From the way you phrase the question, I assume that you have an operating furnace, and are trying to benchmark the performance? If that is the case, the you can determine the efficiency of the heater by accurately measuring the following with thermocouple and Flue gas analyzer:
- Flue Gas temp Exiting Convection bank
- Flue gas composition (%oxygen)
- Combustion Air temperature
You also need to know the Diesel fuel's Lower Heating Value(LHV) With the collected data, you then need to estimate the enthalpy (h of FG) of the flue gas at the stack temp and the enthalpy of AIR. You'll need to calculate the Air/Fuel ratio (AF) and the Flue GAS/Fuel ratio. (FG/FL)
Then Fuel Efficiency (%)can be estimated from:
[((LHV + (h-air x AF))- (h of FG x FG/FL)) / (LHV) ] x 100
(You should then subtract a loss percent from that to account for heat loss through the casing).
Assuming I understood the question, hope that helps.
As for reasons why the stack gas temp may exceed design values? It can depend on alot of factors: How close are you operating to the "design point" of the heater? Fouling in the convection section could raise stack gas temperature. Poor gas distribution over the convection tubes could also cuase this. We need to look into more detail to determine what was causing high gas temps.
- j. katz