mpeck1982
Mechanical
- Nov 12, 2012
- 65
I have a water tubed boiler at our steam facility. The boiler feed water is oxygen scavenged by a DEHA system. 98% of the oxygen is taken out of the system. Then Phosphate is used to take out the other 2% of oxygen out of the boiler feed water. The way the plant operates the boiler is not what the manufacturer operation suggest. Basically we go from a hot stand by to a cold stand by mode. Cold standby is basically letting the boiler cool down to atmosphere. So during the transition of hot stand by to cold standby the superheated steam in the boiler condenses to condensate and sits in the superheater tubes. If oxygen is scavenged out of the system how does it get back into the system during condensing??? There was severe damage of oxygen pitting in the superheater tubes. So oxygen was in the system. we have weekly reports of DEHA (excess scavenged oxygen residual). Reports are above the recommeneded levels. Any help would be appreciative.