The present invention relates to manufacture of glass and glass products, and relates more particularly to the section of a glass manufacturing system known as the forehearth.
The manufacture of glass typically includes the melting together, in a furnace, glassforming raw materials which can include silica and/or one or more oxides, hydroxides, and/or silicates of alkali metals and alkaline earth metals, such as soda ash and the like (known as “batch”) and/or pieces of glass (known as “cullet”) in a furnace. Molten glass from the furnace then flows through a network of refractory channels, called the forehearth system (described below with respect to
Glass forehearth systems are typically fitted with burners that combust premixed air-fuel mixtures (known as air-fired systems) firing perpendicular to the flow of glass (as described below with respect to
In addition to the limited fuel savings, and the cost, of implementing oxy-fuel firing in the forehearth systems, another disadvantage of a 100% oxy-fuel system is the low flow rate of gases to each individual burner in the forehearth system. The combustion space in a glass forehearth system is typically divided into separate zones. Each of these zones is retrofitted with rows of small burners (typically made out of a low grade stainless steel) about 100 mm to 120 mm apart. A forehearth burner block typically houses multiple burners, usually three or four burners. Each combustion zone of a forehearth can have anywhere between 20 to 50 burners depending on the length of the zone. Replacing air-fuel firing with 100% oxy-fuel firing will reduce the gas flow rates from the burners into the combustion zone by approximately 80%.
These reduced flow rates exiting the burners can lead to overheating of the burners and may cause severe coke formation leading to burner failure. Preventing deposit build up on nozzle tips at the exit ends of burners is an important process requirement, especially when no cover plates are used to separate the combustion space of the forehearth system from the molten glass. The deposit of coke or condensable vapors on the nozzle may deflect the direction of the gas jet and often results in flame deflection/impingement or local hot spot. Burner ports and nozzles and fuel and oxygen flows would thus need to be designed carefully to prevent overheating of nozzles and formation of deposits at the nozzle tip. The problem of fuel cracking and coke build up is particularly severe when gaseous fuel contains higher hydrocarbons such as ethane, propane and butane.
Thus, retrofitting an existing forehearth system that employs air fired systems with 100% oxy-fuel firing system is not so attractive for the reasons previously mentioned above and also because it may lead to increased capital expenditure and increased maintenance costs as the burners and burner blocks may need to be redesigned and periodically serviced to remove unwanted deposits of coke and other condensates.
The present invention avoids the aforementioned drawbacks of 100% oxy-fuel firing in a forehearth system, while unexpectedly providing other advantages.
This invention is useful in several different types of forehearth systems, and has several different ways in which it can be implemented within each type of forehearth system.
In one type of forehearth system, to which this invention is applicable, heat is provided to the top surface of the molten glass from flames generated by combustion in the space above the molten glass, by direct heat transfer by which is meant by radiation and convection directly through space not occupied by an intervening solid structure in the path between the flames and the molten glass. That is, there is no physical barrier (also referred to as a cover) between the flames of combustion and the top surface of the molten glass.
For this type of forehearth system, one embodiment of the invention is a method comprising:
from a forehearth system in which molten glass from a glassmelting furnace flows through one or more channels having refractory side walls, wherein the molten glass in the channels is maintained in the molten state by heat of combustion provided directly to the top surface of the molten glass by combustion in a combustion zone above the molten glass in the forehearth system that has at least 2 air-fuel burners at which air and fuel fed to the air-fuel burners are combusted to provide the heat of combustion,
removing at least 50% , preferably all of said air-fuel burners and replacing them with one or more air-fuel injectors each of which opens at its own refractory port in a side wall of the channel and each of which is capable of injecting a premixed mixture of air and fuel into the space in the channel over the molten glass, and with one or more oxygen injectors each of which opens at its own refractory port in a side wall of the channel and each of which is capable of injecting gaseous oxidant into the space in the channel over the molten glass,
wherein the sum of the number of said air-fuel injectors plus the number of said oxygen injectors, which replace said air-fuel burners, is less than the number of air-fuel burners that are removed, and then
injecting from each air-fuel injector into the space above the molten glass in the channel a premixed mixture of air and fuel at a velocity greater than 50 ft/sec in which the amount of air in the mixture injected from the injector is between 25% to 60% (preferably 30% to 50%, most preferably 30 to 40%) of the stoichiometric air required for complete combustion of the fuel in the mixture injected from the same injector, and
injecting from each oxygen injector into the space above the molten glass in the channel gaseous oxidant containing at least 80 vol. % oxygen at a velocity less than 50 ft/sec (preferably less than 30 ft/sec) and at a rate that provides sufficient oxygen, taken together with the oxygen content of the mixture of air and fuel that is injected from the air-fuel injectors, to completely combust the fuel that is injected from the fuel injectors,
wherein there is no physical barrier between the molten glass and the space into which the mixture of air and fuel, and the gaseous oxidant, are injected, and
in the space above the molten glass combusting the fuel injected from the air-fuel injectors with the oxygen in the air and with the oxygen injected from the oxygen injectors so as to generate excess oxygen in the flue gas.
