The present invention is in the general field of power generation and industrial boiler design and, more specifically, combustion air systems for industrial boilers, especially Kraft process recovery boilers or soda process recovery boilers used in the pulp and paper industry.
Industry demand for higher black liquor processing capacity in Kraft recovery boilers has caused a significant increase in furnace shaft velocity and particle carryover. Demand for higher energy efficiency in recovery boilers has also increased black liquor solids content delivered to the boiler, causing smaller mass-median droplet size from black liquor spray nozzles and a further increase in carryover. Higher carryover results in an increase in fouling and plugging of convection pass surfaces.
For a general discussion of chemical and heat recovery in the pulp and paper industry, and the particular aspects of the alkaline pulping and chemical recovery process, reference is made to Steam/its generation and use, 41st Ed., Kitto and Stultz, Eds., Copyright © 2005, The Babcock & Wilcox Company, Chapter 28, the text of which is hereby incorporated by reference as though fully set forth herein.
The recovery boiler 1 illustrated in
With a conventional air system, combustion air is introduced into the recovery boiler 1 furnace 10 via air ports at staged elevations above a floor 22 of the furnace 10. These elevations are—primary air 24, secondary air 26, and tertiary air 28, as shown in
The BL nozzles 14 produce a spray with a distribution in droplet size and a mass median droplet size of about 2-4 mm. Large particles (e.g. >3 mm) from the BL nozzles have downward trajectories because they are mostly influenced by their initial momentum and by gravity. The smallest particles of black liquor (<1 mm) are mostly influenced by aerodynamic drag forces and are lifted upward with the gas flow. These particles are known as carryover. Carryover particles are deposited on convection pass surfaces, which cause fouling and plugging of those surfaces and is detrimental to boiler heat transfer performance and continuous operation of the boiler. An air system design influences the quantity of particle carryover in two ways: 1) the magnitude and distribution of vertical velocity that provides lift for small particles, and 2) horizontal gas currents that push small particles towards the furnace walls, where they are deposited and removed from the gas.
Conventional air systems with the described three levels of combustion air typically have just one level of tertiary air above the black liquor nozzles 14, the principal function of which is to provide air to complete combustion of combustible gases and particles which ascend in the furnace. Formetti et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,715,763 discloses a black liquor recovery boiler furnace having quaternary air injection ports located in the furnace walls in the vicinity of, or at approximately the same elevation as, the black liquor injection guns. Blackwell et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,121,700, discloses a method of introducing air into a recovery boiler furnace which introduces air via sets of small and large jets on opposite walls, the small jets opposing large jets, and which is referred to in the patent as partial interlacing. The concept of vertically aligned air ports was originated by E. Uppstu et al. 1995, and is exclusively applied to secondary air systems in United States Patent Application Publication US 2004/0149185, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,742,463.
The aforementioned systems do not include aspects of the present invention which include a combination of intermediate air ports located just above the black liquor guns, and multiple levels of tertiary air formed by vertically aligned tertiary air ports in opposing walls of the boiler furnace as described herein.
Generally, the recovery boiler air system according to the present invention features: one-level of secondary air (SA) ports on the front and rear walls of the recovery boiler furnace, arranged with fully-interlaced ports and a larger number of SA ports on the rear wall than on the front wall. An intermediate, liquor air (LA) level is provided just above the black liquor (BL) guns, on the front and rear walls. The arrangement of the LA ports is aligned with tertiary air (TA) ports which are provided on the front and rear walls above the LA ports. At least two levels of TA ports are provided on both the front and rear walls, with close vertical spacing (or coupling), in a fully interlaced arrangement of TA ports that are substantially vertically aligned, and a larger number of TA ports is provided on the front wall than on the rear wall (i.e., opposite the SA ports arrangement).
Accordingly, one aspect of the present invention is drawn to an air port arrangement associated with the combustion air system for a recovery boiler having a furnace with a front wall, a rear wall opposing the front wall, and two side walls adjoining the front and rear opposing walls, a plurality of black liquor guns for injecting black liquor into the furnace, the black liquor guns being located in the walls of the furnace and at a common elevation with respect to a floor of the furnace, and a combustion air system for providing a supply of air to the furnace. The air port arrangement comprises several interrelated components, including: a plurality of primary air ports in walls of the furnace which form a primary air level. A plurality of secondary air ports is provided only in the front and rear walls of the furnace which form one secondary air level at an elevation above the primary air level and below the common elevation of the plurality of black liquor guns, the number of secondary air ports on one wall being one greater than the number of secondary air ports on the opposing wall, the secondary air ports on one wall being laterally offset from the secondary air ports on the opposing wall. An elevation of liquor air ports is provided only in the front and rear walls of the furnace, together with a plurality of tertiary air ports only in the front and rear walls of the furnace which form at least two or more tertiary air levels above the elevation of liquor air ports, wherein the tertiary air ports and the liquor air ports are substantially vertically aligned with one another.
