Fired Heater Lecture

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lecture on furnaces

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  • Furnaces(also called Fired Heaters)Julie King (2006)Rev. John Sandell (2007) CM4120

  • Fired Heaters-What they look like.

  • Fired HeatersOften in a large chemical plant or refinery, there will be 50 furnaces.Often you will preheat a feed to get it up to the temperature needed for a reaction in a reactor (i.e., for an endothermic reaction).Furnaces are often used to preheat the feed before it goes into the reactor.

  • Direct Fired FurnacesWe will focus on direct fired furnaces.Have air, fuel (fuel oil or natural gas), and combustion gases in the firebox and this heats the process stream such as heavy hydrocarbons (oils in a refinery) etc. Process stream being heated (like a process gas or oil) is inside tubes.Cooler process stream enters the top of the furnace (convection section) and exits near the bottom (radiant section).

  • Fired Heaters

  • Burner Sketch-Burners locatedunder thefurnace.-Air/fuel mixes-Get combustion-Atomizing steamused to get betterair/fuel mixing

  • Combustion Rapid chemical reaction that occurs when the proper amounts of a fuel and oxygen are combined with an ignition source to release heat and light. CO2 and H2O are the combustion products for a complete combustion reaction.Different fuels release different amounts of heat (energy) as they are burned.

  • Fired Heater

  • Components of a FurnaceFuel TrainFire BoxRadiant TubesConvection TubesDamper and StackRefractory LiningBurners and Air Registers (lets air in by burners)What is a fuel train?

  • Fire Box and Refractory LayerSection contains the burners (under it) the open flames, and combustion gases.Fire box is lined with refractory brick (usually white/tan in color, lightweight, chalk-like, ceramic material) lining that can handle high temperatures and reflects heat back into the furnace.

  • Fire Box and Refractory LayerRefractory layer includes a brick layer and stainless steel rods (sometimes a wire mesh) that attach to the brick. Peep holes so the operator/engineer can view the firebox flame, get a temperature reading, etc.Fire box temperature typically 1,800 oF.

  • Radiant TubesRadiant tubes (process stream inside them, i.e. oil, etc) are along the walls in the fire box. They receive direct heat from the flames (burners). Section of tubes sees higher temperatures and has a faster accumulation of coke deposits on inside of the tubes (carbon like when you BBQ on your grill).Radiant heat transfer typically accounts for 65% of the total heat absorbed by the process stream (oil, etc.).

  • Convection TubesConvection tubes (process fluid inside them) are in the roof of the furnace so NOT in contact with the direct flames in the fire box.Hot combustion gases transfer heat through the metal tubes (often finned tubes to increase efficiency) and into the process fluid.Convective heat transfer typically accounts for 35% of the total heat absorbed by the process stream (oil, etc.).

    Why finned tubes?

  • Damper and StackWarm air and combustion gases leave the furnace though the stack and enter atmosphere.This natural draft (like your chimney in your house that carries the combustion gases up) creates a lower pressure inside the furnace. Draft = atm pressure pressure inside fired heaterTypically 0.05 inches water (vacuum) by the stack damper

  • Draft Profile

  • DamperOften 10 ft up in the stack and allows adjustment of the stack draft.Controls amount of air into the furnace. Open the damper, and more air comes in.Controls the excess O2 into the furnace.Typically want about 2 mol% excess O2 or you waste energy (just send too much hot air out the stack that you did not need to heat!).

  • Furnace Controls

  • Types of Furnace DraftsNatural Draft: draft is induced by buoyancy forces as the hot air rises through the stack and creates a vacuum inside fire box. Pressure in fire box < atm pressureForced Draft : fans are used to force air into the burners (below the fire box)

  • Furnace Types of Furnace DraftsInduced Draft: a fan is put in the stack that enhances the low pressure in the fire box.Balanced Draft : uses 2 fans1 fan pulls air out the stack1 fan forces air into the burners

  • Natural and Forced Draft

  • Induced and Balanced Draft

  • Common Furnace ProblemsFlame Impingement: flames from the burner touching a tubeWeakens the metal tube and causes coke (carbon) to form inside the tube where the process fluid flowsSolve by reducing the fuel supply to the affected burner

  • Common Furnace ProblemsCoke FormationCoking always occurs inside the process fluid tubes (typically the radiant tube section where it is hottest) in a furnace.Remove coke by shutting down the furnace (typically once/3 yrs) and injecting superheated steam to remove the coke.

  • Common Furnace ProblemsReplace RefractoryRefractory in the fire box becomes brittle and starts to fall off over time at high temperatures.Solve by shutting down the furnace (typically once/3 yrs) and removing old refractory and installing new refractory.

  • Common Furnace ProblemsFuel Composition ChangesFuel composition of the fuel oil or natural gas can change.More heat a fuel produces during combustion, the more air is needed. Your process control programs can help you here. Control the % excess O2 (open/close damper), allow more or less fuel into burner, etc.).

  • Common Furnace ProblemsProcess Fluid Feed Pump FailureFurnace will get too hot, causing coking and damaging the equipment (too hot for the furnace materials). Try to restart the feed pump or start the back up process feed pump FAST!Then isolate (block off) the primary feed pump and get it fixed ASAP.

  • Common Furnace ProblemsFlameoutOccurs when the burner flame goes out with the fuel still being pumped into it. Now we have unburned fuel inside the furnace.Often happens when there is not enough air in the burner. Solution: Shutdown the furnace. Stop fuel into the burner/furnace. This is a dangerous situation!

  • ReferencesW. L. Luyben, B. D. Tyrus, M. L. Luyben, Plantwide Process Control, McGraw Hill, NY, 1999.C. E. Thomas, The Process Technology Handbook, Uhai Publishing, Berne, NY, 1997.