Burning system
09791212 · 2017-10-17
Inventors
Cpc classification
F27D19/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F27D21/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F27B9/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F27D99/0033
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F27B9/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F27B9/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F27D99/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F27D19/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F27D3/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The present invention refers to an improved burning system for industrial furnace burners (16), more specifically for tunnel type furnaces for firing ceramic materials, to improve the thermal efficiency and reduce the consumption by these furnaces in the process of firing load (10) such as floor tiles, tiles, sanitary material, refractories, porcelain, insulators, grindstone, tableware ceramic, red ceramic and ceramic in general, by a using flame rotation system, providing a radiant flame surface by dividing the flame into smaller intermittent flames.
Claims
1. A ceramic tiles and sanitary ware burning system comprising: a furnace having insulated walls and being divided into different regions with different temperatures, the different regions including a firing zone comprising at least one injector group comprising injectors, each injector defining an output tip and comprising a controlling device for independently activating each injector and being mounted in a side wall of the furnace; and a programmable logic controller (PLC) configured to alternatively activate the injectors of the at least one injector group in a loop condition at preset time intervals defining firing times to avoid localized overheating during a firing cycle, and wherein the firing cycle comprises more than two firing times; wherein the PLC is configured to: a) activate a first injector of the at least one injector group at a firing time t1; b) activate a second injector of the at least one injector group at a firing time t2=t1+Δt and simultaneously turning off the preceding injector; c) activate a third injector of the at least one injector group at a firing time t3=t2+Δt and simultaneously turning off the preceding injector; d) rotating the injectors to be activated according to a)-c) in an incremented firing time in relation to the previous one until a firing time tn, wherein n is the total number of injectors in each of the at least one injector group; and e) repeating a)-d) in compliance with the formula t1=tn+Δt; wherein each injector is active during a single firing time of the firing cycle and each injector is deactivated during n−1 firing times of the firing cycle; and wherein the burning system further comprises one or more cooling devices associated with each injector and configured to cool the output tip of the associated injector, the cooling devices comprising a fluid jacket located adjacent the output tip of the associated injector and configured for cooling the output tip of the associated injector by moving fluid through the fluid jacket.
2. The ceramic tiles and sanitary ware burning system of claim 1, characterized in that the PLC comprises a dedicated software, which considers at least one of an activation time of each of one or more injectors, a deactivation time of each of the injectors, a preset time, and a sequence of the loop condition to avoid localized overheating.
3. The ceramic tiles and sanitary ware burning system of claim 1, characterized in that the furnace is an industrial furnace of the tunnel type or roller type.
4. The ceramic tiles and sanitary ware burning system of claim 1, characterized in that the injectors inject pure gas or gas with an air excess factor between approximately 0.1 and 0.2.
5. The ceramic tiles and sanitary ware burning system of claim 1, wherein the fluid jacket comprises a water jacket configured for moving water through the water jacket, and wherein the injectors are configured for injecting supplied cold pure gas or supplied cold gas with an air excess factor approximately between 0.1 and 0.2.
6. The ceramic tiles and sanitary ware burning system of claim 1, characterized in that the cooling device comprises an air circulator configured for moving air through the fluid jacket and wherein the injectors are configured for injecting supplied cold pure gas or cold gas with an air excess factor approximately between 0.1 and 0.2.
7. The ceramic tiles and sanitary ware burning system of claim 1, characterized in that the controlling device is a solenoid valve configured to respond to a signal of the PLC.
8. A method for controlling a ceramic tiles and sanitary ware burning system in a furnace, the furnace having insulated walls and being divided into more than three different regions with different temperatures, the burning system comprising at least one injector group comprising injector burners installed in side walls of the furnace, certain injector burners in each of the at least one injector group being activated simultaneously and such that activated injector burners are spaced at regular intervals from deactivated injector burners, each injector burner defining an output tip for cold pure gas or cold gas with an air excess factor approximately between 0.1 to 0.2, and comprising a controlling device, wherein the burning system further comprises one or more cooling devices associated with each injector burner, each of the one or more cooling devices are configured to cool the output tip of the associated injector burner, the one or more cooling devices comprising a fluid jacket located adjacent the output tip of a respective injector burner, the method comprising the steps of: a) activating a first plurality of the injector burners of each of the at least one injector group in an instant t1; b) activating a second plurality of the injector burners of each of the at least one injector group in an instant t2=t1+Δt and simultaneously turning off the preceding plurality of the injector burners; c) activating a third plurality of the injector burners of each of the at least one injector group in an instant t3=t2+Δt and simultaneously turning off the preceding plurality of the injector burners; d) repeating steps a)-c) to alternatingly activate the injector burners in an incremented instant in relation to the previous one until an instant tn, wherein n is the total number of pluralities of the injector burners and each plurality of the injector burners is separately activated; and e) repeating the steps beginning with step a) in compliance with the formula t1=tn+Δt; and wherein each injector burner is active during a single instant of a firing cycle defined by steps a)-d), and each injector burner is deactivated during n−1 instants of the firing cycle.
9. The method of claim 8, characterized in that the first plurality of injector burners is activated in instant t1=tn+Δt.
10. The method of claim 8, characterized in that each step of activating a plurality of injector burners starts with outputting a signal generated by a programmable logic controller (PLC) to control a temperature variance, an activation time of each of the burners, a deactivation time of each of the burners, a preset time, a sequence of a loop condition and avoid localized overheating.
11. The ceramic tiles and sanitary ware burning system of claim 1, further comprising an air recirculator at the exit of the furnace configured to direct air toward and through the firing zone to enhance the thermal efficiency with high temperature air feedback.
12. The method of claim 8, characterized in that moving fluid through the one or more cooling devices comprises the step of moving water streaming in the one or more cooling devices and moving the pure gas or gas with an air excess factor approximately between 0.1 to 0.2 through the nozzle.
