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Regenerative Burners in Heat Treating Furnaces

The document discusses the benefits of regenerative burners for heat treating furnaces, emphasizing their role in improving energy efficiency and reducing emissions in industrial applications. It highlights various burner systems, including self recuperative and regenerative burners, and their effectiveness in preheating combustion air to enhance efficiency. The author advocates for collaboration among users, builders, and manufacturers to optimize performance, energy efficiency, and emissions control while managing investment costs.

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Ramu Ungati
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views11 pages

Regenerative Burners in Heat Treating Furnaces

The document discusses the benefits of regenerative burners for heat treating furnaces, emphasizing their role in improving energy efficiency and reducing emissions in industrial applications. It highlights various burner systems, including self recuperative and regenerative burners, and their effectiveness in preheating combustion air to enhance efficiency. The author advocates for collaboration among users, builders, and manufacturers to optimize performance, energy efficiency, and emissions control while managing investment costs.

Uploaded by

Ramu Ungati
Copyright
© All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

INFUB

8th European Conference on Industrial Furnaces and Boilers

25 - 28 March 2008
Vilamoura, Portugal

Title:
Regenerative Burners for Heat Treating Furnaces

Author:
Joachim G. Wuenning, WS GmbH, Renningen, Germany
E-mail: [Link]@[Link]

Abstract

Regenerative combustion air preheating became increasingly popular due to rising energy
costs. Advances in the abatement of NOx-formation made it possible to lower emissions in
new installation despite high air preheating temperatures. Now, there are many regenerative
fired furnaces in the steel industry, many of them in the large reheating furnaces.
But there is still are large potential in energy savings. Besides the large firing capacities in re-
heating furnaces, there are many heat treating furnaces with smaller capacaity burners and al-
so radiant tube heated furnaces. Small capacity regenerative burner systems require different
concepts which will be discussed in the presentation.

Energy Efficiency related to flue gas losses

Efficiency is usually defined as:

benefit
efficiency =
expenditure

Regarding firing systems for industrial furnaces, efficiency or available heat is defined as:

fuel input - exhaust gas losses fuel input - exhaust gas losses
efficiency = =1-
fuel input fuel input
Figure 1 shows the efficiency as a function of exhaust gas, or process temperature. For a sys-
tem without air preheat, it becomes obvious that the efficiency is vanishing with rising ex-
haust gas temperature. At a 1000°C process temperature, at least 50% of the fuel input will be
lost as hot exhaust gas heat.

Figure 1: Efficiency

To determine the usefullness of air preheat, the relative air preheat ε can be defined as:

ϑpreheat - ϑair ϑpreheat


ε= »
ϑexhaust - ϑair ϑexhaust

with:

ϑpreheat air preheat temperature [°C]


ϑexhaust hot exhaust temperature [°C]
ϑair air inlet temperature [°C]

The air preheat temperature is the temperature which is supplied to the burner. Energy losses
between a central heat exchanger and the burner have to be considered. The hot exhaust tem-
perature is the temperature of the exhaust gases leaving the furnace. In most cases this tem-
perature is close to the process temperature. In radiant tube heated furnaces this temperature
can be substantially higher than the furnace temperature. The air inlet temperature is usually
ambiant air and therefore the relative air preheat can be expressed as the ratio of preheat tem-
perature to hot exhaust temperature. The relative air preheat is a good figure to characterize a
heat exchanger for air preheating.

Figure 2: Heat exchanber performance

A heat exchanger performance is evaluated by the NTU – number of transfer unit. The NTU
are proportional to the heat exchanger area and inversely proportional to the heat capacity
flow through the heat exchanger.

k½A
NTU =
m½cp
with: A - heat exchanger surface area
k – heat transfer coefficient
m – mass flow
cp – specific heat

Figure 2 shows the relative air preheat in a simplified diagramm for counterflow and coflow
heat exchangers.
What can be seen in the diagramm is, that it is relatively easy to achieve a relative air preheat
of 0.4 to 0.5 with counterflow or coflow heat exchangers. But to gain more air preheat, re-
quires effective counterflow heat exchangers with large heat exchanger surface areas. To get
to high air preheat temperatures (relative air preheat of 0.8 to 0.9), requires 5 to 10 times
higher heat exchanger surface areas compared to a relative air preheat of 0.5.
The savings can be calculated as:
low efficiency
savings =1 -
high efficiency

That translates to savings of 20% if a system with 68% efficiency is upgraded to 85% effi-
ciency.
Energy efficiency is not a new topic i, but it has gained popularity lately due to rising energy
prices.

Continous direct fired furnaces

Figure 3: Direct fired contninous furnace

One option, shown in Figure 3, to lower the exhaust gas losses is to add an unheated section
to the furnace where the incoming products are preheated. This is quite effective as long as
the flue gas is hot but to really transfer considerable amounts of heat, very long preheat zones
would be necessary. This method to improve efficiency is common in the ceramic industry in
tunnel furnaces.

Figure 4: Continous furnace with central recuperator


Additional usefull cooling of exhaust gases can be done in a central heat exchanger (Figure
4). The limitation here is coming from the design and size of the recuperator as well as the
maximum temperature for the hot air control valves. Common air preheat temperatures are
300° to 500° and in some cases as high as 600°C.

