STRUCTURE OF A SUPER HEATER

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20100000474
  • Publication Number
    20100000474
  • Date Filed
    December 27, 2005
    18 years ago
  • Date Published
    January 07, 2010
    14 years ago
Abstract
A method for reducing corrosion of a superheater of a steam boiler. The superheater includes a superheater piping. The superheating piping includes a steam pipe where the steam to be superheated is directed. The steam pipe is separated by a protective shell having a surface settling in the flue gas space has a temperature that rises above an upper critical temperature, above which temperature in the flue gas space the compounds from the fuel are substantially in a gaseous form. A superheater of a steam boiler and a circulating fluidized bed boiler.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to a method for reducing corrosion of a superheater of a steam boiler according to the preamble of the appended claim 1. The invention also relates to a superheater of a steam boiler according to the preamble of the appended claim 5, as well as a circulating fluidized bed boiler according to the preamble of the appended claim 9.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to the structure of a superheater of a steam boiler. Superheaters of steam boilers are typically placed in a flue gas flow and in circulating fluidized bed boilers (CFB-boiler) superheaters or a part of the superheaters can be placed below the cyclone, in a so-called loopseal (sand seal). The Increase of the superheating temperature and the heat-to-power ratio of the plant are for their part limited by superheater corrosion. The corrosion mechanism varies depending on combustion, structure and most of all the chemical composition of ash and combustion gases. In boilers using waste and biomass a high content of chlorine (Cl) combined with a high alkali content—which is primarily formed of sodium (Na) and potassium (K)—may lead to a heavy fouling and corrosion of the heat exchange surfaces. Waste and biomass type fuels are especially problematic, because typically their sulphur content (S) is low in relation to their chlorine content, in which case the alkali form alkali chlorides and not alkali sulphates. The compounds being created, in turn, typically have a relatively low melting temperature. The smelt material being created adheres onto the surface of the superheater and creates corrosion. Several other compounds created In the combustion process have corresponding properties as well.


Corrosion is aimed to be controlled by selecting materials that endure corrosion better either over the entire thickness of the material or for the part of the surface layer of the pipe. In addition, corrosion is aimed to be decreased by designing the surface temperature of the superheater below the melting temperature. A low temperature of the superheated steam is not advantageous from the point of view of the operational economy of the plant (lower electricity production).


The surface temperature of the material of a typical superheater is, by means of the present technique, a few tens of degrees higher than the temperature of the contents, depending on the conditions. In practice, the surface temperature and corrosion rate of the material can be substantially affected only by changing the temperature of the contents, i.e. by limiting the superheating temperature.


A superheater material that must simultaneously endure corrosion, high pressure and high temperature, is typically expensive.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Now a superheater solution has been invented, which enables a decrease in the corrosion of the superheater.


To attain this purpose, the method according to the invention is primarily characterized in what will be presented in the characterizing part of the independent claim 1. The superheater of a steam boiler according to the invention, in turn, is primarily characterized in what will be presented in the characterizing part of the independent claim 5. The circulating fluidized bed boiler according to the invention is primarily characterized in what will be presented in the characterizing part of the independent claim 9. The other, dependent claims will present some preferred embodiments of the invention.


The basic idea of the Invention is to arrange the temperature of the surface of the superheater so high that the formation of a critical amount of smelt is prevented on the surface of the superheater. In known solutions the temperature of the surface of the superheater is aimed to be kept below that temperature where the compounds turn into smelt to such a degree that corrosion begins to accelerate. FIG. 1 shows in principle the amount of smelt material comprised by a flue gas in relation to material in other states as a function of temperature. As can be seen from the figure, there Is some first limiting temperature T0, after which the smelt begins to form. In higher temperatures the proportion of the smelt material begins to increase. In addition, there is another limiting temperature Tk1, after which the amount of smelt material is critical from the point of view of corrosion. In addition, there is a third limiting temperature Tk2 (upper critical temperature), above which the amount of smelt on the surface of the superheater is below the amount that is critical from the point of view of corrosion. Above the upper critical temperature Tk2 the compounds are substantially in a gaseous form. The temperature area between the second limiting temperature Tk1 and the upper limiting temperature Tk2 is later called the critical temperature area Tk1-Tk2. The limiting temperatures and the form of the diagram depend substantially on the compound.


