The invention relates to a burner installable to a boiler for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture capable of being installed in a boiler for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture.
The invention relates also to a boiler-burner assembly for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture with a flame generated inside a boiler for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture and a method for generating a flame into the boiler-burner assembly.
So-called premix burners are used for burning a mixture of premixed fuel and air. These burners are intended to attain low NOx emission levels. Particularly premix burners with a long combustion head, intended for attaining low NOx emissions (less than 9 ppm NOx emissions in flue gases) without substantial residual oxygen, are disclosed in the prior art, i.a. in the publication U.S. Pat. No. 6,238,206. This prior known burner model is provided with a combustion head associated with the frame and extending a long way into the interior of a boiler. The biggest downside of this burner has nevertheless been found to be a continuously relatively high NOx emission level, not completely fulfilling the stringent emission standards of e.g. certain states in the United States provided that the burner is to be operated efficiently, in other words, with residual oxygen of less than 3%. Another weakness in relation to the discussed prior known premix burner is its limited compatibility with commercially available boilers.
The invention is intended to provide an improvement regarding the foregoing prior art or at least to alleviate the drawbacks existing in the above-described prior art. Therefore, a first objective of the invention is to provide a high-efficiency burner installable to a boiler, as well as a boiler-burner assembly in which a premixed air-fuel mixture can be combusted by the burner with low residual oxygen of less than 3% in such a way that the average NOx emissions in flue gases remain below 15 ppm, and with residual oxygen of less than 6% in such a way that the average NOx emissions in flue gases remain below 5 ppm. A second objective of the invention is to provide a burner more readily installable to commercially available boilers, as well as a boiler-burner assembly obtainable thereby.
The above objectives will be attained with a burner according to the claims capable of being installed to a boiler for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture, as well as with a boiler-burner assembly according to the claims for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture
More specifically, the invention relates to a burner installable to a boiler for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture. The burner comprises a frame member provided with an elongated combustion head protruding from the frame member. What in a view from the frame member is a distal end of the combustion head is provided with a tip plate and the combustion head comprises an outer, larger diameter tube for a mixture of combustion air and fuel, as well as an inner, smaller diameter tube for combustion air. The combustion head has its outer tube formed with at least one array of aperture lines encircling said body of the outer tube and, in addition, what in a view from the burner's frame member is a distal end opening of the outer tube, i.e. a tip opening of the outer tube, opens to below the tip plate. Said outer tube is provided with a supply of premixed air-fuel mixture from the burner's frame member for conveying the premixed air-fuel mixture outward of the combustion head by way of the apertures included in the body of the outer tube, as well as by way of the outer tube's tip opening, and the inner tube of the combustion head is continuous and extends from the frame member forward of the tip plate. The tip plate has a width substantially equal to the diameter of the outer tube's tip opening and the direction of a plane defined by the tip plate is transverse to a longitudinal direction of the combustion head. In the invention,
On the other hand, in a boiler-burner assembly of the invention for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture with a flame generated inside a boiler, the burner comprises a frame member remaining outside the boiler and has associated therewith an elongated combustion head protruding from said frame member. The combustion head has its first section remaining outside the boiler or connected to structures of the boiler and the combustion head has its second section extending into an interior of the boiler. What in a view from the frame member of the burner is a distal end of the combustion head is provided with a tip plate, said combustion head comprising an outer, larger diameter tube for a mixture of combustion air and fuel as well as an inner, smaller diameter tube. Hence,
In the method of the present invention combustion air is arranged to flow from the combustion head's inner tube to a forward side of the tip plate and further through air openings included in the tip plate for cooling said tip plate, whereby the temperature of a flame portion generated inside the boiler, which temperature is established in the boiler interior immediately behind the tip plate, is lower than the temperature of a main flame surrounding the same. Additionally the gas, such as the fuel-air mixture, supplied in a space on a forward side of the tip plate is arranged to be in a flow connection from the space on the forward side of the tip plate into an interior of the boiler and is directed angularly away from a longitudinal center line of the combustion head by means of an angle of incidence between a side edge of the tip plate and a plane defined by the tip plate, thus generating a main flame which surrounds said flame portion said main flame having a conical burning zone at a tip of the combustion head.
With the definition “the tip plate has a width substantially equal to the diameter of the outer tube's tip opening” is meant in this connection, that the width of the tip plate may about the same or slightly bigger or slightly smaller than the width of the tip opening of the outer tube.
The plane R of a tip plate is perceived as a plane extending across the tip plate's center axis and extending in a lengthwise direction of the tip plate.
In one preferred embodiment of the invention, the tip plate has its side edge at an angle of about 40-80 degrees, specifically at an angle of 60 degrees, with a plane defined by the tip plate in a view of the tip plate from the burner's frame member.
