It is generally known that heat exchangers, waste-heat boilers, and combustion chambers (i.e., spaces in which combustion takes place which are provided with lines through which flows a medium to be heated) have to be cleaned at certain time intervals. The reason such cleaning becomes necessary is that the lines through which flows a medium to be heated gather soot on their outsides due to the combustion process within the combustion chamber, or else become covered by a layer of combustion residues that impede or prevent the transfer of heat. The gathering of soot and/or combustion residues ultimately reduces the level of efficiency of the heat exchanger, waste heat boiler, or combustion chamber.
“Explosion cleaning procedures” are implemented for cleaning such spaces and lines. For example, a textile bag is filled with a gas mixture outside the space to be cleaned, introduced into the space which is to be cleaned, and caused to explode therein. Such a method may involve an explosive effect emanating from a ball-shaped textile bag. However, since the lines which carry the medium to be heated are often very close together, the blasting effect can detach only a small part of the pollutants and contaminating material which are applied externally to the lines or inside walls of the space to be cleaned, but frequently not any of the contaminating material and pollutants which are disposed between the tubes or, as viewed from the explosion point, behind the tubes.
Disclosed herein is a device for cleaning contamination in a heat exchanger apparatus, a heat boiler apparatus, or combustion chamber. In some embodiments, the device permits cleaning of contamination in a space to be cleaned that is below room temperature, or below 100° C. In some embodiments, the device allows the detachment of more than a small part of pollutants and contaminating material which are applied externally to the lines or inside walls of the space to be cleaned, and/or some of any contaminating material and pollutants which are disposed between the tubes or, as viewed from the explosion point, behind the tubes. In some embodiments, the device comprises a long tube with a relatively small diameter wherein a combustible gas mixture and/or a blasting body is provided within the tube, and the tube is destroyed after blasting. In some embodiments, the device comprises a first tube and a second tube, wherein the second tube is connected to the first tube by a hinge, and wherein the second tube contains a fuse connected to blasting cord.
The device is capable of effecting a linear blasting process (as opposed to a ball-shaped blasting process), wherein the blasting effect is distributed over a great length. Thus, in some embodiments, a tube (e.g., a tube of cardboard and/or copper) may be filled with a gas mixture, and/or provided with a blasting cord on the inside of the tube, so that a desired blasting effect can be achieved by the blasting process. An explosion in accordance with the invention may generate a shock wave that removes polluting contamination from a heat exchanger. In some embodiments, a small tube diameter allows cleaning between contaminated lines or bundles of lines. And, if a coolant is flowing through the blasting tube, the cleaning operation may take place when the temperature within the combustion chamber of the heat exchanger has not yet fallen very far (for example, during operation of the heat exchanger, or after the heat exchanger has been shut down for a short time). Thus, in some embodiments, long periods during which the heat exchanger must be shut down for cleaning (for example, periods up to several days) may be avoided.
The foregoing and other features will become more apparent from the accompanying figures.
Depending on the desired use, the tube can be made of any length. For example, in the embodiment depicted in
After triggering of a blasting action which may destroy the entire cardboard tube, certain parts, such as a spark plug, threaded rod, closure means, and so forth, can be further used again.
When one of several embodiments of the described device is introduced into a combustion chamber (i.e., between tube bundles 8 and 9), cleaning of tube bundles 8 and 9 may be effected by means of triggering an explosion. To provide so that the blasting does not take place at an unwanted moment in time, the tube interior may be suitably cooled by means of a supply of water or air, which is introduced through first tube 1.
A blasting cord (and possibly an explosive gas mixture) may be provided within second tube 2, and the blasting cord may be connected to a fuse. As further shown in
When the blasting process is triggered, the outer tube may be shattered (for example, if the outer tube is made of cardboard, glass, metal, copper, or plastic material), and individual particles produced by the blasting process may strike and detach contaminating material on tubes to be cleaned within the combustion chamber.
As depicted in
As depicted in
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