Advanced ultra supercritical steam generator
09874346 ยท 2018-01-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F23B7/007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F22G5/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F22B35/002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F22B29/067
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F22B21/348
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23B7/005
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F22B21/34
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F22B35/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F22B29/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F22B37/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F22G5/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A supercritical steam generator includes a downdraft furnace enclosure, a hopper tunnel, and a convection pass enclosure, with the hopper tunnel joining the downdraft furnace enclosure and convection pass enclosure together. Flue gas passes down through the downdraft furnace enclosure through the hopper tunnel and up through the convection pass enclosure. This structure permits the outlet steam terminals, which provide access to the resultant supercritical steam and/or reheat steam, to be located at a base of the steam generator rather than at the top of the steam generator as with conventional boilers. This reduces the length of the steam leads from the steam generator to a steam turbine that produces electricity using the supercritical steam.
Claims
1. A steam generator, comprising: a downdraft furnace enclosure formed from walls made of water or steam cooled tubes, and wherein the furnace walls define a top end and a bottom gas outlet at a bottom end; a windbox and burners at the top end of the downdraft furnace enclosure for generating flue gas; a convection pass enclosure including a bottom gas inlet and horizontal tube banks located above the bottom gas inlet; a hopper tunnel connecting the bottom gas outlet of the downdraft furnace enclosure to the bottom gas inlet of the convection pass enclosure, such that hot flue gas exits the downdraft furnace enclosure and then flows upwards through the convection pass enclosure; and a steam outlet terminal located at a base of the steam generator; wherein flue gas exiting the convection pass enclosure is recirculated to one of: the top end of the downdraft furnace enclosure; a base of the downdraft furnace enclosure; or a base of the convection pass enclosure.
2. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein the top end of the downdraft furnace enclosure includes a gas inlet for receiving flue gas.
3. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein flue gas exiting the convection pass enclosure is recirculated to the top end of the downdraft furnace enclosure.
4. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein flue gas exiting the convection pass enclosure is recirculated to the base of the downdraft furnace enclosure.
5. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein flue gas exiting the convection pass enclosure is recirculated to the base of the convection pass enclosure.
6. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein the hopper tunnel is lined with a refractory material.
7. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein the hopper tunnel is formed from steam or water-cooled tube panels.
8. The steam generator of claim 7, wherein water trough seals are present between the downdraft furnace enclosure, the hopper tunnel, and the convection pass enclosure.
9. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein fluid in the tubes of the downdraft furnace enclosure flows counter-current to flue gas flow.
10. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein the convection pass enclosure is formed from enclosure walls made of steam or water cooled tubes, wherein the cooling fluid in the tubes of the convection pass enclosure flow co-current to flue gas flow.
11. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein the horizontal tube banks in the convection pass enclosure include superheaters, reheaters, and economizers.
12. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein the steam generator further comprises an upper horizontal pass enclosure connected to a top end of the convection pass enclosure and a down pass, the upper horizontal pass and the down pass containing additional tube banks.
13. The steam generator of claim 1, wherein the hopper tunnel includes a submerged chain conveyor for removing ash and slag.
14. The steam generator of claim 13, wherein the submerged chain conveyor travels in-line with the flue gas flow.
15. The steam generator of claim 13, wherein the submerged chain conveyor travels transverse to the flue gas flow.
16. A steam generator, comprising: a downdraft furnace enclosure formed from walls made of water or steam cooled tubes, and wherein the furnace walls define a top end and a bottom gas outlet at a bottom end; a windbox and burners at the top end of the downdraft furnace enclosure for generating flue gas; a convection pass enclosure including a bottom gas inlet and horizontal tube banks located above the bottom gas inlet; a hopper tunnel connecting the bottom gas outlet of the downdraft furnace enclosure to the bottom gas inlet of the convection pass enclosure, such that hot flue pas exits the downdraft furnace enclosure and then flows upwards through the convection pass enclosure; and a steam outlet terminal located at a base of the steam generator; wherein flue gas exiting the convection pass enclosure passes through at least one of (a) a regenerative air heater and (b) a particulate cleaning device; and is then recirculated to the top end of the downdraft furnace enclosure, a base of the downdraft furnace enclosure, or a base of the convection pass enclosure.