As a result, the air-fuel mixture discharging from the outer tube's mouth is directed away from the combustion head's longitudinal center axis at an angle of about 40-80 degrees, especially at an angle of 60 degrees, in a view of the flow from the burner's frame member.
In another preferred embodiment of the invention, the combustion head has its outer tube formed with a first plurality of apertures, for example a plurality of apertures with a circular cross-section. This plurality of apertures consists of a line of apertures with the apertures included therein encircling the outer tube in the proximity of what is its distal end in view from the burner's frame. In addition, the combustion head is formed with a second plurality of apertures consisting of apertures with an elongated or oblong cross-section, such as apertures with a cross-section in oval or elliptical shape, said second plurality of apertures being made up of a line of apertures with the apertures included therein encircling the outer tube preferably in its mid-section.
Thus, it is preferably in connection with the combustion head's outer tube that mechanical adjustment elements are provided for adjusting the size of apertures included in the outer tube's walls.
The present invention is first of all based on a combustion head being constructed of two concentric tubes, and the inner tube is supplied with cooling air which flows from the inner tube forward of a tip plate and further through air openings included in the tip plate. This cools down the tip plate while on a rear side of the tip plate is established a side flame C (subsequently also a flame portion), said side flame having a temperature which is lower than that of a main flame B which is adjoined by said side flame C.
In case the inner tube is supplied with electric wires, the cooling of a tip plate achieves a significant benefit in the sense that the tip plate cooling also protects the electric wires extending within the inner tube from excessive heating.
Secondly, the invention is based on having between a side edge of the tip plate and a front surface of the tip plate an oblique angle of incidence, especially an angle of 40-80 degrees. Consequently, the air-fuel mixture delivered to a forward side of the tip plate by way of the outer tube is directed at an angle, preferably at an angle of about 60 degrees, forward and away from a longitudinal center axis of the combustion head in a view of the gas flow from the burner's frame member.
It is by directing the air-fuel mixture in such a way that the tip of a combustion head (rearward of a plane R approximately defined by the tip plate) is provided with an advantageous, large-volume main flame B in a hollow cone shape. It is a large volume of the main flame B that achieves a low temperature for the main flame and reduces NOx emissions remarkably. Additionally, it is a conical shape of the main flame that enhances intra-boiler return flows, which further expand the main flame volume and reduce NOx emissions.
In case the boiler has outlet ports for flue gases on the rearward side of what in a view from the burner's frame member is a plane defined by the tip plate, immediately behind a flame portion C, present on the rear side of the tip plate, will be generated a flame portion D with powerful return flows of flue gas being directed therefrom e.g. into zones of the main flame B and the side flame C. The discussed return flows of flue gas are generated e.g. by a shape of the flame as well as by an inclined position of the flame plate's side edges with respect to a front surface of the flame plate. It is by virtue of the return flows of flue gas that carbon monoxide emissions within a zone of the flame portion D burn out with high efficiency.
Thirdly, the invention is based on having the outer tube of a combustion head formed with a first array of apertures, for example apertures with a circular cross-section. In addition, the combustion head is formed with a second array of apertures consisting preferably of apertures with an elongated cross-section, such as apertures with cross-sections in oval or elliptical shape. The air-fuel mixture, delivered from the first and second lines of apertures around the combustion head, increases the temperature of a flame portion A generated around the combustion head and simultaneously stabilizes this particular flame portion.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the outer tube is provided with mechanical adjustment elements capable of being used for configuring the size of elongated apertures included in the outer tube's walls, thereby providing a capability of configuring the temperature of the combustion head-surrounding flame portion A so as to make it appropriate for each boiler.
The invention and benefits attained thereby will now be illustrated in even more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The general construction of a burner 1 is depicted in
Of these,
As seen from
Visible in a longitudinal section view of
The actual combustion head 2 comprises an outer, larger diameter tube 3, and a smaller diameter, inner tube 4 more clearly visible in section
The inner tube 4 is intended for combustion air and is used in a subsequently described manner (cf.
The outer tube, in turn, has its mouth 35 opening into a second space 7d1 on the forward side 7d of the tip plate 7. Blending of gas flows 55, 80 arriving in the first space 7d2 and the second space 7d1 on the forward side 7d of the tip plate 7 is prevented as the inner tube 4 extends all the way to the tip plate's front surface 7c.
The tip plate 7 has width T which is roughly equal to a diameter of the outer tube's 3 tip opening 35 in the direction of a plane R defined by the tip plate 7. The direction of the tip plate's R plane is transverse to a lengthwise direction P of the combustion head.
