Method For Injecting Ballast Into An Oxycombustion Boiler

A method for injecting fuel, oxidant, and ballast into an oxycombustoin boiler is presented.

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Description

This application claims priority to European Patent Application EP 08167521.7 filed Oct. 24, 2008, incorporated herein in its entirety.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a method for injecting fuel, oxidant and ballast into an oxycombustion boiler.

BACKGROUND

In an oxycombustion boiler, in which fuel, oxidant and ballast are injected, it is possible to separate a portion of the ballast in order to introduce it into the boiler at different locations from the burner, or combustion chamber jet. By using a suitable injection arrangement of this type, a number of beneficial effects may be achieved. The profile of the heat transfer flux to the walls of the boiler is smoother and a “gas curtain” is created around the flame so as to spread the heat release along the combustion chamber. This ‘gas curtain’ is not to be confused with ‘sweep gas’ which is typically used for protecting flame detectors, out of service injectors, probes, etc. The ‘gas curtain’ protects the furnace tubes from direct contact with the flame. Greater physical separation of the fuel and oxidant injection compared with the ballast is obtained, thus allowing more direct contact between fuel and oxidant for better combustion of difficult fuels. The ballast may consist of recycled flue gases (whether cold or not), with the advantage of having flame radiation absorption properties with respect to the predominant gases CO2 and H2O, or other gases or gas mixtures.

There are existing schemes that recycle ballast into various locations within a boiler. There exist systems using recycle injection into the burner or windbox; recycle injection into furnaces; recycle injection into the burner; and recycle, recreating a synthetic air (mixture of oxygen and recycle flue gases). This flue gas recycle is usually performed by separating one part of the main flue gas stream exiting a boiler, and redirecting it towards the boiler through appropriate ducts and impelled generally with a fan or a suction device, known to the skilled in the art.

There are also existing schemes in which nitrogen is injected in a boiler separately from oxygen (as such described in EP 1 517 085 A2), so as to create either nitrogen-poor or nitrogen rich atmospheres for the purpose of controlling NOx emissions. In the present invention, the shielding gas is meant to be essentially devoid of nitrogen, as this invention is directed toward oxy-combustion in boilers. The goal of this oxy-combustion in boilers is to produce an exhaust stream enriched in CO2, and thereby facilitating CO2 capture. Typical examples of shielding gas envisaged in the present invention are therefore flue gas recycle from oxy-combustion (composed mainly of CO2 and H2O), dried flue gas recycle from oxy-combustion (composed mainly of CO2, after condensation of moisture) or steam.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

When the present invention is to be used for combustion with air as oxidant, for example at transient conditions for the oxy-boiler or at start-up of the oxy-boiler, a shielding gas stream may also be composed of flue gas recycle, but in such a case this stream would contain a non-negligible content of nitrogen (over 50% in volume). In other embodiment for this usage of air as oxidant, a shielding gas stream may even be air, which for efficiency reasons can be previously heated.

There are other boiler schemes in which Over Fire Air (OFA) is injected separately from the burners to reduce NOx emissions. This should divide the incorporation of oxidant into the boiler so as to create at the burners a fuel-rich primary zone, while the rest of the oxidant is added at this OFA ports for achieving a complete combustion at a so-called burnout zone. An example is shown in the patent U.S. Pat. No. 5,626,085 A. In the present invention, thermal gas shielding of regions within the boiler is at issue, and not injections for affecting chemically the flame and the combustion phenomena.

The present invention utilizes the separation of ballast injection into the furnace from the oxygen injection into the burner. There may be an arrangement of the ballast injection into the boiler according to the flux profile. There may be the creation of a gaseous ballast offset, to ensure separation between the flame and the walls of the boiler. There may be the control of the burner ballast/boiler ballast injection ratio according to the various operating parameters (fuel characteristics, boiler operating conditions, temperature levels in the chamber, etc.). The flow of injected ballast (coming from the ratio of burner injection to boiler chamber injection) and the distribution of these injections will be different, depending on the desired effect.

Turning now to FIG. 1, one aspect of the present invention results in the smoothing, levelling or flattening of the flux profile on the walls of the burner. As may be seen in the figure, the transfer profile corresponding to an oxygen flame has a non-uniform shape. For an oxygen flame, the main component of this transfer is radiation, owing to the high flame core temperature and above all the gases that predominantly make up the oxycombustion flue gases, namely CO2 and H2O, radiating at high temperature. The non-homogeneous temperature distribution along the length of the flame results in a non-uniform heat flux along the corresponding length of the furnace wall. This results in non-linear heat transfer issues, potential concerns about furnace wall (or tube wall) temperatures and other problems regarding localized excessive temperature concentrations.

