Burner Furnace
Burner Furnace
Burner Furnace
Muffler
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Back to Basics
Rectangular flames. Wall-fired burners (Figure 3) typically produce a flat or rectangular flame (Figure 4). These
burners heat the firebox refractory wall, which radiates heat
toward the tubes located in the center of the firebox. This
type of firebox arrangement is more costly to build because
the amount of tube surface area per unit of firebox volume
is low. However, it does permit much better control of heat
flux in the tubes, and is therefore the preferred solution in
applications where the flux and temperature profile, both
longitudinal and circumferential, are critical, such as coker
heaters and steam cracking furnaces. Fluegas alone is a poor
radiative emitter because it emits and radiates only at certain
wavelengths. A solid wall does not have this restriction and
is therefore capable of more-efficient radiant heat transfer.
Flat-flame wall-fired burners rely on the firebox wall to
create a certain heating pattern that is compatible with the
process. This relatively simple concept produces good flame
patterns and low NOx emissions by optimally distributing
(staging) the fuel into the air stream and against the wall.
This burner is well suited for applications with low heat
t Figure 2.
Individual
freestanding
burners located in
the middle of the
firebox provide
radiant heat for
the tubes lining
the firebox walls.
Primary
Fuel Gas Tip
Tile
Mounting Plate
Staged
Fuel Gas Tip
Damper
Plenum
p Figure 3. Wall-fired burners produce flat flames that heat the refractory
wall of a firebox. This provides more-efficient radiant heat transfer for the
tubes in the center of the firebox.
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and thermal NOx production. In staged-air burners, the primary air (approximately 40% of the total air) is mixed with
the total quantity of fuel, producing a fuel-rich flame. This
primary-zone flame is both relatively cool and deficient in
oxygen conditions that inhibit NOx formation. Secondary
air is introduced downstream of the primary-flame zone so
combustion is completed in an environment that is sufficiently cool to limit thermal NOx production.
A similar effect is accomplished in staged-fuel burners
by separating the fuel into two stages while all of the air is
introduced into the flame at once.
In ultra-low-NOx and next-generation ultra-low-NOx
burners, more advanced techniques such as internal fluegas
recirculation and lean premixing of the air and fuel are used
to reduce NOx emissions to very low levels. These techniques and their impact on firebox design are outside the
scope of this article.
Radiant-wall burners
The term radiant wall refers to the configuration of the
firebox. Dozens (or even hundreds) of burners mounted
on the wall of the heater provide even, radiant heat to the
process tubes in the center of the firebox (Figure 5). Applications that require even heat flux to process coils, such as
hydrogen reforming and hydrocarbon cracking to ethylene,
have been using many small premix radiant-wall burners
since the late 1950s. In a premix burner, some or all of the
fuel and air are mixed inside the burner, prior to reaching
the tile. A typical radiant-wall burner (Figure 6) is comprised of five parts: the venturi, the primary premix tip, the
fuel orifice spud, the primary air door, and the secondary
lighting and sighting port(s). Burner tile assemblies, such
Premix
Tip
Secondary Light/
Sight Door
Fuel Spud
Air Tip
Venturi
Primary Air
Door
Gas Tip
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Back to Basics
Combination burners
Many refining and petrochemical plants use liquid burner
fuel, especially outside the U.S., due to its availability, ease
of transport, and flexibility in storage. A liquid-fired burners
design is significantly different from that of any gas-fired
burner, and it presents many more challenges during operation than a gas-fired burner. For those reasons, most burners
designed for liquid firing are also equipped with gas-firing
capability. Therefore, oil burners for process heaters are typically combination gas-oil burners.
A combination burner can be thought of as two or even
three burners in one the combination burner must perform using oil exclusively as the fuel, gas exclusively, and
sometimes both gas and oil simultaneously. Good performance with one fuel does not imply good performance with
the other fuel or the combination. The design strategies that
work well for gas-only or oil-only burners can conflict in a
combination burner.
Firing a liquid fuel requires atomization of the liquid.
In order to efficiently combust, the liquid fuel needs to be
broken up into small droplets. Smaller droplets allow fast
surface vaporization, providing the required gas phase for
mixing with air. To break the fuel into small droplets, an
atomization system (i.e., oil gun) is required. Most oil guns
in industry have a concentric tube design in which oil flows
through the inner tube while the atomizing medium, usually
steam, flows through the annular area between the inner and
outer tubes (Figure 9).
A typical combination burner contains a primary oil
tile (i.e., regen tile) and a secondary tile, as illustrated in
Figure 10. The oil gun is located at the center of the regen
tile and the gas tips are located between the regen tile and
the secondary tile. While oil firing is uncommon due to its
complexity and high NOx emissions, there are still many
older combination burners in the U.S. that fire gas only.