13. The method of claim 8, characterized in that moving fluid through the one or more cooling devices comprises the step of moving air with ambient temperature through the one or more cooling devices and moving the pure gas or gas with an air excess factor approximately between 0.1 to 0.2 through the nozzle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(10) The system presented herein can be better understood from the following detailed description of the figures.
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(12) The furnace has ceramic insulation 15 on the sides and on the ceiling. The thickness of said insulation 15 depends on the characteristics of the latter and on the temperature in that region. Back to
(13) The insulation and the support columns 12 of the load 10 support plates 11 are placed over the steel frame. In order to avoid gas from going into or coming out of the furnace through the sides of the trolleys, they have skirts 14 that slide along a chute filled with sand.
(14) These tunnel furnaces have a very good thermal efficiency compared to intermittent furnaces. This is due to many factors, among which the fact that, differently from what happens in intermittent furnaces, tunnel furnace insulations need not be heated. Furthermore, as aforesaid, the material load in the trolleys goes in and moves continually from one end of the furnace to the other, as in a conveyor belt, passing through several regions with different temperatures until the product is completely fired and cured.
(15) In the first region of the furnace, as can be seen in
(16) In the second region, according to
(17) Upon leaving the firing zone, the load moves to a subregion, passing through a short transition zone, then moves to the third region, the rapid cooling zone 23. This cooling region does not have burners and this is where the cool air is directly injected into the furnace, both under and over the load.
(18) The fourth region through which the load passes is a transition zone called slow cooling zone, which precedes the fifth and last region, where the final cooling occurs by once again injecting a lot of air to cool the fired load to room temperature. These three last regions, the rapid cooling, slow cooling and final cooling zones, are illustrated in
(19) As can be noted from the description above, the air and its temperature are the key factors for perfectly curing the material to be fired, specially the cooling air. Part of the air is sucked out at the exit of the furnace by the hot air suction system 21. However, a large volume of the air is sucked out by the furnace draft, at the entrance of the furnace. It is precisely the air sucked out by the furnace draft that greatly distinguishes a tunnel furnace from an intermittent furnace.
(20) Basically, this air is cold when it first goes into the furnace through the end opposite its entrance, and as it moves along in the opposite direction as the load, it “absorbs” the hot temperature of the material by heat exchange and cools the load. All this “cold” and pure air (approximately 21% of O.sub.2) reaches the main firing zone with a temperature slightly lower (a difference of about 30° C.) than the firing temperature of the product. It should be pointed out that about 90% of this air moves along over and under the load. Most of this heat (flow rate×temperature×specific heat) is used to heat the load. This air is not found in intermittent furnaces.
(21) In other words, these furnaces are big heat exchangers, in which the load moves from the entrance to the exit and the gases move from the exit to the entrance.
(22) Tunnel furnaces used nowadays have burners divided into firing groups, as shown in the cross-section view of
(23) Each conventional burner injects gas and air with an air excess factor in the range of from about 0.8 to 1.15 (normal variation). This means that, for example, in order to burn 1 m.sup.3 of a natural gas, a minimum air volume of 8.5 m.sup.3 is required to obtain the stoichiometric burning (air excess factor=1). Consequently, this means that the conventional burner injects, for each m.sup.3 of gas, an air flow rate varying from 0.8×8.5=6.8 to 1.15×8.5=9.77 m.sup.3 of air.
(24) Generally, the cold ambient air is injected into the burners. Some furnaces, mainly the high temperature ones, have recovering systems to preheat the combustion air to temperatures of up to 400° C. The main aim of this preheating is to save energy. The higher the temperature of the combustion air, the higher the temperature of the flame and the lower the gas volume required to reach the same temperature. The adiabatic flame temperature, with dissociation, goes from 1971° C. with the air at 25° C. to 2543° C. with the air at 1100° C.
(25) Ideally, from a theoretical point of view, the cold combustion air should not be injected directly into the conventional burners and the “preheated” air resulting from the cooling process should be used as combustion air. The basic idea would be to substitute a conventional burner with several injectors injecting pure gas or gas with an air excess factor of about from 0.1 to 0.2. However, this could be never accomplished in practice, mainly due to two factors: the overheating in the point where the flame is formed and the clogging of the gas outlet due to the cracking of the gas.
(26) In order to solve the second problem, a special gas outlet can be designed and cooling water can be used all the way up to the exit etc. But as to the localized flame overheating problem, the present invention proposes to solve it with a radiant flame surface, by dividing the flame into several smaller intermittent flames instead of concentrating the flame in a single fixed point.
(27) Instead of using conventional burners in the firing zone (temperatures above 800° C.), the present invention seeks to implement several injectors injecting pure gas or gas with a very small amount of air 17, thus providing a pulsating firing, as shown in
(28) A controlling device, preferably a solenoid valve, but not limited to that, is inserted into each injector, so that the injectors work in rotation, responding to the signal of a programmable logic controller (PLC) with dedicated software. This avoids the occurrence of localized overheatings.
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(30) Furthermore, in order to avoid the cracking of the gas, it is possible to cool the tip of the injector by using a cooling device 18, preferably a water jacket, or by circulating a small amount of air through the injector. This cooling system is shown in
(31) Another possibility to increase the amount of hot air is by using preheated air instead of cold air in the rapid cooling fan. It should be noted that this air can be removed from the hot air at the exit of the furnace.
(32) It should be further pointed out that the present invention can also be implemented in roller furnaces.
(33) Therefore, it should be understood that the subject matter of the present invention and its component parts described above are part of some of the preferred modalities and of examples of situations that could happen, however, the real scope of the subject matter of the invention is defined in the claims.