeding primary air through an air distribution system by way of which all or several coke oven chambers of a coke oven battery or coke oven bank can be approached, or with an air distribution system that admits the primary air individually into the coke oven chambers of coke oven batteries or coke oven banks.
The present invention solves this task by a feeding device for primary combustion air which is installed into the entry ports for primary air of coke ovens and which is comprised of spouts located at the oven-inwardly directed sides, with the primary air being conducted in bundled form and in form of an angularly directed primary air stream through said spouts into the interior of the gas-filled space superposing the coke cake of a coke oven chamber. The feeding device is preferably configured as an insert that can be installed into the entry ports for primary air and which can be built-in, depending on requirements, in any number into the top or into the coke oven chamber wall above the coke oven chamber door or into the coke oven chamber door or into several or into all of these positions.
Through the inventive insert with the inventive spouts, primary air streams at the coke cake in vertical direction at an angle (β) of less than 90° and in horizontal direction at an angle (β′) of more than 0°.
Claim is also laid in particular to a device for feeding primary air for the combustion of coking gas into the coking chamber of a coke oven of a coke oven battery of the “Non-Recovery” or “Heat-Recovery” type, wherein
The device may also be so configured that entry ports are located both in the top of the coke oven chamber and in the coke oven chamber wall above the coke oven chamber door as well as in the coke oven chamber door which frontally closes the gas space above the coke cake, with primary air entering through said entry ports into the gas-filled space existing above the coke cake and being brought there in contact with the coking gas, and that at least one of the entry ports is equipped with the inventive inserts. In principle, the entry ports may be located at any of the mentioned positions in the coke oven chamber, in any number or in any combination.
In a typical embodiment, the device is comprised of a cylindrical insert made of a heat-resistant material and embedded and fastened in the brickwork of the coke oven top or coke oven chamber wall existing above the coke oven chamber door. This can be accomplished by embedding it in the brickwork or by fastening it with splints. The insert is preferably cylindrical but it may also be of a parallelepiped shape or nearly cylindrical. After all, the shape of the insert is arbitrary, provided it allows for the inventive implementation of a bordering into the coke oven chamber wall or provided it is suitable for bordering of spouts.
The insert may also be chamfered at the sides so that it can be embedded into a bordering bricked-up in opposite direction in the coke oven chamber wall. As a result hereof, it can be exchanged or taken-out, for example, depending on the operational requirements of the cokemaking process. For instance, this can be done prior to or after the beginning of a cokemaking cycle, but also during operation, depending on the operational requirements.
For the implementation of the present invention, it is also possible to equip only one entry port with an inventive insert, considering a plurality of inserts. The number and arrangement of inserts depends on the ventilation requirement of a specific coke oven chamber.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the inserts on the oven-outwardly directed side are provided with covers that protect the entry ports with the inventive openings against weather impacts. This is particularly the case if the entry ports supply each oven individually with air from the outside. However, depending on the layout, this may also be the case with an air supply system for a coke oven battery. In another embodiment of the present invention, the cover over the entry ports is comprised of U tubes seated above the entry port and offering protection against the exterior atmosphere by means of the U-shaped bending, if the entry port is situated in the top of the coke oven chamber. Conversely, if the entry port is situated in the frontal coke oven chamber wall above the coke oven chamber or in the coke oven chamber door, then for example the cover my also be an extended oven-outwardly directed tube.
In the interior, the U tube or the cover may be comprised of a device through which the admittance of air can be controlled. This device may also be mounted on the opening of the U tube or at any arbitrary position. Devices for controlling and regulating the admittance of air are known from prior art in technology. An example for controlling devices for the admittance of air is taught by WO 2007057076 A1. The regulating system for the control mechanism for the admitted quantity of primary air can be driven arbitrarily. In a simple form, it can be driven by a manually operated chain, and in another embodiment it can also be driven by an actuator motor, for example.