The combustion head 2 has a body of its outer tube 3 provided with two arrays of aperture lines 31, 33 encircling said body 30 of the outer tube 3, whereof the apertures included in the aperture line 31 are elongated in shape, cf. also
A second array of apertures formed in the combustion head 2 consists of apertures with an elongated cross-section, such as apertures with oval and/or ellipse-shaped cross-sections extending through the body 30 of the tube 3. This plurality of apertures is made up of an aperture line 31 with the apertures included therein encircling the tube 3 in its mid-section or middle region at an equal distance from a distal end 3a of the outer tube 3 in a view from the burner's frame member 5.
The tip plate 7 signifies a so-called flame plate, which is used for spreading a mixture 80 of combustion air and fuel, arriving from a tip 3a of the larger tube 3, into the boiler 9. In addition the tip plate 7 can be used for protecting electric wires extending within the inner tube 4 from excessive heating.
Therefore, the tip plate 7 is firstly provided with a plurality of air openings 71 extending through the tip plate 7 and, in addition, the inner tube 4 has its mouth opening in the traveling direction of combustion air 55 immediately onto a forward side 7; 7d2 of the tip plate 7 into alignment with the air openings 71 extending through the tip plate 7. Inside the inner tube 4 is a space for example for electrification.
It is for cooling the tip plate 7 that the inner tube 4 is provided with a supply of combustion air 55 from the burner's 1 frame member 5 for conveying the combustion air 55 onto a forward side 7; 7d2 of the tip plate 7 and further through the air openings 71 onto a rearward side 7e of the tip plate. By cooling the tip plate 7 it is possible to install for example electrical wirings (not shown in the figures) inside the inner tube. Electrification cannot be carried out this way in prior known burners.
The tip plate 7 is disposed at such a distance lengthwise P of the combustion head 2 from the mouth 35 of the outer tube 3 that the air-fuel mixture 80, arriving by way of the outer tube 3 in a second space 7d; 7d1 present on a forward side 7d of the tip plate's 7 front surface 7c, shall flow from the space 7d; 7d1 present on a forward side of the tip plate 7 in a flow co-directional with a side edge 7a of the tip plate over onto the other side of a plane R of the tip plate. Between the tip plate's 7 side edge 7a and the tip plate's 7 rear surface 7b is an angle of incidence a. The mixture of fuel and gas, preferably a fuel and air mixture 60, delivered from the outer tube into the space 7d1 on a forward side of the tip plate 7, proceeds along the side edge 7a of the tip plate 7. Since there is the angle of incidence a between the tip plate's side edge 7 and the tip plate's rear surface 7b, it is also in an inclined orientation that the fuel and air mixture 60 comes across the rear surface 7b of the tip plate. Thereby the fuel and air mixture 60 is directed into the interior of a boiler at an angle of about 60 degrees outward and forward from a center line P of the burner's combustion head 2 when seen from the direction of frame member 5 as illustrated more clearly in
In this coordinate system straight to sideways from the longitudinal axis of combustion head is angle 90. Lengthwise direction of combustion head, that is the direction of center line P, is regarded as angle 0.
In a boiler-burner assembly of the invention, nitrogen oxide emissions are principally generated as atmospheric nitrogen is oxidized as a result of high temperature (so-called thermal NOx emissions). It is by lowering the flame temperature in a boiler that NOx emissions can be effectively reduced.
It is by directing the flow 60 of an air-fuel mixture at a correct angle outward as viewed from a longitudinal center line of the burner's 1 combustion head 2 that inside the boiler can be produced a main flame B, which burns at a lower-than-conventional temperature and in which are generated a less-than-usual amount of NOx emissions, cf. also the description of
In the invention, the flow 60 of an air-fuel mixture is directed at an angle of about 650 degrees away from a center line P of the combustion head, thereby producing at a tip of the combustion head 2 (behind a plane R defined approximately by the tip plate) a favorable, large-volume main flame B in the shape of a hollow cone. It is a large volume of the main flame B which achieves a low temperature for the main flame and reduces thermal NOx emissions considerably. In addition, the main flame's conical shape enhances return flows internal of the boiler 9, which further expand a volume of the main flame B and reduce NOx emissions.
In
In
In
The most significant aspects of the invention will now be reviewed in even more detail with reference to the foregoing concise description of
It is a boiler-burner assembly of the invention, as well as generation of a flame in the interior of a boiler 9, which are illustrated in
As mentioned above, it is in a view from the burner's 1 frame member that the opening at a distal end of the outer tube 3, i.e. the opening 35 at a tip 3a of the outer tube 3, opens onto a forward side 7d of the tip plate 7 into a space 7d1. The tip plate 7 is used for spreading a flame, for lowering the temperature of a main flame B obtainable inside the boiler, as well as for generating a flame portion C behind the tip plate.
