Controlling Fired Heaters
Controlling Fired Heaters
Controlling Fired Heaters
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Ad he eq h c t b ~... Vince G. Gom McG Univ here are two prim obje in furn ope 3. Air sy fo co a A p system Hum respo is inad for con effi to ab 90 Th ar w c o
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CONTROLLINGFIREDHEATERS
t-,... I
tion-fuel efficiency and safety while maintaining the desired flow, temperature and pressure conditions. The complex interactions between the process variables, and the multiple simultaneous manipulations needed to meet the objectives, make automatic control essential. Split-second decisions required to prevent an explosion hazard in a fuel-efficient furnace (low excess-air operation) are best left to automatic protection
T
widely used with fired heaters. Design of the heat-recovery system is based on fluegas temperature, dewpoint, and the temperature of the stream that picks up the waste beato The decision to use such equipment should be based on a technoeconomic feasibility study. Broadly speaking, heat-recovery systems can include: 1. Process-stream heating in convection section. 2. Steam generation.
heaters are the most widely used heat-recovery system
in boosting
a system.
the
furnace
operations.
of fundamentals
instrumentation
of such
The
1--I
The factors that determine heater efticiency are: 1. Fluegas exit temperature. 2. Excess-air for combustion. 3. Type o fuel. 4. Heater casing loss. Improvement in heater efficiency is usuaIly realized by incorporating: a heat-recovery system; improved instrumentation and control; more-efficient burners; improved insulation; efficient soot blowers; reduced air leaks.
.
.Airflowrate.
. . . .
.
. Operating
Process
excess-air.
fluid flowrate.
Furnace draft.
Flame condition.
Combustibles.
~-
CHEMICAL
ENGINEERING/JANUARY
7,198563/~---.-
ensuring long-term accuracy. However, the overall system accuracy and flow range are limited by the differential-pressure secondary instrumentation (transmitters, meters, etc.). Hence, care must be exercised in the selection of the secondary instruments. Excess-air estimation used
The
~IR HE % o di p f . B com the to pe pr 1 y t o Good contr requi good mea devi The foc flow meas howe pose som prob sinc ventu yield a l press drop ow but is com tively expen and may requ a d tran from uct a r to c ectan cros The ircu Ann Essen an Annu elem has char sim ele for E, pr by th c i g b s rangin withi 1% of value base on 95% of test poin It E r lag [0 ga x gen in sam ga T = T (a e Be its ou vo is te tion to the log of O c o s o
Tamparatura-controllad
chambar
"" ""
-.
"
,..'
Mounting plata' \ \ \
unracovarad
(i.a.,
prassura
loss) *
I I
Support
plata
Aspiration-air
lina ,/
11 9 21 16 13 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 3 2
c/
60%
ot the
d itterential
Choosing a transducer
herewillbemainlyonprimarymeasuringelements.
as to which is preferable,
ceramicsensingelementhascometobewidelypre-.
but
oxygen
analyzers
are
-"
Flow
measurement
Fuel-oil,
and
process-fluid,
flowrate
measurement
can
be
ferred. It offers several advantages ayer the other existing types-such as reduced maintenance requirements,
mnimumsample-conditioningneeds,abilitytohandledirtyfluegases,andgreaterresolutionatlowoxygen combinationwithothersuitablemonitoringdevicessuch...~asthecombustiblessensor.Apartanoftheaspirated~sampleisredinaclosedlooptothesensor(whichis.
satisfactorily achieved by orfice meters. The fuel-gas flowrate can be corrected by using a densitometer. Airan orfice produces a high, permanent, pressure loss. The
content-and is readily adaptable for use as a probe type or extractive type. The extractive type can be used in
element
TheAnnubarisanaveragingtypeofflowelemento
has be en found
suitable
housed
in a temperature-controlled
chamber)
and is dis-
charged back to the furnace (Fig. 1). The sensor output signal is determined with respect to
theoxygencontentofareferencegassuchasair.The
is further reported to have a 0.1 %-of-value repeatability, based on an average of various differential-pressure readings. The permanent pressure loss in the Annubar is comparable to that of the venturi tube; hence, it is much less energy-intensive compared with the orfice plate (Table I). Further, the Annubar is relatively insensitive to surface wear or abrasion on edges or sensor parts,
[02Jsample
gas
[02]Reg.
gas
the cell has to be maintained at a constant temperature. Since the resulting output signal is inversely pro porpledgas,thesignalstrengthishigheratlowerconcen-~
tration.
resolutionareobtainableatthelowerrangeofoperating~
Therefore,
(see
greater
II).
accuracy,
reliability
and'r
excess-air
Table
indicators
to control
low-excess-air
trim
are
oxygen
and carbon
CHEMICALENGINEERING/JANUARY7,1985
monoxide
meters.
