STEAM
POWER PLANT
Coal needs to be stored at various
stages of the preparation process, and conveyed around the CPP facilities. Coal
handling is part of the larger field of bulk material handling, and is a complex and
vital part of the CPP.
Stockpiles
Stockpiles provide surge capacity to various
parts of the CPP. ROM coal is delivered with large variations in production
rate of tonnes per hour (tph). A ROM stockpile is used to allow the washplant
to be fed coal at lower, constant rate. A simple stockpile is formed by
machinery dumping coal into a pile, either from dump trucks,
pushed into heaps with bulldozers or from conveyor booms.
More controlled stockpiles are formed using stackers to form
piles along the length of a conveyor, and reclaimers to
retrieve the coal when required for product loading, etc. Taller and wider stockpiles reduce
the land area required to store a set tonnage of coal. Larger coal stockpiles
have a reduced rate of heat lost, leading to a higher risk of spontaneous
combustion.
Stacking
Travelling, lugging boom stackers that
straddle a feed conveyor are commonly used to create coal stockpiles.
Reclaiming
Tunnel conveyors can be fed by a
continuous slot hopper or bunker beneath the stockpile to reclaim material.
Front-end loaders and bulldozers can be used to push the coal into feeders.
Sometimes front-end loaders are the only means of reclaiming coal from the
stockpile. This has a low up-front capital cost, but much higher operating
costs, measured in dollars per tonne handled. High-capacity stockpiles are
commonly reclaimed using bucket-wheel reclaimers.
These can achieve very high rates
ASH HANDLING
SYSTEMS:
Ash Handling Systems is the none / un combusted portion or residue, after taking
combustion of any solid fuel.
Solid fuel is usually coal. And any coal contains some non combustible portion which is called ash. Content of that coal.
Solid fuel is usually coal. And any coal contains some non combustible portion which is called ash. Content of that coal.
There
are different types of ashes.
• Bottom ash
• fly ash.
Bottom ash is the residue which remains in the solid form at the bottom and fly ash is the light particle which goes out along with exhaust gases, and usually they are collected in chimneys.
Taking their so formed ash away from the Plant / Boiler is called – "ASH HANDLING SYSTEM" This is done in either
• Mechanical conveying
• Pneumatic conveying
• Bottom ash
• fly ash.
Bottom ash is the residue which remains in the solid form at the bottom and fly ash is the light particle which goes out along with exhaust gases, and usually they are collected in chimneys.
Taking their so formed ash away from the Plant / Boiler is called – "ASH HANDLING SYSTEM" This is done in either
• Mechanical conveying
• Pneumatic conveying
Mechanical system requires conveyors,
and Pneumatic system requires – compressed air to carry out the ash.
Ash Handling Systems
Bulk Material Handling Systems
Conveyors And Material Handling Equipments
Process Equipments And Storage Equipments
Portable Handling Equipments
Rotary Equipments
Bulk Material Handling Systems
Conveyors And Material Handling Equipments
Process Equipments And Storage Equipments
Portable Handling Equipments
Rotary Equipments
Pneumatic
Conveying Systems
Magnetic Equipments
Vibratory Equipments
Spares
Overhead Bag Handling Systems
Magnetic Equipments
Vibratory Equipments
Spares
Overhead Bag Handling Systems
COMBUSTION EQUIPMENTS:
Combustion
control options range from electro / mechanical through to full microprocessor
control systems to match both application and customer needs.
Cochran
supply an extensive range of fuel handling equipment to complement and help
ensure that the optimum performance from the combustion and control equipment
is maintained. Fuel handling equipment includes gas boosters, oil pumping and
heating stations, fuel metering and instrumentation packages are available to
match individual installation requirements.
STOCKERS:
A
mechanical stoker is a device which feeds coal into the firebox of a boiler. It
is standard equipment on large stationary boilers and was also fitted to large
steam locomotives to ease the burden of the fireman. The locomotive type has a screw
conveyor (driven by an auxiliary steam engine) which feeds the coal into
the firebox. The coal is then distributed across the grate by steam jets,
controlled by the fireman. Power stations usually use pulverized coal-fired boilers.
PULVERISER:
A pulverizer or grinder
is a mechanical device for the grinding of many different types of materials.
For example, they are used to pulverize coal for combustion
in the steam-generating furnaces of fossil fuel power plants.
Types of pulverizers
Ball and tube mills
A ball
mill is a pulverizer that consists of a horizontal rotating cylinder, up to
three diameters in length, containing a charge of tumbling or cascading steel
balls, pebbles, or rods.