As indicated in FIG. 2, the proposed way of making this flux more uniform is to inject the ballast along the side of the flame, along the side of the walls that would ordinarily be absorbing this heat, so as to effectively create a gas curtain. This ballast gas curtain may contain gases that are not transparent to the radiation (i.e. CO2, H2O, coming for example from a flue gas recycle), and therefore absorb the radiation of the flame due to the fact of being comparatively cooler. In one embodiment of the current invention, a greater ballast may be injected near the transfer peak to allow the height of the transfer peak to be reduced.

In one embodiment of the present invention a large amount of ballast gas may be injected with two operating positions (e.g. on/off), with the advantage of a simplified process and a simplified control scheme, and with the disadvantage of increased implementation complexity, potential flexibility issues, and the associated pressure drop through the system. In another embodiment of the present invention, a lesser amount of ballast gas injection may incorporate a flow rate regulation in order to end up with the desired flux smoothing performance, with the advantage of greater control and more predictable results, and the disadvantage of a more complex process and a more complex control scheme.

In one embodiment of the present invention the ballast streams are injected vertically parallel with and substantially adjacent to the walls of the combustion chamber in a substantially downward direction. In one embodiment of the present invention the ballast streams are injected vertically parallel with and substantially adjacent to the walls of the combustion chamber in a substantially upward direction. In one embodiment of the present invention the ballast streams are injected horizontally parallel and substantially adjacent to the floor of the combustion chamber. In one embodiment of the present invention the ballast streams are injected horizontally parallel and substantially adjacent to the ceiling of the combustion chamber. In one embodiment of the present invention system data is provided to a control system, and the control system then controls the injection of the ballast streams. The system data may be fuel type, fuel characteristics, boiler operating conditions, exiting flue gas composition, or exiting flue gas temperature. Ballast injection streams rate and distribution can vary as well with boiler load.

In one embodiment of the present invention sensors are mounted in the walls of the combustion chamber. These sensors provide input to a control system. The control system then controls the injection of the ballast streams. The sensors may measure wall temperature, tube skin temperature, water wall fluid temperature, tube fluid temperature, furnace gas temperature, heat flux into the furnace wall, heat flux into the tubes or heat flux into the water walls.

The ballast injection regulation is designed within this context on the flow rate and as a function of the flux measurements on the walls, but it may also take place as a function of the tube skin temperatures, or overall parameters such as the incoming power or the boiler combustion temperature outlet temperature, once the typical flux profile has been established for a combustion chamber configuration and a burner design.

In another embodiment of the present invention, a gaseous offset may also be produced. This offset may be envisaged either for protecting the walls of the boiler from direct contact of the end of the flame (impingement) or for protecting them from lateral contact of the flame. Direct contact of the flame on the walls has devastating effects on the integrity of the metal tubes that make up the walls of the chamber in usual boiler configurations. The points of possible impingement can be predicted in advance, thereby facilitating the arrangement of the injections into the boiler. As indicated in FIG. 2, in order to avoid lateral contact of the flames on the tubes, the ballast gas may be injected in parallel with the walls. This configuration may profit from the flux smoothing effect described above. As indicated in FIG. 3, in order to avoid direct contact of the flames, which is more probable and at the same time the most damaging, which has the greatest chance of occurring at the end of the flame, the ballast may be injected along the back wall of the furnace.

The ratio of ballast injected in the burners over the ballast injected into the furnace, may depend on a number of operational criteria. This ratio may depend on the fuel characteristics. For example, with a difficult fuel (i.e. pitch difficult to atomize, wet fuels, fuels with a high content of incombustibles, fuels of a dangerous nature, etc.): the ballast injection ratio will be predominantly transferred towards the boiler, in order to allow and oxidant-rich combustion close to the burner. For a fuel with a high nitrogen content: to promote reaction mechanisms that reduce NOx formation, the ballast injection ratio will be displaced towards the burners, so as to create fuel-rich conditions at the flame. This ratio can also vary with boiler load, with a ratio displaced towards the boiler, in order to allow oxygen-rich conditions close to the burner to improve flame stability at low boiler load. Combined to this, the ratio may depend on operating conditions such as tube skin temperature, maximum flux measurement, and other operational criterial known to the skilled artisan.

Other features and advantages of the invention will appear from a reading of the description that follows. Embodiments of the invention are provided as non-limiting examples.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

FIG. 1 a schematic representation of the variation in heat flux experienced within the side walls of a furnace of a typical boiler as a function of flame profile.

FIG. 2 is a schematic representation of the variation in heat flux within the side walls of furnace of a typical boiler, as a function of flame profile, as modified by one embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 3 is a schematic representation one aspect of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

For a further understanding of the nature and objects for the present invention, reference should be made to the detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like elements are given the same or analogous reference numbers

The present invention is a method for injecting shielding gas into a boiler comprising;

feeding at least one fuel stream and at least one oxidant stream, essentially devoid of nitrogen, to a combustion chamber wherein the fuel is substantially combusted to produce at least one combustion chamber jet and flue gas,

the improvement consisting of:

passing into a region of the combustion chamber a plurality of shielding gas streams, wherein the shielding gas streams are located, oriented, and controlled in a manner appropriate to protect an element in the region.

