Power Plant Combustion Theorey
Power Plant Combustion Theorey
Power Plant Combustion Theorey
Chaplin
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1. Combustion Fundamentals
1.1. Definitions of combustion
1.2. Principles of Combustion
1.3. Combustion Equations
2. Combustion Calculations
2.1. Concept of the Mole
2.2. Composition of Air
2.3. Excess Air Requirements
3. Energy Balances
3.1. Plant Efficiency
3.2. Boiler Efficiency (Input-Output Method)
3.3. Boiler Efficiency (Heat Loss Method)
4. Air-Fuel Ratios
4.1. Review
4.2. Exhaust Gas Analysis
4.3. Methods of Calculation
4.3.1. The Mole Method
4.3.2. The Joule Method (BTU Method)
5. Heat of Combustion
5.1. Calorific Value
5.2. Higher and Lower Heating Values
5.3. Combustion Temperatures
6. Combustion products
6.1. General
6.2. Nitrogen Oxides
6.3. Sulfur Dioxides
Glossary
Bibliography
Biographical Sketch
Summary
When a simple fuel such as carbon is burned in air, it combines with the oxygen to
produce carbon dioxide. If a hydrocarbon fuel is burned then, in addition, water is
produced from the hydrogen. Similarly various combustible impurities, such as sulfur,
produce their respective oxides, in this case sulfur dioxide.
THERMAL POWER PLANTS Vol. I - Power Plant Combustion Theory - R.A. Chaplin
Simple chemical balances of the reactants and products enable the quantities required or
produced to be determined. Ideally there should be no reactants left over in the products
to obtain chemically correct or stoichiometric combustion. The nitrogen in the air has to
be taken into account. Although it passes through the combustion process essentially
unreacted, it does dilute both the reactants and the products. The chemical equation
describing the combustion process therefore must include an amount of nitrogen on
each side. With this taken into account the required air-fuel mass ratios can be
determined for any particular fuel.
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Similarly it is possible to work backwards from a chemical analysis of the exhaust gas,
using the combustion equations, to determine the fuel constituents or air-fuel ratio. This
is a convenient method of monitoring the combustion efficiency of the boiler. In
practice, for complete combustion of the fuel, it is necessary to provide some excess air
beyond that necessary for stoichiometric conditions so some oxygen usually appears in
the exhaust gas.
It is also possible to determine the boiler thermal efficiency from an exhaust gas
analysis. The flue gas carries away a considerable amount of heat which is not
transferred to the water-steam circuit. Knowledge of the heating value of the fuel, the
gas-fuel ratio, the specific heat of the gases and their exhaust temperature is sufficient to
determine the boiler efficiency which is usually around 90 percent for large units.
1. Combustion Fundamentals
THERMAL POWER PLANTS Vol. I - Power Plant Combustion Theory - R.A. Chaplin
innocuous products. Oxygen is readily available from the atmosphere but is not pure.
The major constituent of the air is nitrogen and, although the relatively inert gas passes
through the combustion process largely unreacted, it does produce some undesirable
nitrogen oxide at high temperatures. Generally combustion for large scale heat
production should proceed continuously under stable conditions. This implies that the
fuel and oxygen must be supplied to the combustion zone continuously and the products
of combustion likewise removed. Within the combustion zone the air containing oxygen
must be brought into intimate contact with the fuel, irrespective of whether it is in
gaseous, liquid or solid form. This requires that fuel be well dispersed and the air
turbulent in the combustion zone. Liquid and solid fuels require suitable division into
small particles to ensure intimate mixing with the air.
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Solid fuels usually produce significant amounts of ash which must be removed from the
combustion zone but only after sufficient time has been allowed for the combustible
elements within the fuel particles to have fully reacted with the oxygen of the air.
The purpose of combustion is to produce heat which is radiated from the combustion
zone or carried away by the gaseous products of combustion. This heat is to be
transferred effectively to the working fluid of the thermodynamic cycle but a certain
portion is inevitably lost to the environment when the exhaust gases are discharged to
the atmosphere.
