Cost of Steam
Cost of Steam
Cost of Steam
Boosting the productivity and competitiveness of U.S. industry through improvements in energy and environmental performance
One of the problems is that the cost of steam depends on the generation rate, especially in complex multi-boiler multi-fuel plants that also have steam turbines. To most people, this is not intuitively obvious. In this BestPractices Steam Technical Brief, we will show how to calculate the steam cost at different process operating rates, and demonstrate through an illustrative example that the only way to do this accurately is through steam-system modeling. Consider the simplified system shown in Figure 1, taken from an actual plant. Exhaust to Atmosphere Flue Gas Combustion Air Fuel Input Blowdown Steam BFW Sludge to Disposal Main Steam Header Vent C Vent B BPST Flash Drum Deaerator Vent A Bypass BFW Makeup BD to Sewer
BPST = Backpressure Steam Turbine BFW = Boiler Feedwater BD = Blowdown
Alkali Scrubber
kW
Process
Condensate Tank
3. Boiler feed water treatmentincluding clarification, softening, demineralization (CBFW) 4. Feedwater pumping power (CP) 5. Combustion air fan (FD or ID) power (CA) 6. Sewer charges for boiler blowdown (CB) 7. Ash disposal (CD) 8. Environmental emissions control (CE) 9. Maintenance materials and labor (CM) Calculating the cost of generating steam is relatively easy. The total variable cost of raising steam, CG, is the sum of all these individual contributions, expressed as dollars per thousand pounds ($/Klb) of steam generated: CG = CF + CW + CBFW + CP + CA + CB + CD + CE + CM Fuel cost is usually the dominant component, accounting for as much as 90% of the total. It is given by: CF = aF x (HS hW)/1000/B where aF = fuel cost, ($/MMBtu) HS = enthalpy of steam, Btu/lb hW= enthalpy of boiler feedwater, Btu/lb B = overall boiler efficiency, fractional. Overall boiler efficiency is based on combustion air supply at ambient temperature, and boiler feedwater makeup temperature to the deaerator. It is assumed that boiler feedwater preheat from ambient to condensate temperature (usually about 200F) will be done by heat exchange against a process stream, outside the boiler island battery limits, with only some top-up heat recovery against hot boiler blowdown. The use of steam to preheat boiler feedwater was common when energy was cheap, but using surplus process heat instead (from below the process pinch temperature) represents a significant opportunity for improved cycle efficiency. Overall boiler efficiency becomes primarily a function of the final flue gas temperature, and will typically be in the range of 80 to 85% when the excess air ratios are near optimal. In principle, one should calculate the individual cost components rigorously for the site-specific conditions. In practice, it is usually sufficient to use an approximation: CG = CF (1 + 0.30) The number 0.30 represents a typical value for the sum of cost components 2 through 9 above (in oil- and gas-fired facilities). However, it could be more in smaller facilities, or in those that use coal and biomass. Normally, maintenance costs could be considered fixed, rather than variable. If the plant has multiple boilers, however, and there is an option to shut down one or more of them as the steam production rate is reduced, then maintenance costs should more properly be considered to be variable. The second step is to calculate the cost of steam at lower pressure levels. This is not easy, as the cost depends upon the path that the steam follows from the point of generation to the point of use. Low-pressure steam that is produced through a pressure letdown station, usually a pressure-reducing valve (PRV), has substantially the same enthalpy as the higher-pressure steam from which it was made. Therefore, it will be superheated, and the normal practice is to desuperheat it using condensate. The low-pressure steam cost is then calculated from the high-pressure steam cost as: CL = CH x (HSL hW)/(HSH hW) where HSL = enthalpy of low-pressure steam, Btu/lb HSH = enthalpy of high-pressure steam, Btu/lb.
Making low-pressure steam through a PRV is inefficient. For steam flows over 50,000 lb/h, it is usually far more cost effective to extract by-product power by passing the steam through a backpressure steam turbine. When the low-pressure steam is produced through a turbine, its cost is calculated as: CL = CH 1000 x aE x (HSH H*SL)/3413/T/G where aE = electrical power cost, $/kWh H*SL= enthalpy of low-pressure steam from isentropic expansion of high-pressure steam, Btu/lb T = isentropic efficiency of steam turbine, fractional G = generator efficiency, fractional. The difficulty is to assign the correct cost to the increase or decrease in low-pressure steam consumption, which depends on the path followed by steam from the point of generation to the point of use (for example, PRV or turbine). The only way to determine the correct value is to develop a heat and material balance simulation model of the system.