In the present invention said region is selected from the group consisting of: the combustion chamber,

a zone within the combustion chamber of predominantly radiant heat transfer,

a zone within the combustion chamber of maximum heat flux,

a zone within the combustion chamber where the heat flux exceeds a predetermined value,

a zone within the combustion chamber where the flue gas temperature is at a maximum, and

a zone within the combustion chamber where the flue gas temperature exceeds a predetermined value.

In the present invention, said element is selected from the group consisting of:

the walls of the combustion chamber,

the sides of the combustion chamber,

heat transfer elements positioned within the combustion chamber,

heat transfer elements positioned within a zone of predominantly radiant heat transfer within the combustion chamber, and

the boiler elements in contact with the flue gas.

In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected vertically parallel with and substantially adjacent to the walls of the combustion chamber. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected vertically parallel with and substantially adjacent to the heat transfer elements positioned within the combustion chamber. In the present invention the ballast streams may be located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected horizontally parallel and substantially adjacent to the heat transfer elements positioned within the combustion chamber. In the present invention the ballast streams may be located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected horizontally parallel and substantially adjacent to the heat transfer elements positioned within the combustion chamber.

In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected vertically parallel with and substantially adjacent to one or more zones within the combustion chamber where the heat flux exceeds a predetermined value. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected in a direction substantially parallel to the direction of the combustion chamber jet.

In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected in a direction substantially perpendicular to the direction of the combustion chamber jet. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected in a direction substantially convergent to the direction of the combustion chamber jet. In the present invention, the feeding ports for the shielding gas streams into the combustion chamber may be located more than 1 meter away from the burner jet.

In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be injected such that at least one of the shielding gas streams has a swirl rate between 0.05 and 5, preferably between 0.26 and 1.73. This swirl rate is defined as It over Ia, It and la being respectively tangential and axial impulsions of the fluid rotated in the stream.

The present invention may further comprise

providing system data into a control system,
controlling the injection of the shielding gas streams with this control system.

In the present invention, the system data may be selected from the group consisting of:

fuel type,

fuel characteristics,

fuel flows,

oxidant characteristics,

oxidant flows,

ballast gas characteristics to the burners,

ballast gas flows to the burners,

boiler operating conditions,

exiting flue gas composition, and

exiting flue gas temperature.

The present invention may further comprise;

  • mounting sensors in or on the elements of the combustion chamber,
  • inputting the output of the sensors into a control system,
  • controlling the injection of the shielding gas streams with this control system.

In the present invention, the sensors may measure a variable selected from the group consisting of wall temperature, tube skin temperature, water wall fluid temperature, tube fluid temperature, furnace gas temperature, and heat flux. In the present invention, the shielding gas may comprise recycled flue gas. In the present invention, the totality of injection of recycled flue gas into the boiler may be in the form of shielding gas.

In the present invention, the total injection of recycled flue gas into the boiler may be shared among ballast gas injected at the burners level and in the form of shielding gas. In the present invention, the ballast gas injected at the burners level may be injected separately to an oxidant stream. In the present invention, the ballast gas injected at the burners level may be injected after being mixed with an oxidant stream.

In the present invention, the shielding gas streams passing into the combustion chamber region may comprise at least one frequency with an amplitude of vibration, and wherein the boiler system comprises at least one natural frequency. In the present invention, the ratio between the lowest frequency created by at least one of the shielding gas injections and the lowest natural frequency of the boiler system may be comprised between 0 and 0.95 or between 1.05 and 100, and preferably between 0 and 0.6 or between 1.3 and 5.

In the present invention, the flow of the different shielding gas injections may be controlled by the measure of the amplitude of the vibration at a location of the oxy-boiler selected from the group consisting of:

burners,

oxy-boiler walls,

heat exchangers,

ducts,

stack,

fans.

In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may have a controlled composition. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may have undergone a clean-up treatment before injection. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may have undergone a partial clean-up treatment before injection, aiming specifically at reducing the concentration of certain components. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may have undergone a partial clean-up treatment before injection, aiming specifically at reducing the concentration of corrosive components. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may have undergone a total or partial drying, so as to reduce the moisture content of these streams.

In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be injected at temperatures between about −50° C. to about 1500° C., preferably between about 100° C. and about 250° C. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be injected at ambient temperature. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may have undergone thermal exchange against other fluids before injection. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may have undergone pre-heating before injection. In the present invention, the shielding gas streams may be injected at different temperature levels at each injection point.

It will be understood that many additional changes in the details, materials, steps and arrangement of parts, which have been herein described in order to explain the nature of the invention, may be made by those skilled in the art within the principle and scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the specific embodiments in the examples given above.