Another aspect of the present invention is drawn to a combustion air system for a recovery boiler having four generally orthogonal walls and a floor. The combustion system includes a primary air level formed by a plurality of primary air ports in all of the walls of the furnace proximate to the floor. A single secondary air level is formed by opposed secondary air ports in front and rear walls of the furnace above the primary air ports. Black liquor guns in the walls of the furnace are provided above the single secondary air level of opposed secondary air ports, and an elevation of liquor air ports only in the front and rear walls of the furnace are located a vertical distance in the range of about zero to four feet above the elevation of black liquor guns. Finally, at least first, second and third tertiary air levels formed by tertiary air ports are provided only in the front and rear walls of the furnace above the black liquor guns, the tertiary air ports arranged in substantially vertically aligned columns in opposing walls of the furnace and aligned with the liquor air ports. Each tertiary air port is located at one of the at least three tertiary air levels, the first tertiary air level located a vertical distance in the range of about four feet to twelve feet above the elevation of liquor air ports, and the second and any additional tertiary air levels are located and spaced from an adjacent tertiary air level at regular spaced vertical intervals in the range of about four feet to eight feet.
Yet still another aspect of the present invention involves the application of the combustion air system to industrial boilers which do not burn black liquor, and instead burn a solid fuel such as wood or biomass. In such types of industrial boilers which burn these alternative types of fuels, the black liquor guns would be replaced by fuel injection devices such as known mechanical distribution devices for solid fuels; e.g. fuel spreaders, fuel chutes, or the like. The liquor air ports in such applications would be referred to as fuel air ports or the like.
Yet another aspect of the present invention is drawn to a method for reducing particle carryover, while achieving rapid mixing and burnout of combustible gases, and minimum corrosion is disclosed. One benefit is the reduction of NOx emissions through deeper staging of combustion air.
The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the invention, its operating advantages and the specific benefits attained by its uses, reference is made to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter in which preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated.
In the Figures:
Referring to the drawings generally, wherein like reference numerals designate the same or functionally similar elements throughout the several drawings, and to
While the following description is provided in the context of a recovery boiler of the Kraft recovery boiler type, it will be appreciated that the present invention is also applicable to soda process recovery boilers, and to industrial boilers as described herein. Accordingly, while the following description thus uses the term black liquor guns to refer primarily to the firing of black liquor in Kraft recovery boilers, the fuel used in the aforementioned soda processes is also fired via liquor guns and, in visual appearance, is also nearly indistinguishable from black liquor. Hereinafter, and in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this disclosure, the term black liquor guns or liquor guns is used interchangeably to refer to the appropriate fuel firing devices used for the fuel in question. Finally, while the computational fluid dynamic (CFD) models used during the development of the present invention were based upon the firing of black liquor in a Kraft recovery boiler, it is believed that similar results would be obtained with the soda process recovery boilers, or to the industrial boilers described herein, and thus the present invention includes all these Kraft recovery, soda process recovery and industrial boilers.
The furnace 100 comprises furnace enclosure walls 120, front wall 160, rear wall 180, two side walls 200 more particularly designated as left and right hand side walls LHSW and RHSW, respectively, a floor 220, an arrangement of black liquor (BL) nozzles 140 at an elevation BL, and auxiliary burners 50. A primary air level PA is formed by primary air ports 240, a secondary air level SA formed by secondary air ports 260, a liquor air level LA formed by liquor air ports 40, and multiple tertiary air (TA) levels TA-1-TA-M, where M=2 or 3, formed by tertiary air ports 280. The liquor air level LA is the first level of combustion air introduced into the furnace 100 at an elevation above the black liquor nozzles elevation BL having the BL nozzles 140.
The secondary air ports 260 are all preferably the same size, and arranged to form only one secondary air level SA at an elevation above the primary air level PA and below a common elevation of the plurality of black liquor guns at the liquor gun level BL. In addition, it is preferred that the number of secondary air ports 260 on one wall (front or rear) is one greater than the number of secondary air ports 260 on the opposing wall (front or rear), and the secondary air ports 260 on one wall are laterally offset from the secondary air ports 260 on the opposing wall, thereby forming a fully interlaced arrangement as is known to those skilled in the art. However, a fully interlaced arrangement is not absolutely essential. In other words, the secondary air ports 260 may comprise larger and smaller secondary air ports 260 which alternate across a width of the recovery boiler and wherein the larger secondary air ports on one wall oppose smaller secondary air ports on the other wall in a partially interlaced secondary air arrangement.