In addition to the material balances, we must also develop the heat (enthalpy) balance equations for each subsystem. The combined set of equations is solved algebraically. Examination of the overall balance shows that there is one more unknown variable than there are equations, so it is necessary to solve the problem iteratively. This is not a problem, and the calculations tend to converge fairly rapidly in a unique solution. The recommended computational strategy is to assume a trial value of steam generation rate, and proceed to solve the equations for boiler feedwater makeup, condensate return, blowdown, and boiler feedwater. The individual subsystem balances are then solved in a top-down sequence: steam header, blowdown flash drum, condensate tank and deaerator. The new calculated steam rate is then compared with the assumed trial rate, and this is repeated until the two values converge to within an acceptable difference. The net cost of operating the system is equal to the cost of steam generation less the credit for power generation in the turbine. For simple systems with steady steam demand, the calculation only needs to be done once, and then adjusted periodically when external circumstances or assumptions change. A computer-based model may not even be necessary. Most large industrial steam systems are typically much more complex: with multiple boilers, multiple fuels, multiple pressure levels, and alternative connection paths (for example, PRVs and turbines) between the different steam headers, as in Figure 2. For them, it is particularly important that an accurate computer-based model is developed, and that the model is run frequently, perhaps as often as three times per day.
For evaluating energy conservation and/or efficiency improvement projects, it is the marginal cost that should be determined. The first step is to decide on basic operating parameters for the combined heat and power system, including condensate return rate, boiler blowdown, deaerator pressure, fuel mix, condensate temperature, boiler feedwater makeup supply temp, the process steam demand profile, PRV, and steam turbine flows. The model is then used to calculate the total operating cost for this base case scenario, as in Table 1. How does the total operating cost change if the consumption of low-pressure steam, at 12 pounds per square inch gauge (psig), in the process either increases or decreases by some amount, Y lb/h? To determine this, we manually change the input value of the low-pressure process steam consumption by the appropriate amount, and make a note of the new operating cost calculated by the model. However, the model should accurately incorporate the plant operating policy for fluctuations in the
0.0 Klb/h
0.0 Klb/h
0.0 Klb/h
Swing Boiler
Max. Cap. (Klb/h) 32 Boiler Eff. (%) 83 % of Capacity 85
Boiler #1
Boiler #2
200 psig 387.9F (saturated) 1204 Btu/lb 80 psig Users 13.3 Klb/h Blow Off 12 psig Users 250.5 Klb/h
Vent
Figure 2. Simplified Schematic Flowsheet of Combined Heat and Power System for a Sugar Refinery
Comments
Operating Costs:
Quantity 363.6 KCF/h 0.52 MW 246.4 gpm 47.4 gpm Unit Cost, $ @ Unit 2.40 KCF 61.0 MWH 1.00 Kgal 0.25 Kgal Total MM$/yr 6.70 0.24 0.11 0.01 7.06
process-steam demand. For example, important information includes whether the reduction in steam input to the low-pressure header is through a PRV or through a steam turbine, whether the required degree of superheat is being maintained, whether the correct boiler and fuel are being scaled back, whether the equipment capacity constraints are being observed, and whether the correct boiler and turbine efficiencies are being used at the new flow conditions. This procedure is repeated for several additional perturbations, and the results are tabulated and illustrated in Table 2 and Figure 3. Table 2 shows that the marginal cost of low-pressure steam varies significantly with operating rate, because the low-pressure steam follows different paths through the combined heat and power system. At the low end, when the process steam demand is 152.8 Klb/h, the gas boiler (#1) is being operated at its minimum rate (30% of capacity). Under these conditions, gas is the more expensive fuel, and the coal boilers (#2 through 6) are operated to provide the balance of steam demand. Turbogenerators #2 and #3 are at their minimum operating rates, 20 and 40 Klb/h respectively. As the process steam requirement increases the load on the coal boilers increases, as well as the amount of steam passed through turbogenerator #3 up to its maximum capacity of 110 Klb/h. As the steam demand increases, further, the flow through turbogenerator #2 starts to increase. At some point the preferred operating rate of 85% for the coal boilers is reached. Further increases in steam demand must now be supplied from the gas boiler. Once the flow through turbogenerator #2 reaches its maximum capacity of 60 Klb/h, further demand for lowpressure steam can now only be provided by passing high-pressure steam through a PRV. The marginal cost of low-pressure steam therefore takes a dramatic rise. As low-pressure steam demand continues