Figure 5: Decentralized heat recovery

The limitations for air preheating could be overcome with self recuperative burners (Figure 6)
or regenerative burner systems for decentralized heat recovery (Figure 5). Here every burner
has its own heat exchanger which is placed in the furnace wall or close to the burner. The
combustion air control valves are located on the cold side of the heat exchangers. Besides
higher efficiency, such a system provides a more excact furnace temperature control because
there is no interaction between the furnace zones. The lack of the costly insulated hot air pip-
ing and a preheat zone usually offsets the higher burner costs and the expenditure for the ex-
haust collection system. Energy savings of 10 to 30% compared to systems with central recu-
perators can be achieved.
Figure 6: Self recuperative burner REKUMAT® (WS GmbH)

Even higher airpreheat temperatures and therefore higher efficiency can be achieved with re-
generative burners. For larger burner capacites, regenerative burner pairs are common. As
shown in Figure 7, two burners are linked and are firing alternately. Exhaust and combustion
air are directed over the regenerators which are made of ceramic balls or honeycombs. Rela-
tive air preheat of 0.8 to 0.9 are achievable, making these systems very effective. Figure 8
shows one of the regenerative burners. The burner uses air staging as NOx-reducing measure
ii
.

Figure 7: Regenerative burner pair Figure 8: Regenerative burner (Bloom)

For smaller capacities, a self regenerative burner allows the same high efficiency, but with the
advantage of a single burner solution iii. There is no need to switch from one burner to another
and the one burner can fire continously, just like a recuperative burner. This is possible by in-
tegrating all switching valves and regenerators into one compact unit, as shown in Figure 9
and Figure 10.
Figure 9: Self regenerative burner Figure 10: REGEMAT® (WS GmbH)

Fuel saving compared to self recuperators are in the range of 10 to 20% and savings of 50%
and more compared to cold air systems were achieved. Low NOx combustion is achieved by
flameless oxidation iv, FLOX® (registered trademark of WS Wärmeprozesstechnik, Rennin-
gen, Germany).

Radiant tube fired systems

For radiant tubes, decentralized heat recovery is preferable. Central heat exchangers, which
are common for large direct fired furnaces are not practical for radiant tube fired systems be-
cause there is no central exhaust outlet of the furnace. The hot exhaust gases would have to be
transported to the heat exchanger in costly insulated ducts and then the hot air has to be dis-
tributed back to the individual radiant tubes. For radiant tube heating, a good heat recovery
system is essential since the exhaust temperatures are often substantially higher than the fur-
nace temperature. That is particularly true for ceramic radiant tubes with high heat release
rates.
The different radiant tube designs (see Figure 11) require different strategies for heat recov-
ery.
Figure 11: Radiant tube designs

In straight through tubes, heat recovery is very rare. For U- or W-tubes, the most common
way to preheat the combustion air is to use plug-in recuperators (Figure 12). To enhance the
air preheat, external recuperators are also possible. The limitation for air preheat is coming
from the necassity to guide the hot air from the exhaust leg to the burner and also from the
coflow heat exchanger design.

Figure 12: W-tube with plug in recuperator

Higher air preheat temperatures and thereby higher effiency can be achieved with regenera-
tive burner systems in U-, W- and A-tubes. Two burners per tube are firing alternating (see
Figure 13). The regenerative systems allow air preheat temperatures close to the furnace tem-
perature. Energy savings of more than 20% compared to systems with plug in recuperators are
typical. Besides energy savings, the temperature uniformity of the tubes are much better due
to the alternating flow direction in the tube. Attention has to be paid to NOx-formation due to
the high air preheat and also the complexity of the system due to two burners per tube.
Figure 13: regenerative fired W-tube

Single ended, P- and Double-P tubes are usually fired with self recuperative burners. The
counterflow heat exchanger, which is placed inside the furnace wall, allows high air preheat
temperatures and there is no hot air piping required outside the furnace. For high tempera-
tures, self recuperative burners with ceramic heat exchangers (see Figure 6) are available. Air
preheat temperatures in the range of 500 to 700°C are typical. Figure 14 shows a double-P
tube with a self recuperative burner. High velocity combustion results in a good temperature
uniformity and internal recirculation allows the application of flameless oxidation FLOX®, as
an effective method to reduce thermal NOx formation. Self recuperative burners a widely used
since they combine good performance with a high efficiency.

Figure 14: Double-P-tube with self recuperative burner


Figure 15: Double-P-tube with self recuperative burner

Figure 16: Double-P-tube with self regenerative burner

To combine the advantages of regenerative systems and self recuperative burners, a self re-
generative burner for radiant tubes was developped.

Figure 17: Self regenerative radiant tube burner Figure 18: Firing into a Double-P-Tube

Figure 17 shows a self regenerative burner which could be used for direct firing and for heat-
ing of recirculating radiant tubes. The self regenerative burner is used in combination with a
pulse firing system, that means, the burner is on/off controlled. All the logic for regenerative
switching, flame safety, ignition and valve operation is handled by a local burner control unit.
That makes the installation, start up and maintenance as easy as with self recuperative burn-
ers. The tube temperature uniformity is excellent because of the internal recirculation and
NOx emissions are low due to flameless oxidation. Figure 18 shows the self regenerative
burner firing into a double-P-tube. The burner is in operation but firing in flameless oxidation
mode.

Conclusions

There are many options for increasing the energy efficiency. Preheating the combustion air is
the most effective way to increase efficiency in most furnaces. To fight the challenges of ris-
ing energy cost and environmental regulations, a close cooperation of the end user, the fur-
nace builder and the burner manufacturer is necessary to choose the best possible configura-
tion with respect to:
- performance
- energy efficiency
- low emissions
- low maintenance
and of course not higher than needed investment costs.

i
Combustion Engineering and Gas Utilization, J.R. Cornforth, 3rd edition 1992, British Gas, London
ii
Dave Schalles, Greenhouse Gas Reduction Options Applied to Metals Industry, 2002 AFRC Meeting, Houston
iii
Milani A., Salomone GV., Wünning J., Advanced Regenerative Design Cuts Air Pollution, Advanced Steel
1998-99, UK

iv
Wünning J., Flameless Oxidation: Combustion with low NOx-emissions even at high air preheat temperatures
2002 AFRC Meeting, Houston

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