There is no equipment problem. The sequence is simple and visible.
Atmospheric air is compressed to 6 psi, chilled to Plus 10 Deg c, the condensed water is drained off. This 10 Deg Saturated air is sent to activated alumina dryers to get MINUS 70 Deg C dew point air. This is the air used in furnace for burning sulfur.
The sulfur having rain water etc and atmospheric moisture is melted in melting pits to 120 Deg C. The moisture comes out as steam at the first pit. And then sulfur gets melted. This molten sulfur goes as underpass to the 2nd 3rd pits. After the first pit, the molten sulfur does not get exposed to air. It always has sulfur vapour above the liquid surface. Sulfur at 120 Deg C cannot retain water. The only thing that goes with the sulfur is the ash. No hydrogen sulfide.
The Assay of Sulfur is correct. This has been confirmed by variuos reliable testing agencies. We pay premium price for this Sulfur.
The sulfur gun is a steam jacketted. And is compressed air atomised. This compressed air is sourced from the MINUS 70 Deg C dew point air.
so no water contamination in this atomisation air. Any leakage of steam in the burner will make the flame wobble and the flame color will change.
There is no leakage of steam in the pits, pump, pipeline, gun/burner, waste heat boiler, economiser.
This is not a sulfuric acid plant. There is no acid drying tower. So no acid mist carryover in the air.
There is no process design/warranty issue. It is only a technical puzzle. None of the acid plants could reply. In acid palnt the gas is not allowed to go below 500 Deg C. Hence nobody knows waht will happen when this 14% SO2 is cooled to below 200 Deg C. We are cooling to 35 Deg C.
Yes, SO3 can form. But it will not condense to Liquid at this condition. If you have handled Oleum 65% or 24%, you will know that one drop of liquid SO3 will release at least 1 Cubic metre of white fumes in ambient air. The acid containing 24% SO3 is called fuming sulfuric acid.
The acid that I am getting condensed in the pipelines and the economiser is totaly fumeless. This economiser is not a part of the WH Boiler. It is a stand alone economiser connected to the waste heat boiler with a pipeline.
No maloperation is feasible. This is a very small plant burning 12 Tons of sulfur per day. No superheaters. Just a Waste Heat Boiler generating saturated steam at 10 Kg/Cm2 pressure.
So we are back to same question. From where this Hydrogen Atom comes, when all the inputs are devoid of Hydrogen atoms.