Pilot burners
Pilot burners are small, independently controlled burners
that act as an ignition source for the larger process burners.
Pilot burners are predominantly premixed, although there are
raw-gas and liquid-hydrocarbon-fueled pilots. This article
discusses gas-fired premix pilots only.
One of the earliest attempts at specifying pilots was
National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) Standard 85C
for pilot burners in power-generation boilers (3). These
pilots were initially used in coal-fired and heavy-oil-fired
large-capacity-boiler burners. The most recent standards are
NFPA 85, Boiler and Combustion Systems Hazards Code
(4), and NFPA 87, Recommended Practice for Fluid Heaters (5). The American Petroleum Institute (API) has issued
two publications that address pilots: API Standard 560/ISO
13705, Fired Heaters for General Refinery Service (6), and
API Recommended Practice 535, Burners for Fired Heaters
in General Refinery Services (7). Engineers working with
pilot burners should familiarize themselves with the full
content of these referenced publications, as they are generally accepted industry norms.
Primary Tile
Gas Tip
Secondary Tile
Oil Gun
Pilot Tip
Air Inlet
Mixer
p Figure 9. This oil gun has a concentric tube design. Oil flows through
the inner tube, while the atomizing medium, typically steam, flows through
the annular area between the inner and outer tubes.
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Fuel Spud
p Figure 11. This standard premix gas pilot for process burners is
manually ignited.
Flame detection
The two most common technologies for burner flame
detection are flame rods and scanners.
In recent years, flame ionization rods with flame rectification circuits have become more common. When a flame
rod is placed within a flame zone, the ionized particles
within the flame provide a conducting pathway between the
isolated and insulated flame rod assembly and the grounded
pilot and main burner assemblies. The flame rectification
circuit provides a low voltage to the flame rod (Figure 12).
With the presence of flame, the ionized zone within the
flame allows current to flow; sensing this current flow is
proof of flame.
In order for the flame rod to function properly, it must be
immersed in the pilot flame, the flame rod assembly must be
isolated and insulated from any grounding or contact with
the pilot and main burner assemblies, and the pilot body
must be adequately grounded.
Optical scanning technology, typically in the ultraviolet
(UV) range, is frequently used for main-burner flame detection, but can be used for pilot flame detection as well. In a
UV flame scanner, optical sensors detect the UV radiation
emitted during combustion.
Ignition of pilot burners and process burners can be
accomplished either locally or remotely. Either a torch
(i.e., flame ignition) or electronic starter can provide local
ignition. If ignition is accomplished via remote signal, electronic methods are typically used.
Pilot Tip
Ignition Rod
Flame
Rod
Air Inlet
Mixer
Fuel Spud
Burner selection
Process burners are typically custom-designed for each
unique application. Therefore, process burner selection must
be made in conjunction with a burner manufacturer. Heater
geometry, fuel type, heat input requirements, and emissions
performance are important factors that must be considered
prior to burner selection. In addition, replacing conventional
burners with low-NOx or ultra-low-NOx burners often
requires special attention, because of the increase in flame
dimensions and the limited space in the heater. Computational fluid dynamic (CFD) studies can be performed to
identify potential adverse fluegas flow patterns so appropriate steps to prevent flame impingement on coils can be taken
during burner design and selection (8). Plants and companies
may select a limited number of burner designs to minimize
CEP
maintenance and operator training.
Literature Cited
1. Platvoet, E., et al., Process Burners, Chapter 1 in Baukal, C.,
ed., John Zink Hamworthy Combustion Handbook, Vol. 3:
Applications, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL (2013).
2. Baukal, C., and W. Bussman, NOx Emissions, Chapter 15 in
Baukal, C., ed., John Zink Hamworthy Combustion Handbook,
Vol. 1: Fundamentals, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL (2013).
3. National Fire Protection Association, Standard for the Prevention of Furnace Explosions/Implosions in Multiple Burner BoilerFurnaces, NFPA 85C, NFPA, Quincy, MA (1991).
4. National Fire Protection Association, Boiler and Combustion
Systems Hazards Code, NFPA 85, NFPA, Quincy, MA (2011).
5. National Fire Protection Association, Recommended Practice
for Fluid Heaters, NFPA 87, NFPA, Quincy, MA (2011).
6. American Petroleum Institute, ANSI/API Standard 560
(ISO 13705:2006), Fired Heaters for General Refinery Services,
4th ed., API, Washington, DC (Aug. 2007).
7. American Petroleum Institute, API Recommended Practice
535, Burners for Fired Heaters in General Refinery Service,
2nd ed., API, Washington, DC (Jan. 2006).
8. Lorra, M. A., and S. Chen, CFD-Based Combustion
Modeling, Chapter 13 in Baukal, C., ed., John Zink
Hamworthy Combustion Handbook, Vol. 1: Fundamentals,
CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL (2013).
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