Spouts for a directed introduction of primary combustion air can be shaped arbitrarily. For example, they may be of a quadratic shape in their cross section or they may also be round. In a preferred embodiment, they are round in their cross section and constitute a cylindrically shaped continuation of the inventive insert, said continuation being shaped as a channel and directed into the oven interior. In one embodiment, it has an angle (α) of 1° to 35° relative to a longitudinally directed plumb through the center of the insert. In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the spouts have an angle (α) of 15° to 25° relative to a longitudinally directed plumb through the insert. For inserts in the top of a coke oven, the plumb relates to a perpendicular vertical plumb in the coke oven top; for inserts in the frontal lateral coke oven chamber wall above the coke oven door, the plumb relates to a horizontal plumb through the coke oven chamber wall.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the inserts installed into the brickwork of the coke oven chamber top or coke oven chamber wall are of a cylindrical shape. But they may also be of a parallelepiped or conical shape. The entry port into the coke oven chamber top or into the coke oven chamber wall is typically adapted to the insert.
In an advantageous embodiment, the length of the spouts accounts for 70 to 500 mm. Typically, the lengths of the spouts amount to 300 mm. The number of spouts per entry insert may also be arbitrary. For example, it may range between 1 and 6 spouts. In a preferred embodiment, the number of spouts per insert amounts to four. The cross section of the inner gas-carrying spout tube has a size that allows for installing the utilized number of spouts. The cross section of the inner gas-carrying spout tube typically ranges between 1500 and 15000 mm2. The cross section of the inner gas-carrying spout tube may have an arbitrary shape. Preferably it is of a round shape. With a round shape, the inner diameter of the gas-carrying spout tube preferably has a diameter of 70 to 500 mm at the level of the opening and insert bordering, and even more preferably amounts to 100 mm.
To allow for a reasonable gas inflow velocity, the inventive spouts have a preferred length vs. diameter ratio. It typically lies at 1 to 20. In a particularly preferred embodiment, the length vs. diameter ratio is greater than 2. To allow for a reasonable gas flow velocity, it is also feasible to equip the inventive insert with elements that increase the tangential gas flow velocity. For example, if it is intended to increase the gas flow velocity, these elements may be Venturi elements. With a desired deceleration of the gas flow, these elements may also be flaps. These elements may also be controllable. With a desired broadening of the gas flow, the Venturi elements may be inclined accordingly. To increase the tangential gas flow velocity, the inventive device may also be comprised of a fan mounted at any arbitrary position.
The inventive device is so manufactured that it can resist high temperatures, particularly those prevailing in the interior of a coke oven chamber. Particularly suitable materials for manufacture are ceramics, silica, shot concrete, fireclay bricks or a high temperature resistant steel. The inventive insert can also be manufactured from different input materials. For example, the encompassing insert may be manufactured from ceramics, while the spouts may be manufactured from high temperature resistant steel. The insert with the spouts can be manufactured in any arbitrary manner. For example, the processes applied may be pressing or casting processes. The insert and the spouts can also be manufactured from different materials. If the spout is made of a material that differs from the material utilized for the insert, then the spout is preferably made of a high alumina material in a casting process and it distinguishes itself by specific densities greater than 2.5 g/cm3. The spouts thus manufactured are acid-proof and resist to coking gases containing sulfuric oxides.
Claim is also laid to a method for feeding primary combustion air into the coke oven chamber of a coke oven battery or a coke oven bank. Accordingly, primary air is supplied through the entry ports in the upper area of the coke oven, with it being possible to supply this air both separately into each entry port and through a centralized air supply system. For the implementation of the inventive method, it does not matter whether the supplied primary combustion air has atmospheric temperatures or whether it is heated or cooled.
Claim is also laid in particular to a method for feeding combustion air for the combustion of coking gas into a coking chamber of a coke oven of the “Non-Recovery” or “Heat Recovery” type, wherein
The inventive method may also include for exchanging or taking-out the inventive inserts with the spouts. The exchange of the inventive insert can be performed prior to, during or after a coal carbonization cycle. The moment of exchange and the duration basically depend on operational requirements.
The inventive device and the method executed thereby have the advantage of a directed supply of primary combustion air into the interior of a coke oven chamber gas-filled space superposing the coke cake. By way of the inventive device, the distribution of primary air over the entire space of the gas-filled space above the coke oven chamber is substantially improved. It leads to an improved distribution of the coking temperature above the entire coke cake and thus to a substantially improved quality of coke. Finally, the formation of contaminants in primary combustion of coking gas and more particularly the formation of nitric oxides of the NOx type, too, is substantially reduced by the inventive execution of this method.
