MAEC
Mechanical
- Feb 21, 2006
- 11
Greetings List:
I have on my hands what some consider to be the bible of sugar cane milling process... LA SUCRERIE DE CANNES by E. Hugot.
It shows an interesting equation regarding boiler efficiency from the point of view of available heat delivered to the steam.
The equation is: eff = Mv/VCS where Mv is the ammount of heat transfered to the steam and VCS the upper calorific value of bagasse. If you consider VCS, there is one approach: considering ashes and sucrose content in bagasse which leads to what we can call a downgraded VCS.
Regarding Mv, he uses an expression which involves bagasse water content, which is quite high, and heat loss in the gases. The result is multiplied by some factors which leads to a supposed real condition of the process, incluiding non burned solids, radiation and poor combustion.
I just tried it on an spreadsheet and the result was a 46% efficiency of a 2 year old boiler!!!! Are efficiencies THAT low??... i know for a fact that whole cycle efficiencies are low but a new equipment???
This is kinda retorical but the thing is that if I´m right then Hugot is wrong!!! Are there some Thermodynamic professors out there who could give me a hand on this??
I know a better approach which consists in an indirect efficiency by considering heat losses in the system, which is the one the germans use. Do you have another approach??
By the way, now that i´m into this, does anyone have any equation to calculate CO levels theoretically? I have CO2, Ar, N2, H2O and H2 levels... but i have no CO... i do know that the same volume of CO2 corresponds to the same volume of CO and that you just need to find the proportions of those.
I have on my hands what some consider to be the bible of sugar cane milling process... LA SUCRERIE DE CANNES by E. Hugot.
It shows an interesting equation regarding boiler efficiency from the point of view of available heat delivered to the steam.
The equation is: eff = Mv/VCS where Mv is the ammount of heat transfered to the steam and VCS the upper calorific value of bagasse. If you consider VCS, there is one approach: considering ashes and sucrose content in bagasse which leads to what we can call a downgraded VCS.
Regarding Mv, he uses an expression which involves bagasse water content, which is quite high, and heat loss in the gases. The result is multiplied by some factors which leads to a supposed real condition of the process, incluiding non burned solids, radiation and poor combustion.
I just tried it on an spreadsheet and the result was a 46% efficiency of a 2 year old boiler!!!! Are efficiencies THAT low??... i know for a fact that whole cycle efficiencies are low but a new equipment???
This is kinda retorical but the thing is that if I´m right then Hugot is wrong!!! Are there some Thermodynamic professors out there who could give me a hand on this??
I know a better approach which consists in an indirect efficiency by considering heat losses in the system, which is the one the germans use. Do you have another approach??
By the way, now that i´m into this, does anyone have any equation to calculate CO levels theoretically? I have CO2, Ar, N2, H2O and H2 levels... but i have no CO... i do know that the same volume of CO2 corresponds to the same volume of CO and that you just need to find the proportions of those.