Claims
- 1. A solid fuel pulverizing and burning system characterized by a possible turndown ratio of up to at least fifteen to one and comprising a pulverizer for impacting relatively coarsely sized solid fuel and autogenously pulverizing it in turbulent air, said pulverizer having a housing with means for introducing solid fuel to be pulverized, means for introducing ambient primary air, impeller means, and discharge means for passing a stream of the primary air and autogenously pulverized solid fuel to a burner for firing into the ignition chamber of a furnace or other heating structure; a burner having means defining an ignition chamber, an elongate, firing conduit having one end in communication with said discharge means of the pulverizer and the opposite end in communication with said ignition chamber as a firming orifice; said conduit being adapted to pass said stream from end-to-end thereof and into said ignition chambers through said firing orifice; a valve element movably mounted relative to said firing orifice for adjustment closer thereto or farther therefrom as a primary air and fuel feed control valve, said conduit being relatively long and longitudinally imperforate so as to confine the longitudinally extensive flow of said primary air and fuel stream therethrough; structural means within said conduit and mutually spaced along the length thereof for imparting turbulence to said longitudinally extensive flow of primary air and fuel prior to its discharge from said conduit and its entering said ignition chamber; means for introducing a controlled quantity of secondary air into the turbulent stream after its discharge through said firing orifice; means for igniting the pulverized solid fuel in said ignition chamber; means for observing conditions within said ignition chamber; and means for adjusting the position of said valve element relative to said firing orifice in accord with observed conditions in the ignition chamber to control the quantity of primary air and fuel fired into said ignition chamber and to influence flame propagation and flame shape.
- 2. A system according to claim 1, wherein the pulverizer comprises a shaft rotatably mounted in the housing; a series of impellers fixed to said shaft in mutually spaced arrangement defining respective pulverizing stages and terminating short of said housing to provide circumferential flow space therearound, said impellers being provided with air-motivating, solid particle impact members thereon; air inlet means adjacent to one end of said housing as the means for introducing primary air, to provide a carrier stream of air; solid fuel inlet means adjacent to said one end of the housing as the means for introducing solid fuel to be pulverized; discharge conduit means adjacent to the other end of the housing and connected to the firing conduit as the means for passing the carrier stream of air and pulverized solid fuel to the burner; and means for rotating the impeller shaft.
- 3. A system according to claim 2, wherein the pulverizer additionally comprises a series of annular partitions fixed to the housing and extending peripherally thereof and between mutually adjacent impellers of respective sets of said mutually adjacent impellers to direct flow toward the impeller axis in opposition to centrifugal force exerted by the impellers.
- 4. A system according to claim 3, wherein the air inlet means and the fuel inlet means are arranged to discharge directly against the first stage impeller; and wherein the second state impeller is provided with a greater number of impact members than is said first stage impeller.
- 5. A system according to claim 4, wherein the annular partition between the first and second stage impellers has additionally a discharge lip turned inwardly toward the axis of the impellers to funnel material from said first stage to said second stage.
- 6. A system according to claim 2, wherein the inside face of the housing is provided with impact bars spaced peripherally thereof and positioned within the said flow space.
- 7. A system according to claim 3, wherein the housing is cylindrical and it and the impeller shaft are positioned vertically, with the upper end of the housing closed by a top wall; wherein the impellers and annular partitions extend horizontally; and wherein the primary air inlet means and the solid fuel inlet means are located in said top wall.
- 8. A system according to claim 7, wherein the primary air inlet means and the solid fuel inlet means comprise respective elongate, substantially rectangular openings through the top wall of the housing at diametrically opposite sides of the impeller axis; and flow conduits leading to the respective openings.
- 9. A system according to claim 8, wherein the long sides of the rectangular, elongate, air inlet opening are substantially uniformly, concavely curved toward the impeller axis.
- 10. A system according to claim 9, wherein both the primary air inlet opening and conduit and the fuel inlet opening and conduit are similarly formed so as to be interchangeably used, and wherein deflector skirts are provided in the one selected as the solid fuel inlet so as to reduce its size relative to that of said air inlet.
- 11. A system according to claim 7, wherein the discharge conduit means opens substantially tangentially into the lowest impeller stage through the cylindrical side wall of the housing, and the impeller of said stage has vanes fixed to and projecting from its upper surface substantially within the height of the opening into said discharge conduit means so as to serve in effect as an ejector fan for the carrier stream of primary air and the pulverized fuel entrained therein.
- 12. A system according to claim 1, wherein the construction and arrangement of the pulverizer and the means for operating it are such that the energy input during operation is sufficient to generate fuel-drying heat internally of the housing during operation with ambient air input and to produce finely pulverized solid fuel, about 80% of which is 40 microns in size and all of which will pass a standard two hundred mesh screen.
- 13. A system according to claim 1, where provision is made for the inflow of tertiary air to the furnace so as to surround the means defining the ignition chamber with a flow of said tertiary air.
- 14. A system according to claim 1, wherein the firing orifice is defined by an inturned, circumferential lip sloped toward the ignition chamber.
- 15. A system according to claim 1, wherein the valve element of the burner is double-taper-ended and is positioned in-line with flow of material through the firing orifice.
- 16. A system according to claim 1, wherein the means for introducing secondary air is a conduit concentric with and surrounding the firing conduit and opening into the ignition chamber of the burner, said firing conduit being slidable longitudinally relative to the secondary air conduit and to the ignition chamber, so as to permit selective positioning of the firing orifice relative thereto; and wherein means are provided for securing said firing conduit in the selected position.
- 17. A system according to claim 1, wherein the valve element is fixed to one end of an elongate rod which extends backwardly through the firing conduit to a location exteriorly thereof; and wherein mutually spaced spiders within said firing conduit slidably support said rod, said spiders being formed with slanted vanes as the means for imparting turbulance to the fuel and primary air flowing through the conduit.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
The present application is a continuation of our similarly entitled copending application Ser. No. 06/378,347, filed May 14, 1982, now abandoned, which itself is a continuation-in-part of our copending application Ser. No. 06/216,267, filed Dec. 15, 1980, now abandoned, entitled "Pulverized Solid Fuel Burning Apparatus".
Note is also made of copending applications Ser. No. 304,860, filed Sept. 23, 1981, entitled "Apparatus and Method for the Pulverization and Burning of Solid Fuels", and Ser. No. 482,503 filed Apr. 6, 1983, similarly entitled.
US Referenced Citations (51)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
77990 |
Apr 1962 |
FRX |
1326557 |
Apr 1963 |
FRX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
Raymond Vertical Mill, pp. 8-38, 8-43, 8-44 from Perry's "Chemical Engineer's Handbook", Bulletin No, 118, Combustion Engineering, Inc. |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
378347 |
May 1982 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
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216267 |
Dec 1980 |
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