A tube
mill is a revolving cylinder of up to five diameters in length used for fine
pulverization of ore, rock, and other such materials; the material, mixed with
water, is fed into the chamber from one end, and passes out the other end as
slime (slurry).
Ring and ball mill
This
type of mill consists of two rings separated by a series of large balls. The
lower ring rotates, while the upper ring presses down on the balls via a set of
spring and adjuster assemblies. The material to be pulverized is introduced
into the center or side of the pulverizer (depending on the design) and is ground
as the lower ring rotates causing the balls to orbit between the upper and
lower rings. The pulverized material is carried out of the mill by the flow of
air moving through it. The size of the pulverized particles released from the
grinding section of the mill is determined by a classifer separator.
Vertical roller mill
Similar
to the ring and ball mill, this mill uses large "tires" to crush the
coal. These are usually found in utility plants.
Raw coal
is gravity-fed through a central feed pipe to the grinding table where it flows
outwardly by centrifugal action and is ground between the rollers and table.
Hot primary air for drying and coal transport enters the windbox plenum
underneath the grinding table and flows upward through a swirl ring having multiple
sloped nozzles surrounding the grinding table. The air mixes with and dries
coal in the grinding zone and carries pulverized coal particles upward into a
classifier.
Fine
pulverized coal exits the outlet section through multiple discharge coal pipes
leading to the burners, while oversized coal particles are rejected and
returned to the grinding zone for further grinding. Pyrites and extraneous
dense impurity material fall through the nozzle ring and are plowed, by scraper
blades attached to the grinding table, into the pyrites chamber to be removed.
Mechanically, the vertical roller mill is categorized as an applied force mill.
There are three grinding roller wheel assemblies in the mill grinding section,
which are mounted on a loading frame via pivot point. The fixed-axis roller in
each roller wheel assembly rotates on a segmentally-lined grinding table that
is supported and driven by a planetary gear reducer direct-coupled to a motor.
The grinding force for coal pulverization is applied by a loading frame. This
frame is connected by vertical tension rods to three hydraulic cylinders
secured to the mill foundation. All forces used in the pulverizing process are
transmitted to the foundation via the gear reducer and loading elements. The
pendulum movement of the roller wheels provides a freedom for wheels to move in
a radial direction, which results in no radial loading against the mill housing
during the pulverizing process.
Depending
on the required coal fineness, there are two types of classifier that may be
selected for a vertical roller mill. The dynamic classifier, which consists of
a stationary angled inlet vane assembly surrounding a rotating vane assembly or
cage, is capable of producing micron fine pulverized coal with a narrow
particle size distribution. In addition, adjusting the speed of the rotating
cage can easily change the intensity of the centrifugal force field in the
classification zone to achieve coal fineness control real-time to make
immediate accommodation for a change in fuel or boiler load conditions. For the
applications where a micron fine pulverized coal is not necessary, the static
classifier, which consists of a cone equipped with adjustable vanes, is an
option at a lower cost since it contains no moving parts. With adequate mill grinding
capacity, a vertical mill equipped with a static classifier is capable of
producing a coal fineness up to 99.5% or higher <50 mesh and 80% or higher
<200 mesh, while one equipped with a dynamic classifier produces coal
fineness levels of 100% <100 mesh and 95% <200 mesh, or better.
Bowl mill
Similar
to the vertical roller mill, it also uses tires to crush coal. There are two
types, a deep bowl mill, and a shallow bowl mill.
Demolition pulverizer
An
attachment fitted to an excavator. Commonly used in demolition work to break up
large pieces of concrete.
ELECTROSTATIC
PRECIPITATOR:
An electrostatic
precipitator (ESP), or electrostatic air cleaner is a particulate
collection device that removes particles from a flowing gas (such as air) using
the force of an induced electrostatic charge. Electrostatic
precipitators are highly efficient filtration
devices that minimally impede the flow of gases through the device, and can
easily remove fine particulate matter such as dust and smoke from the air
stream.[1]
In contrast to wet scrubbers which apply energy directly to the flowing fluid
medium, an ESP applies energy only to the particulate matter being collected
and therefore is very efficient in its consumption of energy (in the form of
electricity).
Modern industrial electrostatic precipitators
ESPs
continue to be excellent devices for control of many industrial particulate
emissions, including smoke from electricity-generating utilities (coal and oil
fired), salt cake collection from black
liquor boilers in pulp mills, and catalyst collection from fluidized bed
catalytic cracker units in oil refineries to name a few. These devices treat
gas volumes from several hundred thousand ACFM to 2.5 million ACFM (1,180 m³/s)
in the largest coal-fired boiler applications. For a coal-fired boiler the
collection is usually performed downstream of the air preheater at about 160 °C
(320 deg.F) which provides optimal resistivity of the coal-ash particles. For
some difficult applications with low-sulfur fuel hot-end units have been built
operating above 371 °C (700 deg.F).
