NewBern
Chemical
- Mar 13, 2008
- 4
We would appreciate comments or shared experiences for a significant problem we are dealing with. Thanks.
The pulp mill I work at has a boiler with an economizer that has developed tube leaks (boiler capacity is 200,000 lb/hr at 850psig/825F steam - fed with 305F dearated feedwater). The tubes have thinned due to external corrosion (burning #6 oil + sulfur waste gases -- 12 years in service).
We plan to replace the economizer in 14 weeks, but must continue to operate it until then. The boiler is critical to the operation (no production when it is down!).
We are considering by-passing the feedwater around the economizer (feedwater directly to the boiler steam drum).
Because of the downstream scrubber system, the boiler exit gases (700-800F) must be cooled to <400F. The plan would be to run water from a cooling tower through the economizer. Thus, the economizer would act as a carbon steel heat exchanger cooling the flue gases (cooling water in at 70F and out at 160F).
The water would not be deaerated and it is colder than normal feedwater so corrosion would be greater. On the positive side, the pressure is significantly less (100 psig vs. 1000 psig).
This is a bit unusual -- we would obviously would not do this for the longterm. The question is: will the economizer survive 14 weeks operated in this manner? Perhaps someone has some direct experiences with something like this.
Thanks again.
The pulp mill I work at has a boiler with an economizer that has developed tube leaks (boiler capacity is 200,000 lb/hr at 850psig/825F steam - fed with 305F dearated feedwater). The tubes have thinned due to external corrosion (burning #6 oil + sulfur waste gases -- 12 years in service).
We plan to replace the economizer in 14 weeks, but must continue to operate it until then. The boiler is critical to the operation (no production when it is down!).
We are considering by-passing the feedwater around the economizer (feedwater directly to the boiler steam drum).
Because of the downstream scrubber system, the boiler exit gases (700-800F) must be cooled to <400F. The plan would be to run water from a cooling tower through the economizer. Thus, the economizer would act as a carbon steel heat exchanger cooling the flue gases (cooling water in at 70F and out at 160F).
The water would not be deaerated and it is colder than normal feedwater so corrosion would be greater. On the positive side, the pressure is significantly less (100 psig vs. 1000 psig).
This is a bit unusual -- we would obviously would not do this for the longterm. The question is: will the economizer survive 14 weeks operated in this manner? Perhaps someone has some direct experiences with something like this.
Thanks again.