Preferably, in this embodiment and in all other embodiments herein in which air-fuel burners are removed and replaced with air-fuel injectors or with oxygen injectors, air-fuel burners are replaced with air-fuel injectors at a ratio of one air-fuel injector for each two to twelve air-fuel burners, preferably two to six air-fuel burners that are replaced, and air-fuel burners are replaced with oxygen injectors at a ratio of one oxygen injector for each two to twelve air-fuel burners, preferably two to six air-fuel burners that are replaced, it being understood that the number of air-fuel injectors that replace a given number of air-fuel burners that are removed does not have to be the same number as the number of oxygen injectors that replace the given number of air-fuel burners that are removed.
A second embodiment of this invention is a method comprising:
in a forehearth system in which molten glass from a glassmelting furnace flows through one or more channels having refractory side walls, maintaining the molten glass in the channels in the molten state by heat of combustion which is provided to the space above the molten glass, by:
injecting into the space above the molten glass, from one or more air-fuel injectors each of which opens at its own refractory port in a side wall of the channel, a premixed mixture of air and fuel at a velocity greater than 50 ft/sec in which the amount of air in the mixture injected from the air-fuel injector is between 25% to 60% (preferably 30% to 50%, more preferably 30% to 40%) of the stoichiometric air required for complete combustion of the fuel in the mixture injected from the same injector, and
injecting into the space above the molten glass, from one or more oxygen injectors each of which opens at its own refractory port in a side wall of the channel, gaseous oxidant containing at least 80 vol. % oxygen at a velocity less than 50 ft/sec (preferably less than 30 ft/sec) and at a rate that provides sufficient oxygen, taken together with the oxygen content of the mixture of air and fuel that is injected from the air-fuel injectors, to completely combust the fuel that is injected from the fuel injectors,
wherein there is no physical barrier between the molten glass and the space into which the mixture of air and fuel, and the gaseous oxidant, are injected, and
in the space above the molten glass, combusting the fuel injected from the air-fuel injectors with the oxygen in the air and with the oxygen injected from the oxygen injectors so as to generate excess oxygen in the flue gas.
Alternatively, in forehearth systems having no physical barrier above the molten glass, it may be desired not to employ separate air-fuel injectors and oxidant injectors. For such situations, another embodiment of the present invention is a method comprising:
from a forehearth system in which molten glass from a glassmelting furnace flows through one or more channels having refractory side walls, wherein the molten glass in the channels is maintained in the molten state by heat of combustion provided directly to the top surface of the molten glass by combustion in a combustion zone above the molten glass in the forehearth system that contains at least 2 air-fuel burners at which air and fuel fed to the air-fuel burners are combusted to provide the heat of combustion,
removing at least 50%, preferably all, of said air-fuel burners and replacing them with one or more hybrid burners including a central gaseous oxidant injector pipe and an annular passage for a premixed mixture of air and fuel wherein each hybrid burner opens at its own refractory burner port in a side wall of the channel and is recessed from the hot surface of the side wall, and each hybrid burner is capable of injecting a combustible gas mixture of gaseous oxidant and a premixed mixture of air and fuel into the space in the channel over the molten glass,
wherein said gaseous oxidant contains at least 80 vol. % oxygen and the amount of air in the premixed mixture is between 25% to 60% (preferably 30% to 50%, more preferably 30 to 40%) of the stoichiometric air required for complete combustion of the fuel in the premixed mixture and said air-fuel burners are replaced with hybrid burners at a ratio of one hybrid burner for each two to twelve air-fuel burners, preferably two to six air-fuel burners, that are replaced, wherein said gaseous oxidant is injected at a velocity greater than 100 ft/sec, preferably greater than 200 ft/sec, more preferably 300 ft/sec, in which the total amount of oxygen in the combustible gas mixture injected from the hybrid burner is sufficient for complete combustion of the fuel injected from the same burner and the flame length is less than the width of the channel, wherein there is no physical barrier between the molten glass and the space into which the mixture of oxidant and fuel is injected, and
combusting the fuel injected from the hybrid burners in the space above the molten glass with excess oxygen in flue gas.