17. The steam generator of claim 16, wherein flue gas exiting the convection pass enclosure passes through the particulate cleaning device and is then recirculated.
18. The steam generator of claim 16, wherein flue gas exiting the convection pass enclosure passes through the regenerative air heater and is then recirculated.
19. A steam generator, comprising: a downdraft furnace enclosure formed from walls made of water or steam cooled tubes, and wherein the furnace walls define a top end and a bottom gas outlet at a bottom end; a windbox and burners at the top end of the downdraft furnace enclosure for generating flue gas; a convection pass enclosure including a bottom gas inlet and horizontal tube banks located above the bottom gas inlet; a hopper tunnel connecting the bottom gas outlet of the downdraft furnace enclosure to the bottom gas inlet of the convection pass enclosure, such that hot flue gas exits the downdraft furnace enclosure and then flows upwards through the convection pass enclosure; and a steam outlet terminal located at a base of the steam generator; wherein the hopper tunnel is formed by an outwardly-extending throat of the bottom gas outlet of the downdraft furnace enclosure that extends into a porthole of the bottom gas inlet of the convection pass enclosure.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The following is a brief description of the drawings, which are presented for the purposes of illustrating the exemplary embodiments disclosed herein and not for the purposes of limiting the same.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(19) A more complete understanding of the components, processes, and apparatuses disclosed herein can be obtained by reference to the accompanying drawings. These figures are merely schematic representations based on convenience and the ease of demonstrating the present disclosure, and are, therefore, not intended to indicate relative size and dimensions of the devices or components thereof and/or to define or limit the scope of the exemplary embodiments.
(20) Although specific terms are used in the following description for the sake of clarity, these terms are intended to refer only to the particular structure of the embodiments selected for illustration in the drawings, and are not intended to define or limit the scope of the disclosure. In the drawings and the following description below, it is to be understood that like numeric designations refer to components of like function.
(21) The singular forms a, an, and the include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.
(22) As used in the specification and in the claims, the term comprising may include the embodiments consisting of and consisting essentially of.
(23) Numerical values should be understood to include numerical values which are the same when reduced to the same number of significant figures and numerical values which differ from the stated value by less than the experimental error of conventional measurement technique of the type described in the present application to determine the value.
(24) All ranges disclosed herein are inclusive of the recited endpoint and independently combinable (for example, the range of from 2 watts to 10 watts is inclusive of the endpoints, 2 watts and 10 watts, and all the intermediate values).
(25) As used herein, approximating language may be applied to modify any quantitative representation that may vary without resulting in a change in the basic function to which it is related. Accordingly, a value modified by a term or terms, such as about and substantially, may not be limited to the precise value specified, in some cases. The modifier about should also be considered as disclosing the range defined by the absolute values of the two endpoints. For example, the expression from about 2 to about 4 also discloses the range from 2 to 4.
(26) The terms waterside, water cooled, steam cooled or fluid side refer to any area of the boiler that is exposed to water or steam. In contrast, the terms airside, gas side or fireside refer to an area of the boiler that is exposed to direct heat from the furnace, or in other words the combustion gas from the furnace. Where the specification refers to water and/or steam, the liquid and/or gaseous states of other fluids may also be used in the methods of the present disclosure.
(27) It should be noted that many of the terms used herein are relative terms. For example, the terms upper and lower are relative to each other in location, i.e. an upper component is located at a higher elevation than a lower component in a given orientation. The terms inlet and outlet are relative to a fluid flowing through them with respect to a given structure, e.g. a fluid flows through the inlet into the structure and flows through the outlet out of the structure. The terms upstream and downstream are relative to the direction in which a fluid flows through various components, i.e. the flow fluids through an upstream component prior to flowing through the downstream component.