Claims

1. Method for injecting shielding gas into a boiler comprising;

feeding at least one fuel stream and at least one oxidant stream, essentially devoid of nitrogen, to a combustion chamber wherein the fuel is substantially combusted to produce at least one combustion chamber jet and flue gas,
passing into a region of the combustion chamber a plurality of shielding gas streams,
wherein the shielding gas streams are located, oriented, and controlled in a manner appropriate to protect an element in the region
wherein said region is selected from the group consisting of:
the combustion chamber,
a zone within the combustion chamber of predominantly radiant heat transfer,
a zone within the combustion chamber of maximum heat flux,
a zone within the combustion chamber where the heat flux exceeds a predetermined value,
a zone within the combustion chamber where the flue gas temperature is at a maximum, and
a zone within the combustion chamber where the flue gas temperature exceeds a predetermined value,
a zone within the combustion chamber where heat exchangers are placed; and
wherein said element is selected from the group consisting of:
the walls of the combustion chamber,
the sides of the combustion chamber,
heat transfer elements positioned within the combustion chamber,
heat transfer elements positioned within a zone of predominantly radiant heat transfer within the combustion chamber, and
the boiler elements in contact with the flue gas.

2. The method of claim 1, wherein the shielding gas streams are located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected vertically parallel with and substantially adjacent to the walls of the combustion chamber.

3. The method of claim 1, wherein the shielding gas streams are located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected in a direction substantially perpendicular or substantially parallel to the direction of the combustion chamber jet.

4. The method of claim 1, wherein the shielding gas streams are located, oriented, and controlled such that the shielding gas is injected in a direction substantially convergent to the direction of the combustion chamber jet.

5. The method of claim 1, wherein the shielding gas streams are injected such that at least one of the shielding gas streams has a swirl rate between 0.05 and 5.

6. The method of claim 5, wherein the shielding gas streams are injected such that at least one of the shielding gas streams has a swirl rate between 0.26 and 1.73.

7. The method of claim 1, further comprising

providing system data into a control system,
controlling the injection of the shielding gas streams with this control system.

8. The method of claim 7, wherein the system data is selected from the group consisting of:

fuel type,
fuel characteristics,
fuel flows,
oxidant characteristics,
oxidant flows,
ballast gas characteristics to the burners,
ballast gas flows to the burners,
boiler operating conditions,
exiting flue gas composition, and
exiting flue gas temperature.

9. The method of claim 1, further comprising

mounting sensors in or on the elements of the combustion chamber,
inputting the output of the sensors into a control system,
controlling the injection of the shielding gas streams with this control system.

10. The method of claim 9, wherein the sensors measure a variable selected from the group consisting of wall temperature, tube skin temperature, water wall fluid temperature, tube fluid temperature, furnace gas temperature, and heat flux.

11. The method of claim 1, wherein the shielding gas comprises recycled flue gas.

12. The method of claim 1, wherein the shielding gas streams passing into the combustion chamber region comprises at least one frequency with an amplitude of vibration, and wherein the boiler system comprises at least one natural frequency.

13. The method of claim 12 where the ratio between the lowest frequency created by at least one of the shielding gas injections and the lowest natural frequency of the boiler system is comprised between 0 and 0.95.

14. The method of claim 13 where the ratio between the lowest frequency created by at least one of the shielding gas injections and the lowest natural frequency of the boiler system is comprised between 1.05 and 100.

15. The method of claim 13 where the ratio between the lowest frequency created by at least one of the shielding gas injections and the lowest natural frequency of the boiler system is comprised between 1.3 and 5.

16. The method of claim 13, wherein the flow of the different shielding gas injections is controlled by the measure of the amplitude of the vibration at a location of the oxy-boiler selected from the group consisting of:

burners,
oxy-boiler walls,
heat exchangers,
ducts,
stack,
fans.
Patent History
Publication number: 20100101465
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 14, 2009
Publication Date: Apr 29, 2010
Applicant: L'Air Liquide Societe Anonyme Pour L'Etude et l'Exploitaion Des Procedes Georges Claude (Paris)
Inventors: Jacky Laurent (Saint-Cyr L'Ecole), Xavier Paubel (Chatenay Malabry), Jacques Mulon (Massy), Patrick Jean-Marie Recourt (Marcoussis), Ivan Sanchez-Molinero (Versailles), Remi Pierre Tsiava (Saint Germain-Les-Corbeil)
Application Number: 12/578,621
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: Supplying Fluid (110/348); Recirculation Means (110/204); With Boiler (110/234); Process Of Combustion Or Burner Operation (431/2); Of Noncombustible Fluid; E.g., Air, Etc. (110/188)
International Classification: F23C 9/00 (20060101); F23N 5/00 (20060101); F23L 7/00 (20060101);