A second aspect of this alternative is a method comprising:
in a forehearth system in which molten glass from a glassmelting furnace flows through a channel having refractory side walls, maintaining the molten glass in the channel in the molten state by heat of combustion which is provided directly to the top surface of the molten glass, by:
injecting a combustible gas mixture into the space above the molten glass from one or more hybrid burners each including a central gaseous oxidant injector pipe and an annular passage for a premixed mixture of air and fuel wherein each hybrid burner opens at its own refractory burner port in a side wall of the channel and is recessed from the hot surface of the side wall, and each hybrid burner is capable of injecting a combustible gas mixture of gaseous oxidant and a premixed mixture of air and fuel into the space in the channel over the molten glass,
wherein said gaseous oxidant contains at least 80 vol. % oxygen and the amount of air in the premixed mixture is between 25% to 60% (preferably 30% to 50%, more preferably 30 to 40%) of the stoichiometric air required for complete combustion of the fuel in the premixed mixture,
wherein said gaseous oxidant is injected at a velocity greater than 100 ft/sec, preferably greater than 200 ft/sec, more preferably greater than 300 ft/sec, in which the total amount of oxygen in the combustible gas mixture injected from the hybrid burner is sufficient for complete combustion of the fuel injected from the same burner and the flame length is less than the width of the channel,
wherein there is no physical barrier between the molten glass and the space into which the mixture of oxidant and fuel is injected, and
combusting the fuel injected from the hybrid burners in the space above the molten glass with excess oxygen in flue gas.
In another type of forehearth system, to which this invention is applicable, there is a physical barrier (also referred to as a cover) above the top surface of the molten glass, and heat is provided to the molten glass in the channel, below the cover, from flames of combustion in the region above the cover. This mode of heat transfer to the molten glass is termed “indirect” herein as it involves heat transfer from the flames to the cover, which is thereby heated, and it also involves heat transfer from the heated cover to the molten glass.
For this type of forehearth system, one embodiment of the present invention is a method comprising:
from a forehearth system in which molten glass from a glassmelting furnace flows through one or more channels having refractory side walls, wherein the forehearth system includes a physical barrier above the molten glass, and wherein the molten glass in the channels is maintained in the molten state by indirect transfer to the molten glass of heat of combustion carried out in the region above the physical barrier, wherein the forehearth system contains a combustion zone above the barrier with at least 2 air-fuel burners at which air and fuel fed to the air-fuel burners are combusted to provide the heat of combustion,
removing at least 50%, and preferably all, of said air-fuel burners and replacing them with one or more air-fuel injectors each of which opens at its own refractory port in a side wall of the channel and each of which is capable of injecting a premixed mixture of air and fuel into a region above the physical barrier over the molten glass, and with one or more oxygen injectors each of which opens at its own refractory port in a side wall of the channel and each of which is capable of injecting gaseous oxidant into a region above the physical barrier over the molten glass,
wherein the sum of the number of said air-fuel injectors plus the number of said oxygen injectors, which replace said air-fuel burners, is less than the number of air-fuel burners that are removed,
and then
injecting from each air-fuel injector into the region above the physical barrier in the channel a premixed mixture of air and fuel at a velocity greater than 50 ft/sec in which the amount of air in the mixture injected from the injector is between 25% to 60% (preferably 30% to 50%), most preferably 30% to 40%, of the stoichiometric air required for complete combustion of the fuel in the mixture injected from the same injector, and
injecting from each oxygen injector into the region above the physical barrier in the channel gaseous oxidant containing at least 80 vol. % oxygen at a velocity less than 50 ft/sec (preferably less than 30 ft/sec), and at a rate that provides sufficient oxygen, taken together with the oxygen content of the mixture of air and fuel that is injected from the air-fuel injectors, to completely combust the fuel that is injected from the fuel injectors, and in the region above the barrier combusting the fuel injected from the air-fuel injectors with the oxygen in the air and with the oxygen injected from the oxygen injectors so as to generate excess oxygen in flue gas.
A further embodiment of the present invention is a method comprising:
in a forehearth system in which molten glass from a glassmelting furnace flows through one or more channels having refractory side walls, wherein the forehearth system includes a physical barrier above the molten glass, maintaining the molten glass in the channels in the molten state by indirect transfer to the molten glass of heat of combustion carried out in the region above the physical barrier, by:
injecting into the region above the physical barrier, from one or more air-fuel injectors each of which opens at its own refractory port in a side wall of the channel, a premixed mixture of air and fuel at a velocity greater than 50 ft/sec in which the amount of air in the mixture injected from the air-fuel injector is between 25% to 60%, preferably 30% to 50%, and more preferably 30% to 40%, of the stoichiometric air required for complete combustion of the fuel in the mixture injected from the same injector, and
injecting into the region above the physical barrier, from one or more oxygen injectors each of which opens at its own refractory port in a side wall of the channel, gaseous oxidant containing at least 80 vol. % oxygen at a velocity less than 50 ft/sec (preferably less than 30 ft/sec) and at a rate that provides sufficient oxygen, taken together with the oxygen content of the mixture of air and fuel that is injected from the air-fuel injectors, to completely combust the fuel that is injected from the fuel injectors, and
in the region above the barrier, combusting the fuel injected from the air-fuel injectors with the oxygen in the air and with the oxygen injected from the oxygen injectors so as to generate excess oxygen in the flue gas.