The
original parallel plate–weighted wire design (described above) has evolved as
more efficient (and robust) discharge electrode designs were developed, today
focusing on rigid (pipe-frame) discharge electrodes to which many sharpened
spikes are attached (barbed wire), maximizing corona
production. Transformer-rectifier systems apply voltages of 50 – 100 kV at relatively high
current densities. Modern controls, such as an automatic voltage control, minimize electric
sparking and prevent arcing (sparks are quenched within 1/2 cycle of the TR
set), avoiding damage to the components. Automatic plate-rapping systems and
hopper-evacuation systems remove the collected particulate matter while on
line, theoretically allowing ESPs to stay in operation for years at a time.
Wet electrostatic precipitator
A wet
electrostatic precipitator (WESP or wet ESP) operates with saturated air
streams (100% relative humidity). WESPs are commonly used to remove liquid
droplets such as sulfuric acid mist from industrial process gas streams. The
WESP is also commonly used where the gases are high in moisture content,
contain combustible particulate, have particles that are sticky in nature.
The
preferred and most modern type of WESP is a downflow tubular design. This
design allows the collected moisture and particulate to form a slurry that
helps to keep the collection surfaces clean.
Plate
style and upflow design WESPs are very unreliable and should not be used in
applications where particulate is sticky in nature.
Consumer-oriented electrostatic air cleaners
Plate
precipitators are commonly marketed to the public as air
purifier devices or as a permanent replacement for furnace filters, but all
have the undesirable attribute of being somewhat messy to clean. A negative
side-effect of electrostatic precipitation devices is the production of toxic ozone and NOx. However,
electrostatic precipitators offer benefits over other air purifications
technologies, such as HEPA
filtration, which require expensive filters and can become "production
sinks" for many harmful forms of bacteria.
The
two-stage design (charging section ahead of collecting section) has the benefit
of minimizing ozone production which would adversely affect health of personnel
working in enclosed spaces. For shipboard engine rooms where gearboxes generate
an oil fog, two-stage ESP's are used to clean the air improving the operating
environment and preventing buildup of flammable oil fog accumulations.
Collected oil is returned to the gear lubricating system.
With
electrostatic precipitators, if the collection plates are allowed to accumulate
large amounts of particulate matter, the particles can sometimes bond so
tightly to the metal plates that vigorous washing and scrubbing may be required
to completely clean the collection plates. The close spacing of the plates can
make thorough cleaning difficult, and the stack of plates often cannot be
easily disassembled for cleaning. One solution, suggested by several
manufacturers, is to wash the collector plates in a dishwasher.
Some
consumer precipitation filters are sold with special soak-off cleaners, where
the entire plate array is removed from the precipitator and soaked in a large
container overnight, to help loosen the tightly bonded particulates.
A study
by the Canada Mortgage and Housing
Corporation testing a variety of forced-air
furnace filters found that ESP filters provided the best, and most
cost-effective means of cleaning air using a forced-air system.
DRAUGHT:
Most
boilers now depend on mechanical draught equipment rather than natural draught.
This is because natural draught is subject to outside air conditions and
temperature of flue gases leaving the furnace, as well as the chimney height.
All these factors make proper draught hard to attain and therefore make
mechanical draught equipment much more economical.
There
are three types of mechanical draught:
Induced draught: This is
obtained one of three ways, the first being the "stack effect" of a
heated chimney, in which the flue gas is less dense than the ambient air
surrounding the boiler. The denser column of ambient air forces combustion air
into and through the boiler. The second method is through use of a steam jet.
The steam jet oriented in the direction of flue gas flow induces flue gasses
into the stack and allows for a greater flue gas velocity increasing the
overall draught in the furnace. This method was common on steam driven
locomotives which could not have tall chimneys. The third method is by simply
using an induced draught fan (ID fan) which removes flue gases from the furnace
and forces the exhaust gas up the stack. Almost all induced draught furnaces
operate with a slightly negative pressure.
Forced draught: Draught
is obtained by forcing air into the furnace by means of a fan (FD fan) and
ductwork. Air is often passed through an air heater; which, as the name
suggests, heats the air going into the furnace in order to increase the overall
efficiency of the boiler. Dampers are used to control the quantity of air
admitted to the furnace. Forced draught furnaces usually have a positive
pressure.
Balanced draught:
Balanced draught is obtained through use of both induced and forced draught.