1.3. Combustion Equations
When various elements are burned in oxygen the products of the combustion process
can be determined from basic chemical equations.
When a solid fuel such as carbon is used, the product is carbon dioxide:
C + O 2 = CO 2
(1)
When a simple gaseous fuel such as methane is burned, water vapor as well as carbon
dioxide is produced:
CH 4 + 2O 2 = CO 2 + 2H 2 O
(2)
For more complex liquid hydrocarbon fuels, such as oil, which contain mixtures of
different hydrocarbons, the equations have to be written in a slightly different form and
the amount of each element in the fuel has to be considered.
2. Combustion Calculations
2.1. Concept of the Mole
Each element has a specific atomic mass and each compound a specific molecular mass.
These values are based on the number of protons and neutrons in the atom and, as such,
are somewhat arbitrary masses. Carbon has an atomic mass of 12, oxygen an atomic
THERMAL POWER PLANTS Vol. I - Power Plant Combustion Theory - R.A. Chaplin
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From a chemical point of view this is no different from the previous equation except
that nitrogen has been added and a mass balance using the mole concept yields the
following:
12 kg C + 32 kg O2 + 105.3 kg N2 = 44 kg CO2 + 105.3 kg N2
The procedure enables the amount of air required to burn a certain quantity of fuel to be
determined. In this case the air-fuel ratio is:
THERMAL POWER PLANTS Vol. I - Power Plant Combustion Theory - R.A. Chaplin
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The corresponding air fuel ratio to give 25 percent excess air is then given by:
mair mfuel = 14.3kg air / kg fuel
THERMAL POWER PLANTS Vol. I - Power Plant Combustion Theory - R.A. Chaplin
Black & Veatch (1996). Power Plant Engineering, Chapman & Hall.[ Good general text on power plant
design with chapters on various topics by specialists in the field]
British Electricity International (1991). Modern Power Station Practice, Volume B, Boilers and Ancillary
Plant, Pergamon Press.[ Good specialized text on boiler plant design and operation]
Cengel Y.A. & Boles M.A. (1989). Thermodynamics, an Engineering Approach, McGraw-Hill.[ Basic
thermodynamic text with chapter on combustion and combustion calculations]
Singer J.G. editor (1991). Combustion Fossil Power, Combustion Engineering ABB.[ Detailed text on
boiler design and operation. Includes material on fuels and combustion]
Stultz S.C. & Kitto J.B. editors (1992). Steam, Its Generation and Use, Babcock and Wilcox. [Excellent
text on boiler plant design and operation. Includes chapters on all types of fuels and combustion as well
as environmental controls and effluent treatment]
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Biographical Sketch
Robin Chaplin obtained a B.Sc. and M.Sc. in mechanical engineering from University of Cape Town in
1965 and 1968 respectively. Between these two periods of study he spent two years gaining experience
in the operation and maintenance of coal fired power plants in South Africa. He subsequently spent a
further year gaining experience on research and prototype nuclear reactors in South Africa and the United
Kingdom and obtained M.Sc. in nuclear engineering from Imperial College of London University in
1971. On returning and taking up a position in the head office of Eskom he spent some twelve years
initially in project management and then as head of steam turbine specialists. During this period he was
involved with the construction of Ruacana Hydro Power Station in Namibia and Koeberg Nuclear Power
Station in South Africa being responsible for the underground mechanical equipment and civil structures
and for the mechanical balance-of-plant equipment at the respective plants. Continuing his interests in
power plant modeling and simulation he obtained a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from Queen=s
University in Canada in 1986 and was subsequently appointed as Chair in Power Plant Engineering at the
University of New Brunswick. Here he teaches thermodynamics and fluid mechanics and specialized
courses in nuclear and power plant engineering in the Department of Chemical Engineering. An
important function is involvement in the plant operator and shift supervisor training programs at Point
Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station. This includes the development of material and the teaching of
courses in both nuclear and non-nuclear aspects of the program.