Now such a solution is disclosed for reducing the corrosion and fouling of the superheater, wherein the surface temperature of the superheater is higher than the upper critical temperature Tk2. As can be seen from FIG. 2, the temperature area of the outer surface of the superheater Is above the upper critical temperature Tk2. FIG. 2 also shows in principle that temperature area of the steam to be superheated enabled by the invention. The present solution enables the superheating of steam to a higher temperature with the above-described problematic fuels as well. In known solutions most often the pressure and temperature durability of the material prevents raising the temperature above the upper critical temperature Tk2.


According to a basic idea of the invention the surface of the steam pipe in the superheater is separated from the corroding compounds by a protective shell, the surface of which shell has temperature designed above the upper critical temperature Tk2, in which temperature the compounds from the fuel are in a gaseous form. According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention the protective shell protects the steam pipe from corroding gases. Thus, the agents causing corrosion do not come into contact with the steam pipe.


In an embodiment of the invention a sufficient insulator is arranged between the protective shell and the steam pipe in order to control the conduction of heat. Thus, the temperature of the steam pipe is substantially lower than the temperature of the protective shell.


In another advantageous embodiment the heat conductivity of the protective shell is selected in such a manner that a separate insulator on the surface of the steam pipe of the superheater is not needed.


In an advantageous embodiment no pressure formed in the steam is directed at the protective shell. Thus, the protective shell primarily needs to endure the high temperature of the environment.


By arranging the temperature of the surface of the superheater higher than the upper critical temperature Tk2, the collection of deposits on the surface of the superheater is substantially prevented. Thus, the corrosion of the superheater as well as fouling decreases. This results in a decrease in that the superheater requires less cleaning and maintenance.


The different embodiments of the invention offer various advantages over solutions of prior art. There can be one or more of the following advantages in an application depending on its implementation.

    • the superheating temperature of a boiler can be raised and the electricity production of a power plant can be increased, which results in a better economic efficiency
    • a wider selection of even demanding fuels can be used
    • the usability of the boiler increases
    • the superheater Is Inexpensive to maintain, because the targets requiring most of the maintenance is the protective shell, which is a non-pressurized structure and not a reactor vessel
    • the material of the protective shell can be selected primarily on the basis of temperature endurance (i.e. pressure endurance is not required)
    • as the reactor vessel materials of the superheater it is possible to use more inexpensive materials, which do not need to endure the corrosion caused by flue gases





In the following, the invention will be described in more detail with reference to the appended principle drawings, in which


FIG. 1 shows the amount of smelt material comprised by a flue gas as the function of temperature



FIG. 2 shows the operation temperature areas of the outer surface of the superheater and the steam to be superheated



FIG. 3 shows a circulating fluidized bed boiler



FIG. 4 shows a superheater according to the invention,



FIG. 5 shows an embodiment according to the invention,



FIG. 6 shows a cross-section of the embodiment according to FIG. 5 at point A-A,



FIG. 7 shows another embodiment according to the Invention.



FIG. 8 shows a cross-section of the embodiment according to FIG. 7 at point B-B,



FIG. 9 shows a third embodiment according to the invention,



FIG. 10 shows a cross-section of the embodiment according to FIG. 9 at point C-C,





For the sake of clarity, the figures only show the details necessary for understanding the invention. The structures and details that are not necessary for understanding the invention, but are obvious for anyone skilled in the art, have been omitted from the figures in order to emphasize the characteristics of the invention.


DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION


FIG. 3 shows in principle the structure of a circulating fluidized bed boiler. The boiler comprises a furnace 1, flue gas channels 2 and a cyclone 3, where the flue gases formed in the combustion can flow. In addition, FIG. 3 shows fuel supply 4 and combustion air supply 5, which are connected to the furnace 1, which may be on several layers. Flue gas cleaning systems are not shown in the figure.


In addition, the boiler comprises one of more superheaters 6a, 6b, 6c. The type of the superheater may be, for example, a radiant superheater 6a in the furnace, a superheater 6b in the flue gas channel, or a loopseal superheater 6c placed after the cyclone. In the following, the invention is described using the loopseal superheater 6c as an example, which is referred to as the superheater. It is, however, possible to apply the same principle for other superheaters 6a, 6b, 6c as well.