This is more common with larger boilers where the flue gases have to travel a
long distance through many boiler passes. The induced draught fan works in
conjunction with the forced draught fan allowing the furnace pressure to be
maintained slightly below atmospheric.
SURFACE
CONDERSER:
Surface
condenser is the commonly used term for a water-cooled shell and tube heat exchanger
installed on the exhaust steam from a steam
turbine in thermal power stations These condensers are heat
exchangers which convert steam from its gaseous to its liquid state at a
pressure below atmospheric pressure. Where cooling water is
in short supply, an air-cooled condenser is often used. An air-cooled condenser
is however significantly more expensive and cannot achieve as low a steam
turbine exhaust pressure as a water cooled surface condenser.
Surface
condensers are also used in applications and industries other than the
condensing of steam turbine exhaust in power plants.
In
thermal power plants, the primary purpose of a surface condenser is to condense
the exhaust steam from a steam turbine to obtain maximum efficiency and also to convert the turbine
exhaust steam into pure water (referred to as steam condensate) so that it may
be reused in the steam generator or boiler as boiler
feed water.
The
steam turbine itself is a device to convert the heat in steam to
mechanical power. The difference between the heat of steam per
unit weight at the inlet to the turbine and the heat of steam per unit weight
at the outlet to the turbine represents the heat which is converted to
mechanical power. Therefore, the more the conversion of heat per pound
or kilogram
of steam to mechanical power in the turbine, the better is its efficiency. By
condensing the exhaust steam of a turbine at a pressure below atmospheric
pressure, the steam pressure drop between the inlet and exhaust of the turbine
is increased, which increases the amount of heat available for conversion to
mechanical power. Most of the heat liberated due to condensation
of the exhaust steam is carried away by the cooling medium (water or air) used
by the surface condenser
COOLING
TOWERS:
Cooling
towers are heat removal devices used to transfer process waste
heat to the atmosphere.
Cooling towers may either use the evaporation
of water to remove process heat and cool the working fluid to near the wet-bulb air temperature or in the case of
"Close Circuit Dry Cooling Towers" rely solely on air to cool the
working fluid to near the dry-bulb air temperature. Common applications
include cooling the circulating water used in oil
refineries, chemical plants, power
stations and building cooling. The towers vary in size from small roof-top
units to very large hyperboloid structures that can be up to 200
metres tall and 100 metres in diameter, or rectangular structures that can be
over 40 metres tall and 80 metres long. Smaller towers are normally
factory-built, while larger ones are constructed on site. They are often
associated with nuclear power plants in popular culture, although cooling
towers are constructed on many types of buildings.
Industrial cooling towers
Industrial
cooling towers can be used to remove heat from various sources such as
machinery or heated process material. The primary use of large, industrial
cooling towers is to remove the heat absorbed in the circulating cooling water
systems used in power plants, petroleum
refineries, petrochemical plants, natural gas
processing plants, food processing plants, semi-conductor plants, and for other
industrial facilities such as in condensers of distillation columns, for
cooling liquid in crystallization, etc.[2]
The circulation rate of cooling water in a typical 700 MW coal-fired power plant with a cooling tower
amounts to about 71,600 cubic metres an hour (315,000 U.S. gallons per minute)[3]
and the circulating water requires a supply water make-up rate of perhaps 5
percent (i.e., 3,600 cubic metres an hour).
If that
same plant had no cooling tower and used once-through cooling water, it
would require about 100,000 cubic metres an hour [4]
and that amount of water would have to be continuously returned to the ocean,
lake or river from which it was obtained and continuously re-supplied to the
plant. Furthermore, discharging large amounts of hot water may raise the
temperature of the receiving river or lake to an unacceptable level for the
local ecosystem. Elevated water temperatures can kill fish and other aquatic
organisms. (See thermal pollution.) A cooling tower serves to
dissipate the heat into the atmosphere instead and wind and air diffusion
spreads the heat over a much larger area than hot water can distribute heat in
a body of water. Some coal-fired and nuclear power plants located in coastal areas do
make use of once-through ocean water. But even there, the offshore discharge
water outlet requires very careful design to avoid environmental problems.
Petroleum
refineries also have very large cooling tower systems. A typical large refinery
processing 40,000 metric tonnes of crude oil per day (300,000 barrels
(48,000 m3) per day) circulates about 80,000 cubic metres of water
per hour through its cooling tower system.
The
world's tallest cooling tower is the 200 metre tall cooling tower of Niederaussem Power Station.
Heat transfer methods
With
respect to the heat transfer mechanism employed, the main types are:
·
Wet cooling towers or
simply open circuit cooling towers operate on the principle of evaporation. The working fluid and the
evaporated fluid (usually H2O) are one and the same.