The liquor air is introduced only from opposing (e.g. front and rear) walls of the furnace through the liquor air ports 40, and the elevation of the liquor air level LA is a vertical distance x in the range of about ½ foot to four feet above the elevation BL of the black liquor nozzles 140. Tertiary air is also supplied from only the front and rear walls of the furnace at two or more horizontal levels, TA-1-TA-M. In the embodiment shown in
According to the present invention, the arrangement of tertiary air TA ports at any given level depends on the furnace width/depth ratio. For example, a substantially “square” furnace would typically be provided with an arrangement of 3 front wall and 2 rear wall TA ports—a “3F/2R” arrangement. In a furnace 100 which is narrower, it may be that a 2F/1R TA ports arrangement is required. Generally, the spacing between ports at a given level on either a front or a rear wall of the furnace 100 increases in proportion to the size of the furnace, taking various factors such as the degree of expansion of the air jets into account and how such air jets interact with jets from an opposing wall.
Preferably, the combustion air system of the present invention also provides an air port arrangement wherein the number of tertiary air ports 280 at a given elevation on one wall is greater than the number of tertiary air ports 280 at the same elevation on the opposing wall, and arranged on opposing walls such that the tertiary air ports 280 on the opposing walls are laterally offset with respect to each other. Still further, it is also preferred to arrange the air ports so that the wall having the greater number of tertiary air ports 280 is opposite the wall having the greater number of secondary air ports 260. In these cases, the rear wall 180 may have the greater number of secondary air ports 260, or the front wall 160 may have the greater number of secondary air ports 260. However, combustion air systems according to the present invention may also be such that the same wall, either the front wall 160 or the rear wall 180, may be provided with the greater number of secondary air ports 260 and tertiary air ports 280.
As is known in the art, the furnace enclosure walls 120 are formed of water or steam-cooled tubes which form the boiler water circuit. Air ports are formed through the enclosure walls 120 of the furnace 100 at multiple locations at the various described levels, with air ducts (not shown) leading to the ports from an air supply (also not shown) to control furnace operation. Although shown in the context of this particular boiler design, the principles of the invention are not limited to these specific embodiments or application to only this type of boiler design. For example, the combustion air systems according to the present invention may also be applied to other types of industrial boilers which do not burn black liquor, and instead burn a solid fuel such as wood or biomass. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that in such types of industrial boilers which burn these alternative types of fuels, the black liquor guns would be replaced by fuel injection devices such as known mechanical distribution devices for solid fuels; e.g. fuel spreaders, fuel chutes, or the like. The liquor air ports 40 in such applications would be referred to as fuel air ports 40 or the like.
If auxiliary fuel burners 50 are provided, they are preferably provided on the side walls of the furnace 100, or on locations on the front and rear walls that do not interfere with air jet penetration from the SA ports.
Returning to
With liquor air injection through the LA ports 40, strong horizontal gas currents are created by the LA ports 40 just above elevation BL of the black liquor nozzles 140; small particles are entrained by the horizontal gas currents and pushed toward the walls of the furnace; and carryover removal is started at the lowest possible elevation in the furnace without interfering with the spray distribution of large droplets. Horizontal gas currents are reinforced at the tertiary air levels TA-1, TA-2, etc. which continue the process of carryover removal. The liquor spray distribution (of large droplets) to the furnace walls and char bed is not affected by the liquor air injection through the LA ports 40, particularly when splash-plate type black liquor nozzles 140 are used and tilted downward to direct the coarse spray down toward the furnace floor 220.
As shown in
Advantages of the recovery boiler air system according to the present invention include the ability to fire a wider range of black liquor solids, including and beyond 80% solids firing. Computational fluid dynamic (CFD) modeling of Kraft recovery boilers operating with the air system according to the present invention are predicted to have reduced emissions, the ability to maintain stable combustion in the lower furnace and char bed, and reduced carryover of particles resulting in improved ability to maintain clean convection heating surface for extended periods of operation.
While specific embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described in detail to illustrate the application and principles of the invention, it will be understood that it is not intended that the present invention be limited thereto and that the invention may be embodied otherwise without departing from such principles. For example, the present invention may be applied to new construction involving recovery boilers, or to the replacement, repair or modification of existing recovery boilers. In some embodiments of the invention, certain features of the invention may sometimes be used to advantage without a corresponding use of the other features. Accordingly, all such changes and embodiments properly fall within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60908560 | Mar 2007 | US |