Controversy
exists
It is advisable to locate the analyzer installation at the heater bheching, where errors due to air leakage are
64 '-'
"
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'
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Temperature
Thermocouple temperature measurement is adequate in a heater environment. For better estimation of fluegas ,-..Aemperature, a velocity thermocouple is recommended [1], because of its superior sampling technigue.
--
qui mo fo fla fa T u f Accu 1 % o exce 2 ftrib hea hav co fi th U c Th gas be the ex el b i Ho the UV ra fi ar n e d wi a f en h la a p v ing ang acr pl of th fl is re B Resp range 190nm (wa nei fla by pr po U e bur is int fit w a U s f c Powe cons 15 V A Th life ex of d d the lig sig to th so de w i u UV spe bu ar co b a v a Comb O2 and CO anal can be used to trim ay wh m c b e t The main objec of the cont syst for a fdis urn tem and the philo rega com fail A repres schem will be exam in the fvll
Flame
Useofforced-draftburnerswithelectricalignitionre-
scanning
scanner
comprisesapairofhighlypolishedmolybdenum(or
offers an excellent
Repeatability: Response
0.2%
of measured 3,200F
value
time:
5 s (approximate) 0.1-120
(max.),
with
ceramic
probe
std.
ft3/h
'
2 psig
sometimes tungsten) electrodes positioned at a certain distance from each other inside a helium-filled glass bulbo
Aspirator
at
15 to 100
Combustibles
Catalytic
independent
of 2 sensor
Flame-off
delay:
1-3
s (preset)
for
sides,itisadvisabletoeliminateinterferencefrom
uponbeingstruckbyUVphotons.Theresultantpulse
frequency is a direct measure of the radiation intensity received, thus providing a realizable means for discrimination between the main flame and its neighbors.
optimum
viewing
plane
and
angle.
Temperature Field
range
(operating):
0-60
of view:
3 deg
Purge/cooling "Fault"
air:
1 ft3/min 100
with higher
operating
temperature.
Hence,
proper
hous-
"Flame-on"
sensitivity:
1 }J.W/cm2 }J.W/cm2
sensitivity:
ing and use of cooling air, in addition to an air purge for cleaning the optics, are necessary. Table nI provides a brief summary of typical specification figures. In addition to the detecting-tube type, solid-state scanners algo are available. However, solid-state devices (diode/transistor) are very temperature-sensitive and require installation at a cool, remate location. Therefore, fiber-optic bundle s normally are used for transmitting
ally placed not more than 6 ft away. Commerciallyavail-
expected
~theexitoftheconvectionsectionorinthefluegasduct,a
to be minimum.
at
leak
analysis
is recommended
required
correction
to analyzer readings.
lower
spectra are selected for operation. Modern flame detectors are designed and located for sensing multiple characteristics of a flame before the
Fired-heater control
General description
presenceoftheflameisacknowledged.Thus,itisnot
unusual to find a burner unit fitted with more than one detector head and detector unit logic, including selfchecking features, to take care of sensor failure.
suit
a particular
system.
The
controllers
most
widely
With air preheating are t: 1. Meter fuel according to load demando 2. Proportion air and fuel for complete combustion. 3. Optimize excess-air for fuel efficiency. 4. Initiate protective measures in the event of a flameout or a faTI failure. 5. Maintain optimum draft conditions. 6. Monitor fluegas combustibles and air-preheater cold-end temperature.
used for the analog control system to be described are the parameter-optimized proportional-integral (PI) or the proportional-integral-derivative (PID) type.
Fuel-air control
7.
Monitor
process-stream
conditions.
There are many possible variations of the control scheme that depend on the particular fired-heater sys-
The firing-rate-demand signal is used for regulating the fuel and air flowrates. This signal is derived from the deviation of the process-fluid outlet condition from that desired (setpoint). The process-fluid outlet condition is usually determined from the fluid temperature. In case ofvaporization within a very narrow temperature range, -the fluid pressure is use,d as the feedback. The simultaneous fuel and air control (Fig. 2) employs a cross-limit control system. It ensures that fuel demand does not exceed
CHEMICALENGINEERING/JANUARY7,1985 65---
measured
The firing-rate-demand signal is sent to a pair of signalselectr relays-highand low-signal selectors. The high-signal selector compares the firing-rate demandagainsttheoperatingtotal-fuel-flowsignal.The
changes by the fuel/air controllers within the limits ofthe bias. The high-signal selector: causes the air to lead the causes the air to lag the fuel during the decreasing
mode.