In order to generate the flame portion C, there is provided from the burner's 1 frame member 5 a supply of inner tube combustion air 55 into the combustion head's 2 inner tube 4 along which the flow of combustion air 55 proceeds by way of said inner tube into what in a view from the burner's 1 frame member 5 is a first space 7d2 present on a forward side 7d of the tip plate 71 and further through air openings 71 included in the tip plate onto a rearward side of the tip plate. It is by supplying inner tube combustion air 55 through the tip plate 7 into an interior 90 of the boiler 9 by way of the inner tube 4 that immediately on a rearward side 7e of the tip plate is produced a flame portion C, which is adjacent to the conical main flame B on each side thereof. The flame portion C has a temperature lower than that of the main flame B, whereby the flame portion C cools down the main flame B and, in addition, the flame portion C cools down the tip plate 7 and an air duct extending inside the tube 4 present therebelow. The cooling of an air duct present inside the tube 4 enables for example electrical wiring to be brought inside the tube 4. Temperature of the flame portion C behind the tip plate 7 depends on boiler dimensions, whereby the flame portion C may typically have immediately behind the tip plate a temperature which is by way of example 900-1200° C., depending nevertheless significantly on the shape and volume of the actual boiler. The flame portion C generated in the interior 90 of this boiler 9 has a temperature which is lower than that of the main flame B surrounding the same.
The outer tube 3 is provided with a outer tube combustion air 50. From the burner's 1 frame member 5 arrives outer tube combustion air 50, which is premixed with a mixer 8 and then the mixed outer tube combustion air 50 is supplemented with a fuel by way of an aperture line 72 intended for fuel (cf.
The combustion head 2 has its tip plate 71 located at such a distance from the outer tube's 3 mouth 35 that the gaseous mixture 80 of air and fuel arriving in the space 7d1 on a forward side 7d of the tip plate 7 has a flow connection from the space 7d1 of the tip plate's 71 forward side 7d into an interior 90 of the boiler 9.
As seen from
It is such a stream 60 of the air-fuel mixture 80 that contributes to the main flame B being conical in shape and having an extensive burning zone. It is by virtue of a large extent of the conical burning zone that achieves a large burning volume and a low power density. A low power density leads to a low burning temperature and thereby to low NOx emissions. It is a conical shape of the main flame B around the tip of the combustion head 2 that also enhances return flows which stabilize the main flame B and blend flue gases into the main flame B, which further expands the conical burning zone and thereby lowers the burning temperature within the main flame zone.
The main flame B is stabilized partially by a flame portion C generated on a rearward side of the tip plate C, but mostly the main flame B is stabilized by using a flame portion A, which is to be developed around the combustion head 2 and is contiguous to the main flame (cf.
The combustion head 2 has its outer tube 3 also formed with a second plurality of apertures consisting of an aperture line 31, the apertures included therein encircling the outer tube 3 in its mid-section or central region at an equal second distance from what in a view from the burner's frame member 5 is distal end 3a of the outer tube 3.
Preferably, the first aperture line 33 has its apertures located closer to the combustion head's 2 tip than the apertures of the second aperture line 31.
The apertures of the second aperture line 31 are apertures with an elongated cross section, such as apertures with oblong, oval or ellipse-shaped cross-sections extending through a body 30 of the outer tube 3. The gas flow directed from the frame 5 into the outer tube 3, and further to an end 3a of the tube, such as a stream 40 of the air-fuel mixture 80, proceeds through the apertures of both the aperture line 31 and the aperture line 33. The stream 40 of the air-fuel mixture 80 passing through the apertures has its rate through the apertures of the aperture lines 31, 33 depending, among others, on a flow rate of the stream 40 of the air-fuel mixture 80, as well as on the size of the apertures in the aperture lines 31, 33.
As seen from
In the boiler-burner assembly presented in
It is obvious for a person skilled in the art that the present invention can be implemented in a variety of other ways as well. Accordingly, in
These method steps comprise following:
Burner 1
Combustion head 2
Larger diameter tube, outer tube 3
Inner tube, smaller diameter tube 4
Frame member of the burner 5
Tip plate 7
Boiler 9
Flange for a joint between boiler and burner 91
Mechanical adjustment elements 10
Stream of premixed air-fuel mixture (into boiler) 40
Supply of outer tube combustion air 50
Supply of inner tube combustion air 55
Stream of gas mixture from a side of the tip plate (into boiler) 60
Flow of combustion air through the tip plate (into boiler) 65
Premixed air-fuel mixture 80
Method steps 100-600
Flame A, B, C, D
Angle between a side edge 7a and a plane R of the tip plate a
Supplied air I
Lengthwise direction of the combustion head P
Plane defined by the tip plate R
Width of the tip plate T
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2390059 | De Lancey | Dec 1945 | A |
6238206 | Cummings, III et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
8784096 | Mosiewicz | Jul 2014 | B2 |
20120003595 | Goh et al. | Jan 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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106949471 | Jul 2017 | CN |
19521844 | Jan 1996 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20200300461 A1 | Sep 2020 | US |