(28) The terms horizontal and vertical are used to indicate direction relative to an absolute reference, i.e. ground level. However, these terms should not be construed to require structures to be absolutely parallel or absolutely perpendicular to each other. For example, a first vertical structure and a second vertical structure are not necessarily parallel to each other. The terms top and bottom or base are used to refer to surfaces where the top is always higher than the bottom/base relative to an absolute reference, i.e. the surface of the earth. The terms above and below are used to refer to the location of two structures relative to an absolute reference. For example, when the first component is located above a second component, this means the first component will always be higher than the second component relative to the surface of the earth. The terms upwards and downwards are also relative to an absolute reference; an upwards flow is always against the gravity of the earth.
(29) As used herein, the term supercritical refers to a fluid that is at a temperature above its critical temperature or at a pressure above its critical pressure or both. For example, the critical temperature of water is 374.15 C., and the critical pressure of water is 3200.1 psia (22.1 MPa). A fluid at a temperature that is above its boiling point at a given pressure but is below its critical pressure is considered to be superheated but subcritical. A superheated fluid can be cooled (i.e. transfer energy) without changing its phase. As used herein, the term wet steam refers to a saturated steam/water mixture (i.e., steam with less than 100% quality where quality is percent steam content by mass). As used herein, the term dry steam refers to steam having a quality equal to greater than 100% (i.e., no liquid water is present). Supercritical water or steam will have no visible bubble interface or meniscus forming during a heating or cooling process due to zero surface tension on reaching the critical point temperature. The fluid continues to act like a single phase flow while converting from water to steam or steam to water, and is a non-equilibrium thermodynamic condition where rapid changes in density, viscosity and thermal conductivity can occur.
(30) To the extent that explanations of certain terminology or principles of the solar receiver, boiler and/or steam generator arts may be necessary to understand the present disclosure, the reader is referred to Steam/its generation and use, 40th Edition, Stultz and Kitto, Eds., Copyright 1992, The Babcock & Wilcox Company, and to Steam/its generation and use, 41st Edition, Kitto and Stultz, Eds., Copyright 2005, The Babcock & Wilcox Company, the texts of which are hereby incorporated by reference as though fully set forth herein.
(31) In the conventional boiler of
(32) In the Carolina (two-pass) boiler of
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(34) In use, air and coal are fed into the top end 212 by the windbox or roof vestibule 218, and combusted using the burners 220 to generate hot flue gas 202. Oxy-combustion (i.e. using oxygen-enriched recirculated gas) or air firing can be used. The windbox also generates an air flow that causes the flue gas to flow downwards due to mechanical draft fans (rather than rising as would naturally occur; the downdraft is aided by the wall cooling the flue gas). A bottom gas outlet 222 is present at the bottom end 214, through which the hot flue gas exits the furnace enclosure 210. The flue gas flows through a hopper tunnel 270 located at the base of the furnace enclosure. The hopper tunnel 270 fluidly connects the bottom gas outlet 222 of the downdraft furnace enclosure with a bottom gas inlet 236 of the convection pass enclosure. The hopper tunnel also flexibly seals the bottom gas outlet and the bottom gas inlet. When exiting the downdraft furnace enclosure, the flue gas may have a temperature of about 500 F. to about 2500 F. The flue gas 202 then flows upwards through the convection pass enclosure 230 past horizontally arranged tube banks that act as superheater 240, reheater 242, and/or economizer 244 surfaces. These surfaces capture additional energy from the flue gas. When exiting the convection pass enclosure, the flue gas may have a temperature of about 240 F. to about 825 F. The convection pass enclosure 230 itself also has a top end 232 and a bottom end 234.
(35) The flue gas may pass through a regenerative air heater 302 to transfer some of the remaining heat energy to incoming air. The flue gas may also be sent to pollution control units to remove undesired byproducts. For example, the flue gas can pass through a selective catalytic reduction (SCR) unit 300 to remove NOx, a flue gas desulfurization (FGD) unit 304 to remove SOx, and/or a particulate cleaning device 306 (e.g. a baghouse or electrostatic precipitator). The pollution control units and the regenerative air heater are placed in an order suitable for optimum pollution reduction. For example, in specific embodiments, the SCR unit 300 is placed upstream of the regenerative air heater 302. If desired, the flue gas exiting the convection pass enclosure may be recirculated to the windbox or vestibule 218 at the top of the furnace enclosure, a practice generally referred to as gas recirculation (reference numeral 310). If desired, the flue gas exiting the convection pass enclosure can also be recirculated to the base 252 of the downdraft furnace enclosure for steam temperature control (reference numeral 312) and/or to the base 254 of the convection pass enclosure (reference numeral 314) and used to control the flue gas temperature, which is generally referred to as gas tempering. The steam generator may include any of these recirculation paths, or may include all three recirculation paths.