~RE HE does not drop below meas fuel flow (plu tole onl wit the lim of th bi T n fu o o on a d fir ec m a c t lector includ a s nega bias appl mal to the tota Th out of low se is th s f fuel durin the incre firin mod and the fue flo sig is ad fo e B wit res to the fu ga A fu G a f g for the airflo contr The feed sign to the latThe pro flo is co b a f c ~ l cha du to flu in th fl b u by high and low limit to a n rang of 0.8 to 1.2 arro flow contr is sent the force (FD faT inle diti Th FD faT ou is co (F 3 b t O2 tran O2 cont A = F dete saf inte lam
airflow. (plus tolerance) and that the airflow
flameoff, a purge signal is activated and an override signal for startup is substituted for the control signal.
The low-signal selector compares the firing-rate-demandsignalagainsttheoxygen-trimmedairflowsignal. .,.J Asmallpositivebiasisappliedtotheairflowsignalto
permit
a certain
initial
response
to load changes,
though
latter
is obtained
from
a "summer"
of the
conditioned
se-
the low-signal selector are: cause the fuel to lead the air
fuel to lag the air with increasing firing-rate demando
firing-
the fuel flow controller, the feedback signal being the total fuel flowrate. For combination firing, the fuel-gas flowrate signal is corrected for density variations, and
rate-demand
can be controlled
simultaneously
in case
of combination
teristheoxygen-trimmedairflowsignal.Thissignalis
derived
from
the
airflow
transmitter
and
subsequently
adjusted
oxygen
by a multiplication
controller. The
fctor determined
to the
by the
trim
steam
is controlled
by a differential
pressure
controller.
trim
feedback
oxygen
controller is the oxygen analyzer signal. The output of the oxygen. controller, as a safety precaution, is filtered
(typical).
valle
stationandtheflamesafetyinterlocks.Inthemanual
ler.Afeedforwardcontrolloop,toanticipateload
for
the
fuel-air
control
system.
In the automatic
through
mode,
the output
of the aircontrol
Fan control
positioner
the
manual/automatic
under a balanced-draft
con-
mode,
the
airflow
control
signal
is interrupted,
and
In case of
pressure
Fuel gas
Fue! oil
Oxygen analyzer
Combustion air
Process
stream
(outlet
line)
Flow
transmitter
Btu
corrector
Fuel-tlowsummerM-Astation
Fuel-tlow
controller
Hi-Io
limiter
Low-signal selector
Airtlow
controller
/
T=Fueltrip
M-A=Manual/Automatic
control
station
.:lKf
= PI controller
66
CHEMICALENGINEERING/JANUARY7,1985Lowtire-/I1:..;..,/~"-d'
Lowfire
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1. Th dro do ar to or o t s F h cause furna implo The furn draf is con for clase to -1.0 mm wate pres at the arch by sure at the heate arch, via one or mor high sen ing on stand philo adop A s may yst num or a s FD fallo The drop pare doo are sim ally adjus the degre of open In the eve of FD
fan failure the following course of action is prescribed:
ture.Ontheotherhand,excessivelowpressuremay
adjusting the induced-draft (ID) fan inlet-vane positioner. The feedback to the draft controller is the prespressure
IntheeventofeitherFDorIDfanfailures,certain
transmitter(s).
3. If (1) and (2) (if applicable) do not occur within a specified time, the fuel to the furnace is to be cut off and
theIDfanistotrip,incaseofstandbyFDfanfailure.
corrective
or protective either
steps
are recommended,
depend-
Furnace
IntheeventofIDfanfailure:
accommodate
dropout
doors
on the burner-air
ple-
1. Stack
fully-open or fully-closed dampers operated by pneumatic cylinders. The solenoid val ves activate the switching from forced to natural draft operation. The stack damper is configured similarly, with the option of manu-
initiation.
