This invention relates generally to combustion equipment, and more particularly, it relates to apparatus and methods for lean premix low NOx combustion.
Burners may be used in a wide range of well known applications, such as the drying and heating of materials. Stricter regulatory requirements have created a demand for burners that produce low levels of nitrogen oxides (NOx), carbon monoxide (CO) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). These emissions are a significant source of air pollution, and are thus undesirable.
Several well known techniques for reducing NOx emissions are not well suited for certain burner applications, where, for instance, a compact burner size is required. NOx reduction techniques, such as exhaust gas recirculation or water injection, may not be easy to implement in these applications and may produce undesirable secondary effects, such as reduced thermal and/or combustion efficiency. There is a need for improved burners producing low NOx.
A burner assembly and related methods are disclosed for lean, low NOx combustion. A burner assembly includes: a combustion air inlet; a gaseous fuel inlet manifold located downstream from the combustion air inlet; counter-swirl vanes located proximate the fuel inlet manifold; and a nozzle assembly that is located downstream from and spaced apart from the counter-swirl vanes and that is located downstream from and spaced apart from the gaseous fuel inlet manifold. The manifold has multiple ports for introducing gaseous fuel. The counter-swirl vanes include inner vanes oriented to impart a swirl in a first orientation and outer vanes oriented to impart a swirl in a second orientation that is opposite to that of the first orientation. Accordingly, mixing between the fuel and the combustion air is enhanced.
The spacing of the nozzle relative to the vanes forms a mixing zone between the vanes and the nozzle assembly. The nozzle assembly includes at least one flame anchor formed by a bluff surface located proximate a front of the nozzle assembly for anchoring the flame. The burner assembly preferably includes a fan coupled to the combustion air inlet for providing combustion air through the combustion air inlet to the nozzle assembly in excess of the stoichiometric amount such that the fuel-air mixture is fuel-lean. The burner assembly may also be supplied with combustion air from a manifold or other means.
At least a portion of the ports of the gaseous fuel manifold in the burner assembly are distributed in a plane that generally is perpendicular to a longitudinal axis of the burner assembly. Preferably, said burner assembly includes a converging housing cone generally located between the vanes and the front of the nozzle assembly wherein the nozzle assembly includes at least one converging nozzle cone that cooperates with the converging housing cone to direct flow of the fuel-air mixture. Said nozzle assembly includes at least one converging nozzle cone to direct flow of the fuel-air mixture, wherein the bluff surface of the nozzle assembly is preferably formed proximate the converging nozzle cone.
The burner assembly further includes a diverging cone extending forward from the nozzle assembly, whereby the diverging cone inhibits entrainment toward the front of the nozzle. The burner assembly preferably comprises a cooling air tube extending from the combustion air inlet, through the gaseous fuel manifold, and into a burner housing wherein the nozzle assembly optionally includes an oil nozzle, and the burner assembly optionally includes an oil supply tube capable of providing oil to said oil nozzle and an atomizing air tube capable of providing atomizing air to the oil nozzle.
In an alternate embodiment, a burner assembly for low NOx combustion comprises: a combustion air inlet; a gaseous fuel inlet; a housing; and a nozzle assembly. Said housing defines a mixing zone downstream of the combustion air inlet and downstream of the gaseous fuel inlet for enabling mixing of fuel and combustion air to form a lean fuel-air mixture. The nozzle assembly includes at least: a converging cone for directing the fuel-air mixture; at least one flame anchor formed by a bluff surface located proximate a front of the nozzle assembly for anchoring the flame; an optional oil nozzle located concentric with the converging cone; an optional oil supply tube for providing oil to the oil nozzle; and an air tube extending from the combustion air inlet capable of providing cooling air to the oil nozzle during operation of the burner assembly on oil and providing cooling air to the oil nozzle during operation of the burner assembly only on gaseous fuel. Preferably, the bluff surface is formed proximate a front of the burner assembly and said front of the burner is vaneless.
The burner assembly, in accordance with said alternate embodiment, further comprises a swirl vane assembly for mixing the combustion air with the gaseous fuel upstream of the nozzle assembly. Said swirl vane assembly includes a plurality of inner vanes that impart a swirling motion in a first orientation and a plurality of outer vanes that impart a swirling motion in a second orientation wherein said first orientation may be the same as said second orientation. Preferably, the swirling motion imparted by the plurality of inner vanes is opposite in orientation to the swirling motion imparted by the plurality of outer vanes.
A method for generating low NOx, premixed combustion comprises: supplying and controlling flow of excess combustion air at a burner inlet; introducing gaseous fuel to the burner through a multi-port manifold located downstream the burner inlet; mixing the excess combustion air with the gaseous fuel by means of counter-swirl vanes located proximate the multi-port manifold; directing the air-fuel mixture flow through a nozzle assembly located generally within a converging housing cone; and providing a flame anchor formed by a bluff surface located proximate a front of the nozzle assembly for anchoring the flame. Preferably, the bluff surface is formed proximate the converging nozzle cone.