FIG. 4 shows the principle structure of the superheater 6c according to the invention. The superheater 6c comprises a superheating piping 7, whose straight parts are inside a fluidized bed, in which case they are in a space G exposed to flue gases and/or bed material. The curved parts of the superheating piping 7—as well as the steam connections Sin, Sout, of the superheater—are arranged in a space separated from the fluidized bed material. The figure shows a way to implement the superheater 6c, but it is possible to be implemented in several different manners, however, by maintaining the basic Idea of this invention.



FIG. 5 shows the longitudinal cross-section of a corrosion-shielded superheating piping 7 according to an embodiment of the invention. FIG. 6, in turn, shows a cross-section of the superheating piping 7 at point A-A of FIG. 5. As can be seen in the figures, the superheating piping 7 comprises a protective shell 8 and the steam pipe 9 inside it. In the example according to FIGS. 5 and 6 there is an air slot 10 between the protective shell 8 and the steam pipe 9, which conducts the heat in the manner desired in the example from the protective shell to the steam pipe.


The temperature of the protective shell 8 is aimed to be kept above the critical temperature point Tk2. Above the upper critical temperature Tk2 the corrosive compounds in the flue gases are substantially in a gaseous form. For example, it has been detected in waste combustion that the upper critical temperature Tk2 is of the order of 600 to 650° C. The upper critical temperature Tk2, however, depends substantially on the combustion, the structure, and most of all the chemical composition of ash and combustion gases.


Above the upper critical temperature Tk2 the corrosive compounds in the flue gases are substantially in a gaseous form. When the surface temperature of the superheater 6c is higher than the upper critical temperature Tk2, the compounds in a gaseous form do not deposit on the surfaces of the superheater 6c. If the temperature of the flue gases on the surface drops below the upper critical temperature Tk2, the amount of smelt material is substantially increased. This smelt material is easily deposited on the surface of the superheater creating corrosion and fouling. Because of this, it is advantageous to keep the temperature of the protective shell 8 high enough in comparison to the critical temperature Tk2.


The steam S to be superheated travelling in the steam pipe 9 cools the steam pipe, which, in turn, cools the protective shell 8. The temperature of the steam S to be superheated may vary application-specifically. Often the temperature of the steam S is 450 to 480° C. When the temperature of the steam S is substantially below the upper critical temperature Tk2, the excessive cooling of the protective shell 8 must be prevented. In FIGS. 5 and 6 the heat exchange between the protective shell 8 and the steam pipe 9 is controlled by an air slot 10. By using some other insulation besides the air slot 10 or In addition to it, the heat exchange properties can be adapted to better suit the application. In FIGS. 7 and 8 the heat exchange is controlled by an insulation 10, which is located between the protective shell 8 and the steam pipe 9.



FIGS. 9 and 10, in turn, show an embodiment of the superheater 6c according to the invention, wherein the heat conductivity of the protective shell 8 is selected in such a manner that a separate insulation between the steam pipe 9 of the superheater and the protective shell 8 is not needed. In the solution in question the temperature of the protective shell 8 drops in a controlled manner from the temperature of the outer surface to the temperature of the inside, the difference of which temperatures is substantially significant. The heat conductivity can be affected, for example, with materials and/or structural solutions. The heat conductivity of the structure is selected in such a manner that a separate insulation between the steam pipe 9 of the superheater 6c and the protective shell is not needed.


In the material selection of different structures of the superheater 6c it must be taken into account that the protective shell 8 must mainly endure heat and flue gases, i.e. it does not need to endure pressure as in known solutions. The steam pipe 9 must, in turn, endure pressure, but not corrosive flue gases. The materials in question are substantially less expensive than the corrosion and pressure enduring materials used in known structures. The insulator 10 can be gas, such as, for example, air, liquid or solid material, such as, for example, a coating, a refractory or a separate structure.


An embodiment enables superheating the steam S into such temperature that is between the limiting temperatures Tk1 and Tk2, i.e. on the critical temperature area Tk1-Tk2 (i.e. on areas Tk1-Tk2 of FIGS. 1 and 2) without the compounds significantly depositing on the surface of the superheater piping 7. No significant depositing takes place from the point of view of corrosion, because the steam pipe 9 on said critical temperature area Tk1-Tk2 is insulated from flue gases and/or fluidized material and the temperature of the protective shell 8 is above the upper critical temperature Tk2, This enables such superheating temperatures, which with known solutions would be uneconomical because of, inter alia, corrosion and fouling.