2. If the furnace is designed to operate below a certain limit with natural draft, the heater load is to be adjusted
likewise.
otherwisetheFDfanandfuelaretotrip,withpurge
Fan failures
are detected
by line-pressure
switches
Stack
damper
---, I I I I I I I I I
~
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Washing/fire-
'-""
lA = C alarm urre ST = S trap tea PT P trans ress PIC P res No L ~ o ZS swit osi
I/P = Electrical-to-pneumatic
I extinguishing I water I I I I I I I I I I
--m
I I I I I I I I I I 1
-ti
HC=Manualloader
IS
= Current
PG=PressuregagoPS~PressureswitchPA=Pressurealarm
indicator-controller
TG=TemperaturegagoTS=TemperatureswitchTA=TemperaturealarmSOV=Solenoidvalve
H=HighCHEMICALENGINEERING/JANUARY7,198567-
~IR HE (low at FD fan outle and high at ID fan inle and low trip, the inlet valle are held in the last pos ity. AI sta co by Z o par be fin on tu O s t quick refere to perfo qual Furt a l ow rosion The highalarm also serv to ind cate the possi of fire haza owin to com sions for both the FD and the ID fallo The resp lag of the ons an os re m b o min up off pr H th o dition The 30% mini airfl is mai unti the heate reach of rated capa Initi firin is acof hea ma jus th us of m with an electr spark The flam dete are bro below the minim perm (typ 30% the fue tion of sw tra an bu tr f the ma to the au m C d c R V H E 1. Re R. D. "F Op G P T 1 p 5 2. Sm C. L., "D Co Pr C In T V i p a s M Q H 2 C dy an co a H ho a B T d f th r K In h h f range freed from conta and acce for Tr D o E In L f (N w o p
motor-current switches. In the event of excessive high or low pressures at the furnace arch, fuel and fan trip action should take place, to protect the furnace. During a fuel
the operator switches to manual control. until Air-preheater
Afewinstrumentsareexclusivelyusedformonitoring
instrumentation
performance
Specific component problems should be considered during procurement-for example, setpoint drifting, deadband (inability to reset on signal reversal) problems, and service life of switching elements. Tuning the control scheme described above can be a challenging task by itself. However, proper testing, analysis and documentation should lead, finally, to a tuned system. The basic tuning method involves the use of
J,
input perturbations
determine
the
air
preheater
(Fig.
3).
the controller
methods
Isolation dampers are provided on the inlet and outlet ducts for air and fluegas. Suitable panel and fieldmounted pressure and temperature indicators serve as
Cohen-Coon
preliminary
temperature alarm on the fluegas outlet duct serves to indicate the operating limit for preventing cold-end cor-
Alarms
in case oflarge
pressure
excur-
controllers by simulation, prior to actual operations. AIso it is important to consider the sequence of tuning controllers, and the interaction between them. For example, the airflow controller and the heater-pressure (draft) controller interact (with respect to their outputs) to a certain extent. In such cases, the dr::tft controller is tuned first and its response tested to changes in airflow;
theairflowcontrolleristunedseparately-uponplacing~
the fan dampers, the flexing of the damper linkages, and the wearing-out of bearings should be carefully checked.
accumulation,orlowheat-transferduetofouling.
because
duringsimultaneouscontrolleractionthanwhentested
the
airflow
controller's
response
is more
rapid
by itself. In this case the furnace-pressure controller must be able to deal with any airflow distutbance with furnace-pressure controller must be retained flow-controller sensitivity reduced.
final thoughts
bustibles
movedpriortoinitiationoffiJing.Thiscanbeaccom-
accumulated
in the furnace
are completely
re-
plished by passing air through the furnace at a minimum rate, or by passing low-pressure steam into the firebox,
Some
The increasing
"../
complished online.
with
a group
of ignitors control
that
light
the
fuel
If the combustion
tripped.
drops
is
automatically
Further, the safeguard system does not startup unless safety sequences are followed.
control. Considering the increasing capabilities of microprocessors, and the downward trend of their price, this certainly appears attractive. Even if implementation costs barren to be comparable, it is worthwhile to take a rapid glance at the advantages of digital control when applied to heaters-flexibility in logic implementation, process deadtime compensation, synchronization becontrollogic (e.g., adaptive control) elimina-
during
the testing
and startup
schedules.
trol systems
tweenprimaryandsecondarycontrolloops,useofso-"'~
phisticated
are probably
already
Aspects to consider
Many equipment-related problems are caused by selecting underdesigned components or improperly locating components for demanding service requirements. This especially applies to field-mounted sensors. Such components should be weather-resistant with respect to moisture (at least NEMA-3 rating) and ambient temperature. Further considerations should include mounting-surface temperature, and possible vibration-induced operating problems of components installed on the fan or firing
equipment.
References
Co.,
1972.
research Chemical
Theauthor
of
University,
specializing
3480 University
St.,
in the areas
of process
The sensor-Iocation philosophy should also be based on: obtaining a representative signal ayer the operating
calibration, etc. Transmitters for individ-
Indian
Institute
of Technology,
maintenance,
ual sensing taps, and the need for sensing-line purging, also should be kept in mind. 68
CHEMICALENGINEERING/JANUARY7,1985
equipment.