Alternatively, in forehearth systems having a physical barrier above the molten glass, it may be desired not to employ separate air-fuel injectors and oxidant injectors. For such situations, another embodiment of the present invention is a method comprising: from a forehearth system in which molten glass from a glassmelting furnace flows through one or more channels having refractory side walls, wherein the forehearth system includes a physical barrier above the molten glass, wherein the molten glass in the channels is maintained in the molten state by indirect transfer to the molten glass of heat of combustion carried out in the region above the physical barrier by combustion, and wherein the forehearth system includes a combustion zone including at least 2 air-fuel burners at which air and fuel fed to the air-fuel burners are combusted to provide the heat of combustion,
removing at least 50%, preferably all, of said air-fuel burners and replacing them with one or more hybrid burners including a central gaseous oxidant injector pipe and an annular passage for a premixed mixture of air and fuel wherein each hybrid burner opens at its own refractory burner port in a side wall of the channel and is recessed from the hot surface of the side wall, and each hybrid burner is capable of injecting a combustible gas mixture of gaseous oxidant and a premixed mixture of air and fuel into the space in the channel over the molten glass,
wherein said gaseous oxidant contains at least 80 vol. % oxygen and the amount of air in the premixed mixture is between 25% to 60% (preferably 30% to 50%, more preferably 30 to 40%) of the stoichiometric air required for complete combustion of the fuel in the premixed mixture and said air-fuel burners are replaced with hybrid burners at a ratio of one hybrid burner for each two to twelve air-fuel burners, preferably two to six air-fuel burners, that are replaced, wherein said gaseous oxidant is injected at a velocity greater than 100 ft/sec, preferably greater than 200 ft/sec, more preferably 300 ft/sec, in which the total amount of oxygen in the combustible gas mixture injected from the hybrid burner is sufficient for complete combustion of the fuel injected from the same burner and the flame length is less than the width of the channel,
and combusting the fuel injected from the hybrid burners with excess oxygen in the flue gas in the region above the physical barrier.
Another embodiment of this aspect of the invention is a method comprising:
in a forehearth system in which molten glass from a glassmelting furnace flows through one or more channels having refractory side walls, wherein the forehearth system includes a physical barrier above the molten glass, maintaining the molten glass in the channels in the molten state by indirect transfer to the molten glass of heat of combustion which is carried out in the region above the physical barrier, by:
injecting a combustible gas mixture into the space above the molten glass from one or more hybrid burners each including a central gaseous oxidant injector pipe and an annular passage for a premixed mixture of air and fuel wherein each hybrid burner opens at its own refractory burner port in a side wall of the channel and is recessed from the hot surface of the side wall, and each hybrid burner is capable of injecting a combustible gas mixture of gaseous oxidant and a premixed mixture of air and fuel into the space in the channel over the molten glass,
wherein said gaseous oxidant contains at least 80 vol. % oxygen and the amount of air in the premixed mixture is between 25% to 60% (preferably 30% to 50%, more preferably 30 to 40%) of the stoichiometric air required for complete combustion of the fuel in the premixed mixture,
wherein said gaseous oxidant is injected at a velocity greater than 100 ft/sec, preferably greater than 200 ft/sec, more preferably greater than 300 ft/sec, in which the total amount of oxygen in the combustible gas mixture injected from the hybrid burner is sufficient for complete combustion of the fuel injected from the same burner and the flame length is less than the width of the channel, and
combusting the fuel injected from the hybrid burners in the space above the molten glass with excess oxygen in the flue gas.
As used herein, “removing” means completely removing an integral item of equipment, such as a burner, in which case “replacing” means installing another integral item of equipment in place of the item that was removed; and “removing” and “replacing” as used herein also mean changing one or more components of an item of equipment (without necessarily changing all of the item), or physically changing its capability to perform a function or to perform a function in a particular manner or degree, in which case “replacing” then means establishing the item of equipment with that physical change to its overall construction or to its capability to perform a function in a particular manner or degree.