The inventive embodiment of a device for generating of gases is explained in greater detail by way of four drawings, with the inventive method not being restricted to these embodiments.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2008 050 599 | Oct 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2009/006527 | 9/9/2009 | WO | 00 | 4/7/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/040435 | 4/15/2010 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1058550 | Christie | Apr 1913 | A |
1340990 | Still et al. | May 1920 | A |
1341437 | Pershall | May 1920 | A |
1352338 | Aarts | Sep 1920 | A |
1352696 | Roberts | Sep 1920 | A |
1369673 | Koppers | Feb 1921 | A |
1395061 | Roberts | Oct 1921 | A |
1399594 | Wilputte | Dec 1921 | A |
1497769 | Bishop | Jun 1924 | A |
1588629 | Smith | Jun 1926 | A |
1650126 | Hall | Nov 1927 | A |
1755027 | Saha | Apr 1930 | A |
1894438 | Bartholomew | Jan 1933 | A |
1928607 | Van Ackeren | Sep 1933 | A |
2091702 | Daniels | Aug 1937 | A |
2255406 | Becker | Sep 1941 | A |
2259380 | Hughes | Oct 1941 | A |
2295069 | Zippler | Sep 1942 | A |
2306366 | Becker | Dec 1942 | A |
2306678 | Van Ackeren | Dec 1942 | A |
2309959 | Hughes | Feb 1943 | A |
2334612 | Davis | Nov 1943 | A |
2376718 | Otto | May 1945 | A |
2378387 | Becker | Jun 1945 | A |
2480459 | Fletcher | Aug 1949 | A |
2488175 | Davis | Nov 1949 | A |
2516929 | Van Ackeren | Aug 1950 | A |
2540002 | Mason | Jan 1951 | A |
2620967 | Worn | Dec 1952 | A |
2623846 | Robert | Dec 1952 | A |
2640805 | Hughes | Jun 1953 | A |
2974090 | Schmidt | Mar 1961 | A |
3046096 | Heller et al. | Jul 1962 | A |
3224749 | Berry | Dec 1965 | A |
3275721 | Leroy et al. | Sep 1966 | A |
3398671 | Acosta | Aug 1968 | A |
3847752 | Oleszko et al. | Nov 1974 | A |
3932173 | Collin et al. | Jan 1976 | A |
4045299 | MacDonald | Aug 1977 | A |
4117773 | Johnson | Oct 1978 | A |
4124450 | MacDonald | Nov 1978 | A |
4141797 | Pries et al. | Feb 1979 | A |
4157940 | Watson | Jun 1979 | A |
4222824 | Flockenhaus et al. | Sep 1980 | A |
4351632 | Nagai | Sep 1982 | A |
4435152 | Struck et al. | Mar 1984 | A |
4439401 | Voll et al. | Mar 1984 | A |
4482314 | Giese et al. | Nov 1984 | A |
4515094 | Azuhata et al. | May 1985 | A |
4599140 | Bauer | Jul 1986 | A |
4726761 | Binasik et al. | Feb 1988 | A |
4784810 | Jorzyk et al. | Nov 1988 | A |
4823710 | Garrido et al. | Apr 1989 | A |
5013408 | Asai et al. | May 1991 | A |
5191930 | Chaney | Mar 1993 | A |
5318671 | Pruitt | Jun 1994 | A |
5322026 | Bay, II | Jun 1994 | A |
5505762 | Denholm et al. | Apr 1996 | A |
5829967 | Chyou | Nov 1998 | A |
6187148 | Sturgulewski | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6440356 | Dunne | Aug 2002 | B2 |
6773659 | Dunne et al. | Aug 2004 | B2 |
6932854 | Riley et al. | Aug 2005 | B2 |
20040099011 | Hegewald et al. | May 2004 | A1 |
20080041189 | Brotzmann | Feb 2008 | A1 |
20090152092 | Kim et al. | Jun 2009 | A1 |
20100025217 | Schuecker et al. | Feb 2010 | A1 |
20100300867 | Kim et al. | Dec 2010 | A1 |
20110101576 | Cho et al. | May 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 724 813 | Dec 2009 | CA |
201100634 | Aug 2008 | CN |
81916 | Jul 1895 | DE |
10 2005 015 301 | Oct 2006 | DE |
10 2007 042 502 | Mar 2009 | DE |
10 2008 025 437 | Dec 2009 | DE |
1 893 721 | Mar 2008 | EP |
341 157 | Jan 1931 | GB |
WO 2007057076 | May 2007 | WO |
WO 2009143948 | Dec 2009 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110192395 A1 | Aug 2011 | US |