(36) With regard to the fluid flow in the downdraft furnace enclosure, relatively cold water from the economizer outlet enters the steam generator at the base of the furnace walls 216, and flows through the water tubes, becoming a steam/water mixture by absorbing the heat energy in the flue gas. This water flows counter-current to the flue gas flow (i.e. the water flows upwards while the flue gas flows downwards). The steam/water mixture is collected in outlet headers and sent to vertical steam separators 260 and separated into wet steam and water. The steam is sent to the convection pass enclosure 230 through the superheater 240 then to the steam turbine, and then returns from the steam turbine to pass through the reheater 242 tube banks in the convection pass enclosure. In some embodiments, the convection pass enclosure is also formed from enclosure walls made of water or steam cooled tubes, which can also capture energy. In such embodiments, the fluid flow in the enclosure walls of the convection pass enclosure is co-current to the flue gas flow (i.e. both flow upwards). Generally, the downdraft furnace enclosure is water-cooled at lower loads and becomes steam cooled near the outlet at higher loads, while the convection pass enclosure is steam-cooled.
(37) The supercritical steam and/or reheat steam exits at one or more steam outlet terminals located at the base 254 of the convection pass enclosure, which is part of the steam generator. The reheat steam outlet terminal is labeled with reference numeral 261, while the supercritical steam outlet terminal is labeled with reference number 262, and either or both of these outlet terminals may be present. The term base refers here to the bottom one-third of the steam generator's height, the height being indicated by reference numeral 264. For example, if the steam generator has a height of about 60 feet, then the steam outlet terminal(s) is at a height of at about 20 feet. It should be recognized that the furnace enclosure and the convection pass enclosure may be of different heights.
(38) In this regard, the steam leads for main steam and hot reheat piping needed to operate an advanced ultra supercritical steam generator at 700 C. (1292 F.) are as much as four (4) times the cost of material by mass for the steam leads needed to operate a steam generator at 600 C. (1112 F.). It can thus be advantageous to use the present design to lower the steam outlet terminal rather than incur the cost of such piping.
(39) The tube banks in the convection pass enclosure should be drainable. Internal deposits are generally dispersed along the tube rows, so as not to concentrate in the lower bends of pendant sections. At the connection to the enclosure walls, expansion water seals or gas tight expansion joints (not shown) are present between the enclosure walls and the tube banks.
(40) Returning to
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(45) Because the furnace enclosure and the convection pass enclosure are designed to operate at a high temperature differential, the hopper tunnel 270 must be able to handle the transfer of very hot flue gas. The hopper tunnel may be lined with a refractory material 276, which is chemically and physically stable at high temperatures. Exemplary refractory materials include refractory brick containing aluminum oxide, silica, or magnesium oxide, or ceramic tiles. Such materials can withstand temperatures of 2800 F. to 3000 F. As illustrated here, the hopper tunnel has a width 282, refractory brick 276 located around the entire periphery of the tunnel, and insulation 278 surrounding the brick, and having the appropriate dimensions. The upper portion of the hopper tunnel has a height 284, and the lower portion of the hopper tunnel has a height 286. Present in the lower portion is a mechanical transport system 280 (e.g. a submerged chain conveyor) that moves the ash out of the hopper tunnel.
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(55) It is noted that the convection pass enclosure is depicted in the various Figures as having a single gas path. It is also contemplated that the convection pass enclosure can include parallel gas paths, where one gas path can be used for steam temperature control using gas biasing.
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(57) The present disclosure has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments. Obviously, modifications and alterations will occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the present disclosure be construed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.