The present invention is useful in improving the efficiency of glass manufacture.
Referring to
Referring to
The forehearth system includes apparatus at which combustion occurs in combustion zone 9 which provides heat of combustion to the top surface 6 of the glassmelt 4. In the embodiment shown in
Referring to
In typical forehearth systems with which the present invention is applicable, the burners 21 are air-fuel burners, that is, premixed air and fuel are fed to each burner 21 and combusted to create heat of combustion (and flames 22). Selected numbers of these air-fuel burners are replaced with either a combination of air-fuel injectors and injectors which inject gaseous oxidant, or with hybrid fuel-oxygen burners described below with respect to
In any of the embodiments of the present invention that employ fuels, the preferred fuels are gaseous hydrocarbons such as natural gas, methane, ethane, propane, butane, and mixtures thereof. In the embodiments of the present invention that employ separate air-fuel injectors and oxidant injectors, or that employ hybrid fuel-oxygen injectors, the preferred oxidants are gaseous compositions containing at least 80 vol. % oxygen.
In the embodiments of the present invention that replace air-fuel burners with separate injectors of air-fuel mixture and injectors of gaseous oxidant, the preferred characteristics are:
The flow rate of the air-fuel mixture is 20 to 400 scfh, preferably 40 to 200 scfh. (It will be understood by those skilled in this art that the firing rate and the air-fuel flow rate which are required in a given forehearth system depend on the size of the forehearth.)
The fuel-rich air-fuel mixture contains 25% to 60% (preferably 30% to 50%, more preferably 30 to 40%) of the oxygen needed to completely combust the fuel in the mixture.
The flow rate of gaseous oxidant with or without the aforementioned cover 11 being present is 10 to 50 scfh, preferably 15 to 40 scfh.
The velocity of the gaseous oxidant from oxidant injector with or without the aforementioned cover 11 being present is less than 50 ft/sec, preferably less than 20 ft/sec.
Preferably, in these aspects of the invention, the ports through which gaseous oxidant is injected are spaced from any port through which the air-fuel mixture is injected, by a distance measured between the points at which adjacent ports are closest to each other, of at least two times the diameter of the larger port.
In each of these aspects of the invention, it is preferred that the ratio of the momentum flux (which is defined as the mass flow rate of a gas stream times the velocity of the gas stream) of the gaseous oxidant stream from oxidant injector to the momentum flux of the premixed mixture stream of air and fuel from air-fuel injector is between 0.02 to 0.4, preferably 0.1 to 0.3, more preferably 0.1 to 0.2.
With this aspect of the invention, the air-fuel burners can be replaced at a ratio of 2 to 12 air-fuel burners, preferably 2 to 6, replaced by each one air-fuel injector plus each one gaseous oxidant injector. Replacement can be effected by physically removing a burner, and plugging the holes in side walls 5 that remain where a burner was removed and was not replaced at the same location with an air-fuel injector or with an oxidant injector.
In other embodiments of the present invention, 25% to 87.5% of existing air-fuel burners are removed and the remaining air-fuel burners are modified to become hybrid burners such as depicted in
This embodiment of the present invention has the advantages that fewer ports need to be established than is the case with separate provision of air-fuel injectors and oxidant injectors. Also, retrofitting is eased because an existing air-fuel burner and burner port can be transformed, without having to create additional openings in side wall 5, simply by inserting feed tube 43 into the existing air-fuel burner body and cavity 41 which had been occupied by the air-fuel burner.
The end 44 of feed tube 43 is recessed from the port 21 in order to minimize the risk of deposit formation on the end due to coking of hydrocarbons or due to condensation of vapors of glassforming products or byproducts such as sodium hydroxide or sodium sulfate.
In the embodiments of the present invention that modify and replace air-fuel burners with a hybrid burner such as shown in
The flow rate of the air-fuel mixture is 20 to 400 scfh, and preferably 40 to 200 scfh. (It will be understood by those skilled in this art that the firing rate and the air-fuel flow rate which are required in a given forehearth system depend on the size of the forehearth.)
The fuel-rich air-fuel mixture contains 25% to 60%, preferably 30% to 50%, more preferably 30 to 40%, of the oxygen needed to completely combust the fuel in the mixture. The velocity of gaseous oxidant from hybrid burner with or without cover 11 is greater than 100 ft/sec, preferably greater than 200 ft/sec, more preferably greater than 300 ft/sec.
This application claims the benefit of International Application No. PCT/US2020/053699, filed on Oct. 1, 2020, which claimed the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/929,199, filed on Nov. 1, 2019, which are incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2020/053699 | 10/1/2020 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62929199 | Nov 2019 | US |