This technology relates to a radiant tube for heating a process chamber in a furnace.
A radiant tube is a device that is used to heat a process chamber in a furnace. The tube extends across the process chamber. A burner is fired into one end of the tube, or a pair of burners alternately fire into opposite ends of the tube. In each case combustion proceeds downstream along the length of the tube from the firing burner toward the other end of the tube. The process chamber is heated by thermal energy that radiates from the tube as a result of combustion within the tube.
A method includes the steps of providing a downstream flow of combustion products in a radiant tube, injecting staged fuel into the tube, and recirculating the gaseous contents of the tube. The recirculating step withdraws combustion products from the downstream flow and mixes the staged fuel with the withdrawn combustion products. The mixture is transported upstream relative to the downstream flow along a recirculation flow path that is separate from the downstream flow, and is then discharged into the downstream flow.
In a preferred apparatus for performing the method, a burner fires into the radiant tube in a direction downstream from the burner to provide the downstream flow of combustion products within the tube. An injector injects a stream of staged fuel into the tube in the upstream direction. A recirculation conduit defines the recirculation flow path that is separate from the downstream flow. The conduit has an inlet aligned with the injector to receive the stream of staged fuel, and also to receive combustion products that are inspirated into the conduit by the stream of staged fuel. The conduit further has an outlet for discharging a mixture of the combustion products and staged fuel into the downstream flow at a location between the inlet and the burner.
The apparatus shown in the drawings has parts that are examples of the elements recited in the claims. The following description thus includes examples of how a person of ordinary skill in the art can make and use the claimed invention. It is presented here to meet the statutory requirements of written description, enablement, and best mode without imposing limitations that are not recited in the claims.
As shown schematically in
When a burner 24 or 28 fires into the tube 10, it receives preheated combustion air from a regenerative bed (not shown). The products of combustion that are generated by the firing burner flow within the tube 10 in a direction downstream from the firing burner toward the non-firing burner. The combustion products are then exhausted through the non-firing burner, and are directed into the regenerative bed. This heats the regenerative bed which, in turn, heats the combustion air when the non-firing burner is again fired in the next consecutive regenerative cycle. As the burners 24 and 28 are cycled in this manner, the radiant tube 10 becomes heated by the combustion products that flow alternately through the tube 10 in opposite directions. The process chamber 15 is then heated by thermal energy radiated from the tube 10.
The burners 24 and 28 in the illustrated example are alike. Each has the structure shown in
Each burner 24 and 28 further includes an oxidant baffle 40 with a circular opening 41 through which the fuel injector 32 extends along the axis 35. A blower 42 drives a pressurized flow of combustion air from the regenerative bed to the baffle 40. The baffle 40 directs the combustion air through the opening 41 in the form of an annular stream that surrounds the stream of fuel emerging from the outlet 33. Those reactant streams form a combustible mixture as they flow downstream from the burner 24 or 28. An igniter can be actuated to initiate combustion of the mixture in a startup mode, but an igniter is not needed when the gaseous contents of the tube 10 have reached the autoignition temperature of the mixture through previous cycles of burner operation.
In addition to the first and second burners 24 and 28, the radiant tube 10 is further equipped with first and second recirculation conduits 50 and 52. The recirculation conduits 50 and 52 in the illustrated example also are alike. Each has the structure of the conduit 50 shown in
As further shown schematically in
The recirculation conduits 50 and 52 are configured for operation of the burners 24 and 28 in differing regenerative modes. These include a low temperature mode and a high temperature mode. The low temperature mode is preferred when the temperature within the tube 10 is lower than about 1,400° F. The high temperature mode is preferred when the temperature within the tube 10 is about 1,400° F. or higher.
When the first burner 24 is fired in the low temperature mode, as indicated schematically in
As further shown schematically in
The high temperature mode is illustrated schematically in
With the outlet 33 of the second fuel injector 32 spaced a short distance from the open end 54 of the second conduit 52, the stream of fuel emerging from that outlet 33 withdraws some of the combustion products from the downstream flow in the adjacent annular passage 53 by inspirating those combustion products into the second conduit 52. The fuel and inspirated combustion products form a mixture within the second conduit 52. Circulation and aspiration transport the mixture to the hood 56 and discharge it into the air and combustion products flowing downstream from the turn 18. Further combustion then proceeds along the annular passage 53 leading back toward the second burner 28. In the alternate condition of
The proportions of first and second stage fuel injection can be varied with temperature and/or emission requirements. This can be accomplished by a controller 120 (
When either burner 24 or 28 is fired into the radiant tube 10 in the high temperature mode, the combustion air provided to the firing burner becomes consumed or diluted with inert products of combustion as it flows through the tube 10. As a result, the oxygen concentration in the gaseous contents of the tube 10 is progressively lower along the length of the tube 10 in the downstream direction from the firing burner toward the exhausting burner. By injecting staged fuel into the oxygen-depleted contents of the tube 10 at the exhausting burner, the injector 32 enables the combustion of second stage fuel to occur at minimal peak combustion temperatures. This can result in correspondingly minimal generation of NOx. Moreover, by transporting a dilute mixture of staged fuel and combustion products to an upstream location where the oxygen concentration is higher, which enables still further combustion to proceed downstream from that location, the recirculation conduits 50 and 52 multiply the residence time and distance through which combustion occurs along the length of the tube 10. This can maximize the transfer of heat from the tube 10 into the process chamber 15 in addition to minimizing the emission of NOx from the exhausting end of the tube 10.
In the embodiment shown schematically in
A recirculation conduit 230 is mounted within the tube 200 to define an elongated annular gas flow passage 233 radially between the conduit 230 and the tube 200. An open downstream end 234 of the conduit 230 is located a short distance upstream from the fuel injector 216 for gaseous contents of the passage 233 to be inspirated into the tube 230 by a stream of fuel emerging from the injector 216. An open upstream end 236 of the conduit 230 is equipped with a hood 240 which, like the hoods 56 described above, is configured for gaseous contents of the conduit 230 to be aspirated into the passage 233 by the downstream flow of combustion air. Multiple discharge outlets, as shown for example in
The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and may include other examples of how the invention can be made and used. Such other examples, which may be available either before or after the application filing date, are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they have equivalent elements with insubstantial differences from the literal language of the claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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