to increase, the maximum capacity of the gas-fired boiler is reached, and the coal-fired boilers need to be used, pushing them to their maximum safe operating limit of approximately 95%. Notice that the marginal fuel starts out as coal, then switches to gas, and then switches back to coal. The marginal low-pressure steam cost depends not only on the marginal fuel; it also depends on the path that the incremental steam flow follows between the point of generation and the point of use. The results of Table 2 are plotted graphically in Figure 3, and show that the net steam cost is not constant. In fact, the net steam cost varies significantly with consumption rate, depending on the path being followed. The operating policy, as described above, is implicit in these curves. The same approach can be taken to determine the marginal cost curves for medium- and high-pressure steam. 4.5 4 3.5 3 Normal Operating Point
Cost, $/Klb
140
160
180
200
220
240
260
280
300
Figure 3. Variation of Net Low-Pressure Steam Cost (Marginal) with Consumption Rate Illustrative Example for Evaluating a Proposed Energy Conservation Project
This example is for a proposed project to use the exhaust vapors from an evaporator as the heat source for the reboiler of a distillation column, as illustrated in Figure 4. Anticipated savings will be in 15-psig steam to the reboiler and cooling water load on the evaporator condenser, but the steam supply to the evaporator chest will have to be upgraded from 15 psig to 50 psig. The existing steam balance is shown in Figure 5. The plant operates 8,000 hours per year. The combined heat and power system balance was calculated using a simulation model, which
Existing Process:
210 F Cooling Water 10 MMBtu/h Column
Feed 212 F
Proposed Retrofit:
250 F
Column
Boiler
200 psig Users 10.0 1000 kw 50 psig Users 10.0 23 10 Blow Off 0.4
1 Vent 14 15 psig
Deaerator
Condensate Header
Figure 5. Combined Heat and Power System for Example Problem Table 3: Summary of Key Project Parameters (from model)
Existing
Evaporator Steam Pressure, psig Steam v, Btu/lb Steam Flow, klb/h Steam Pressure, psig Steam v, Btu/lb Steam Flow, klb/h Steam Generation in Boiler, klb/h Condensate Return to Boiler, klb/h Steam Flow thru 50/15 PRV, klb/h Steam Flow thru Turbine, klb/h Power Generated in Turbine, kW Cooling Tower Duty, MMBtu/h 15 945 11.64 15 945 10.58 113.00 60.00 18.00 50.00 2.00 Q
Proposed
50 910 12.09 15 945 0 102.00 49.90 5.00 40.00 1.60 Q-10
Difference
455
Reboiler
Now consider the results from the recommended simulation modeling approach, with the affected utilities priced consistently, as follows: Steam from boiler (at 200 psig) = $3.00 per Klb Condensate return to boiler = $0.30 per Klb Purchased electrical power = $0.05 per kWh Cooling tower duty = $0.50 per MMBtu The project economics are now calculated based on the material balance shown in Table 3: Net utility savings = boiler fuel savings reduced condensate credit reduced power generation credit + savings in cooling tower duty = (11 x 3.00 10.1 x 0.30 400 x 0.05 + 10 x 0.50) x 8000 = $120,000 per yr Estimated capital cost = $150,000 = 150/120 Simple payback = 1.25 years From this calculation, the project would clearly appear to be beneficial.
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Basis: Boiler produces 200 psig superheated steam Lower-pressure steam is desuperheated using 250 F Boiler Feedwater
Why do the two calculating methods give such different answers? The reason is that the simple method does not properly account for the different paths followed by steam, whereas the model method does. Thus, the model method is the recommended approach.
Conclusion
Accurately determining steam costs is important for monitoring and managing energy use in a plant, for evaluating proposed design changes to the generation/distribution infrastructure and the process itself, and for continuing to identify competitive advantages through plant efficiency improvements. Steam costs are highly dependent on the path that steam follows in the generation and distribution system. Simulation models are simple, convenient, and reliable tools to follow these paths, calculate the correct costs, and to optimize the system. The method used for evaluating utility costs has a dramatic effect on project economics, and therefore the investment decision. Improper utility pricing can lead to bad decisions; good projects can be discarded, and bad projects can be implemented. Regrettably, this is relatively common. To avoid such mistakes, it is imperative that plant engineers and managers use appropriate methods for steam pricing, taking into account all the parameters that impact energy costsfuel, condensate, power generation, and cooling waterwhen evaluating proposed projects.
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FOR A
S TRONG A MERICA
Energy efficiency and clean, renewable energy will mean a stronger economy, a cleaner environment, and greater energy independence for America. By investing in technology breakthroughs today, our nation can look forward to a more resilient economy and secure future. Far-reaching technology changes will be essential to Americas energy future. Working with a wide array of state, community, industry, and university partners, the U.S. Department of Energys Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy invests in a diverse portfolio of energy technologies that will: Conserve energy in the residential, commercial, industrial, government, and transportation sectors Increase and diversify energy supply, with a focus on renewable domestic sources Upgrade our national energy infrastructure Facilitate the emergence of hydrogen technologies as a vital new energy carrier.
A CKNOWLEDGEMENTS :
The Industrial Technologies Program would like to thank Kumana & Associates, for writing this BestPractices Steam Technical Brief, and the BestPractices Steam technical subcommittee for reviewing the publication.
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