1 - 201 - Steam and Water Drums
1 - 201 - Steam and Water Drums
1 - 201 - Steam and Water Drums
In the early designs the drums were riveted or solid forged from a single
ingot, but for modern boilers the drum is generally fabricated from steel
plate of differing thicknesses and welded. The materials used are
governed by classification society rules. Test pieces must be provided.
The cylindrical drum is normally constructed from four plates.
Two dished End plates, a thick wall tube plate (thicker to accommodate
the holes drilled in it without increased stress) and completed with a
thinner wrapper plate.
Construction takes the form of rigidly clamping the descaled,
bent wrapper and tube plates together. In addition test pieces cut from
the original material are attached to the construction in such away that
the longitudinal weld extends either sided of the join. These pieces are
later removed and shaped test shapes cut out from specified areas
including across the weld.
The longitudinal weld is critical (taking twice the
circumferential stress) and is normally carried out by specialized
automatic machinery using submerged arc techniques.
The dished end pieces are accurately aligned and welded.
On completion the construction is cleaned and non-destructive
testing- such as x-ray photography, carried out. Final machining is
carried out and any stub pieces and doublers attached. The now
complete drum is heat treated at 600 to 650'C.
The final process is hydraulic testing to classification
requirements. Natural circulation within a boiler is due to the differing
specific gravities of the water at the differing temperatures, the steam
drum provides a reservoir of cool water to give the gravitational head
necessary for natural circulation. Cool water entering the steam drum
via the feed lines provides the motive effect for the circulation
distributing it to the downcomers.
Also the space within the drum provides for the separation of
the steam and water emulsions formed in the water walls and the
generating tubes. Water droplets entrained with the separated steam are
Figure 1
The internal fittings in the steam drum help distribute the water evenly
throughout the drum, separate the generated steam from the water and
remove moisture from the steam before it leaves the boiler (refer to Figure
2).
Figure 2
Water drum
Distributes feed water from the downcomers to the headers and
generating tubes. Provides a space for accumulating precipitates and
allows them to be blown down.
Water drum size is limited to that required to receive the
generating tubes, for modern radiant heat boilers with only a single bank
of screen tubes and no generating tubes between the drums, the water
drum has been replaced by a header and the downcomers fed straight to
the waterwall headers. With system blow down is done at the steam
drum. Too small a water drum can cause problems of maintaining ideal
water level and little steam reserve