The steam pipe 9 of the superheater 6c and the protective shell 8, and in some embodiments also the insulator 10, may have different heat expansion properties. This seems to be due to the different temperatures of different parts and partly due to the different materials. In an embodiment the steam pipe 9 is arranged inside the protective shell 8 without it being rigidly fixed to It. In another embodiment the steam pipe 9 is, in turn, fixed rigidly to only one point of the protective shell 8, such as, for example, the other end of the protective shell. Thus, the steam pipe 9 and the protective shell 8 may expand independent of each other.


The above-presented structure of the superheater piping 7 is also very use friendly, because its maintenance procedures are easy to perform. Especially in the loopseal superheater 6c the protective shell 8 is worn in use in such a manner that is must be renewed from time to time. In the presented solution the change of the protective shell 8 is usually sufficient, which may be performed by conventional methods. For example, the old protective shell 8 can be cut and removed. A replacement protective sheet 8 can in an embodiment be formed of two pipe halves, which are connected together after they have been set around the steam pipe 9. Because pressure effect is not directed to the protective shell 8 in use, its welding does not have the same requirements as welding the pressure-enduring pipes of a conventional superheater 6.


By combining, in various ways, the modes and structures disclosed in connection with the different embodiments of the invention presented above, it is possible to produce various embodiments of the invention in accordance with the spirit of the invention. Therefore, the above-presented examples must not be interpreted as restrictive to the invention, but the embodiments of the Invention may be freely varied within the scope of the inventive features presented in the claims hereinbelow.

Claims
  • 1-10. (canceled)
  • 11. A method for reducing corrosion of a fluidized bed heat exchanger of a circulating fluidized bed boiler, the fluidized bed heat exchanger comprising a superheater piping, the superheater piping comprising a steam pipe, the method comprising: directing steam to be superheated to the superheating piping,wherein the steam pipe is separated by a protective shell, whose surface temperature rises above a critical temperatures, which temperature is substantially higher than the temperature of the steam, and above which temperature in the flue gas space the compounds from the fuel are substantially in a gaseous form.
  • 12. The method according to claim 11, wherein the surface temperature of the protective shell is above 650° C.
  • 13. The method according to claim 11, wherein an insulator is arranged between the steam pipe and the protective shell for controlling heat conduction.
  • 14. The method according to claim 11, wherein no pressure formed in the steam is directed at the protective shell.
  • 15. A fluidized bed heat exchanger of a circulating fluidized bed boiler, the fluidized bed heat exchanger comprising: a superheater piping comprising a steam pipe to which can be directed steam to be superheated, a protective shell that surrounds the steam pipe and separates it from the fluidized bed material in such a manner that the surface temperature of the protective shell can be arranged in the use conditions above an upper critical temperature even if the temperature of the steam pipe would be on a critical temperature area, on which temperature area the compounds from the fuel are substantially in a smelt form.
  • 16. The fluidized bed heat exchanger according to claim 15, further comprising: an insulator arranged between the protective shell and the steam pipe.
  • 17. The fluidized bed heat exchanger according to claim 15, wherein the protective shell is substantially non-pressurized.
  • 18. A circulating fluidized bed boiler, comprising: a superheater piping of a fluidized bed heat exchanger inside a fluidized bed, the piping comprising a steam pipe to which can be directed steam to be superheated, the superheater piping further comprising a protective shell that surrounds the steam pipe and separates it from the fluidized bed material in such a manner that the surface temperature of the protective shell can be arranged in the use conditions above an upper critical temperature, which temperature is substantially higher than the temperature of the steam, even if the temperature of the steam pipe would be on a critical temperature area, on which temperature area the compounds from the fuel are substantially in a smelt form.
  • 19. The circulating fluidized bed boiler according to claim 18, further comprising: an insulator arranged between the protective shell and the steam pipe.
  • 20. The circulating fluidized bed boiler according to claim 18, wherein the protective shell of the fluidized bed heat exchanger is substantially non-pressurized.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
20045506 Dec 2004 FI national
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 371c Date
PCT/FI2005/050489 12/27/2005 WO 00 9/22/2009