·
Dry Cooling Towers operate
by heat
transfer through a surface that separates the working fluid from ambient
air, such as in a tube to air heat
exchanger, utilizing convective heat transfer. They do not use evaporation.
·
Fluid coolers or Closed
Circuit Cooling Towers are hybrids that pass the working fluid through a
tube bundle, upon which clean water is sprayed and a fan-induced draft applied.
The resulting heat transfer performance is much closer to that of a wet cooling
tower, with the advantage provided by a dry cooler of protecting the working
fluid from environmental exposure and contamination.
In a wet
cooling tower (or Open Circuit Cooling Tower), the warm water can be cooled to
a temperature lower than the ambient air dry-bulb temperature, if the air is
relatively dry. (see: dew point and psychrometrics).
As ambient air is drawn past a flow of water, an small portion of the water
evaporate, the energy required by that portion of the water to evaporate is
taken from the remaining mass of water reducing his temperature (aproximately
by 970 BTU for each pound of evaporated water). Evaporation results in
saturated air conditions, lowering the temperature of the water process by the
tower to a value close to wet bulb air temperature, which is lower than the ambient
dry bulb air temperature, the difference determined by the humidity of the
ambient air.
To
achieve better performance (more cooling), a medium called fill is used
to increase the surface area and the time of contact between the air and water
flows. Splash fill consists of material placed to interrupt the water
flow causing splashing. Film fill is composed of thin sheets of material
(usually PVC) upon which the water flows. Both methods create increased surface
area and time of contact between the fluid (water) and the gas (air).
Air flow generation methods
With
respect to drawing air through the tower, there are three types of cooling
towers:
Natural
draft, which utilizes buoyancy via a tall chimney. Warm, moist air naturally
rises due to the density differential to the dry, cooler outside air. Warm moist air is less dense than drier air at the same
pressure. This moist air buoyancy produces a current of air through the tower.
Mechanical draft, which
uses power driven fan motors to force or draw air through the tower.
Induced draft: A
mechanical draft tower with a fan at the discharge which pulls air through
tower. The fan induces hot moist air out the discharge. This produces
low entering and high exiting air velocities, reducing the possibility of recirculation
in which discharged air flows back into the air intake. This fan/fin
arrangement is also known as draw-through. (see Image 2, 3)
Forced draft: A
mechanical draft tower with a blower type fan at the intake. The fan forces
air into the tower, creating high entering and low exiting air velocities. The
low exiting velocity is much more susceptible to recirculation. With the fan on
the air intake, the fan is more susceptible to complications due to freezing
conditions. Another disadvantage is that a forced draft design typically
requires more motor horsepower than an equivalent induced draft design. The
forced draft benefit is its ability to work with high static pressure. They can
be installed in more confined spaces and even in some indoor situations. This
fan/fill geometry is also known as blow-through. (see Image 4)
Fan assisted
natural draft. A hybrid type that appears like a natural draft though airflow
is assisted by a fan.
Hyperboloid
(a.k.a. hyperbolic) cooling towers (Image 1) have become the design standard
for all natural-draft cooling towers because of their structural strength and
minimum usage of material. The hyperboloid shape also aids in accelerating the
upward convective
air flow, improving cooling efficiency. They are popularly associated with nuclear power plants. However, this association
is misleading, as the same kind of cooling towers are often used at large
coal-fired power plants as well. Similarly, not all nuclear power plants have cooling
towers, instead cooling their heat exchangers with lake, river or ocean water.
Categorization by air-to-water flow
Crossflow
Crossflow
is a design in which the air flow is directed perpendicular to the water flow
(see diagram below). Air flow enters one or more vertical faces of the cooling
tower to meet the fill material. Water flows (perpendicular to the air) through
the fill by gravity. The air continues through the fill and thus past the water
flow into an open plenum area. A distribution or hot water basin
consisting of a deep pan with holes or nozzles in the bottom is utilized
in a crossflow tower. Gravity distributes the water through the nozzles
uniformly across the fill material.
Counterflow
In a
counterflow design the air flow is directly opposite to the water flow (see
diagram below). Air flow first enters an open area beneath the fill media and
is then drawn up vertically. The water is sprayed through pressurized nozzles
and flows downward through the fill, opposite to the air flow.
Common
to both designs:
The interaction
of the air and water flow allow a partial equalization and evaporation of
water.
The air, now
saturated with water vapor, is discharged from the cooling tower.
A collection
or cold water basin is used to contain the water after its interaction
with the air flow.
Both
crossflow and counterflow designs can be used in natural draft and mechanical
draft cooling towers.
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