The combustion air is preferably supplied by a fan that is coupled to the burner inlet. Combustion air may also be supplied to the burner assembly from a manifold or other means. A portion of the fuel-air mixture is directed through a converging housing cone generally located between the vanes and the front of the nozzle assembly wherein said nozzle assembly includes at least one converging nozzle cone that cooperates with the converging housing cone to direct flow of the fuel-air mixture.
The burner assembly, according to the method described herein, further comprises a cooling air tube extending from the combustion air inlet, through the gaseous fuel manifold, and into the burner housing for providing cooling air to the nozzle assembly. Said nozzle assembly optionally includes an oil nozzle and the burner assembly optionally comprises an oil supply tube for providing oil to the oil nozzle and an atomizing air tube for providing atomizing air to the oil nozzle. Combustion according to the method described herein achieves NOx emissions levels below 20 ppm at 3 percent O2.
Combustion air inlet 12 may include a first flange 33 that may be integral with the gaseous fuel inlet manifold assembly 14 (as more fully described below) for attaching to a combustion air fan 80. Combustion air fan 80 preferably is a conventional centrifugal fan having a tangential outlet. Combustion air fan 80 includes a fan housing 81, a mating flange 82 and a fan wheel 83 having a plurality of blades 84 and a fan hub 86 for mounting the plurality of blades 84.
The gaseous fuel inlet manifold assembly 14 has a second flange 35 for attaching to a burner housing. The burner housing preferably includes cylindrical housing section 71 and a frusto-conical housing section or converging housing cone 75, as best shown in the embodiment depicted in
Referring now to
Referring again to
As will be apparent from the discussion below, the description of the function and operation of the burner assembly 10 is provided simultaneously with a description of a method according to an aspect of the present invention.
Referring now to
As shown in
As can be observed in
Referring now to
A first portion of the accelerated air-fuel mixture in frusto-conical housing section 75 may enter the nozzle assembly 18 and may flow into the first cylindrical shell 201, the second cylindrical shell 202 and the converging nozzle cone 203. A second portion of the air-fuel mixture in frusto-conical housing section 75 may flow around converging nozzle cone 203 through the annular volume formed between the converging nozzle cone 203 and the frusto-conical housing section 75. Converging nozzle cone 203 aids in directing the first portion of flow toward the annular volume formed between the cooling air tube 305 and the first cylindrical shell 201. Converging nozzle 203 also aids in directing said first portion of flow through the annular volume formed between the first cylindrical shell 201 and the second cylindrical shell 202.
The fuel-air mixture exiting the nozzle assembly 18 may be ignited to form a flame which may be anchored to the nozzle assembly 18 by the first bluff body surface 211 of cylindrical shell 201, the second bluff body surface 212 of second cylindrical shell 202, and the third bluff body surface 213 of cooling air tube 305. Furthermore, acceleration of the air-fuel mixture by the frusto-conical housing section 75 and the converging nozzle cone 203 may assist in preventing flashback of the flame into the burner assembly 10. The flame formed at the front of the nozzle assembly 18 is allowed to develop with the aid of the diverging cone 145, which may assist in anchoring and stabilizing said flame by, for example, inhibiting entrainment and blowoff. A fraction of the combustion air that entered cooling air tube 305 through cooling air tube inlet 307 flows the length of cooling air tube 305 and may assist in cooling the nozzle assembly 18 when the burner assembly 10 is in operation. Furthermore, as shown in
The combustion air fan 80 may be controlled, for example, by a variable frequency drive (VFD), a damper mechanism or some other suitable mechanism which a person familiar with this technology would know how to select. The combustion air fan 80 may provide a flow of combustion air in excess of the stoichiometric amount required to burn the gaseous fuel supplied through the gaseous fuel inlet manifold assembly 14. Precise control of the resulting air-to-fuel ratio (A/F) of the fuel-air mixture and the enhanced gaseous fuel mixing achieved with counter-swirl vane assembly 16 may help minimize peak flame temperatures produced by burner assembly 10. Reduced peak flame temperatures result in lower emissions of NOx. NOx emissions, for instance, of burner 10 may be reduced to levels below 20 ppm at 3 percent O2. Further, the premixing in burner 10 produces reduced levels of CO, VOCs, and the like. The burner preferably operates at 40 percent excess air, more preferably at approximately 50 percent excess air, which provides an adiabatic flame temperate of a maximum of 2800 degrees F., which is generally considered a threshold for thermal NOx formation.
The present invention is not limited to the particular structures disclosed herein, but rather encompasses variants as will be clear to persons familiar with burner technology and encompasses all structures recited and following from the language of the claims. For example, the present invention is not limited to a burner having, nor limited to the particular structure recited for, the counter-swirl vane assembly, fuel manifold, converging nozzle cone, and like components, unless the structure is stated in the claim. The embodiments described are illustrative, and the present invention is not limited to said embodiments.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090226852 A1 | Sep 2009 | US |