Hot Water Boiler Systems ASHRAE Presentation
Hot Water Boiler Systems ASHRAE Presentation
Hot Water Boiler Systems ASHRAE Presentation
Thermal Shock
Resistant boilers
Copper fin tube Flexible Watertube boilers Most condensing boilers Eutectic cast iron boilers
Thermal Shock
Thermal Shock results from rapid temperature changes in the boiler uneven temperature changes to boiler vessel parts of boiler expanding (or contracting) more rapidly than other parts rigidity in boiler construction continuous flexing of rigid parts can be caused by frequent cycling for example: shutting plant down at night
Thermal Shock results in leaking tubes cracked tube sheets cracked sections in cast iron boilers
Disadvantages
Prone to thermal shock
Slow warm-up Maintain temperature in standby boilers
On many large projects, firetube hot water boilers are extremely efficient and reliable, but hydronic system and control system design must be adapted to the boilers needs
Con
Gas fired only Flow sensitive
Use primary-secondary systems Excess flow erosion Low flow scale formation Must have flow to operate
Flextube Boilers
Water in the Tubes/Exhaust Gases Pass Around the Tubes Up to 12 MMBtu/hr Input Multiple Passes Hot Water/Low Pressure Steam Boilers High Resistance to Thermal Stress Heating Applications
10 100 134 200 268 335 402 470 536 670 836 1005 1340 1675 2010 2350 2680 3350 4020 4690 5360
100
125 150 200 250 300 350 400 500 600 700 800
500 670 1005 1340 1675 2010 2345 2680 3350 4185 5025 6695 8370 10045 11720 13400 16740 20080 23450 26780
SYSTEM TEMPERATURE DROP - DEGREES F 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 20 MAXIMUM CIRCULATION RATE - GPM 50 33 25 20 17 14 12 11 67 45 33 27 22 19 17 15 100 67 50 40 33 29 25 22 134 89 67 54 45 38 33 30 168 112 84 67 56 48 42 37 201 134 101 80 67 58 50 45 235 157 118 94 78 67 59 52 268 179 134 107 90 77 67 60 84 75 335 223 168 134 112 96 418 279 209 168 140 120 105 93 503 335 251 201 168 144 126 112 670 447 335 268 224 192 168 149 838 558 419 335 280 240 210 186 1005 670 503 402 335 287 251 223 1175 784 587 470 392 336 294 261 1340 895 670 535 447 383 335 298 1675 1120 838 670 558 479 419 372 2010 1340 1005 805 670 575 502 448 2345 1565 1175 940 785 670 585 520 2680 1785 1340 1075 895 765 670 595
100 10 13 20 27 33 40 47 54 67 84 100 134 167 201 236 268 335 402 470 535 18
Efficiency by Losses
Fuel energy in = heat energy out Energy leaves in hot water (or steam) or as a loss Efficiency = 100% minus losses Greatest loss is stack loss (100% minus stack loss = Combustion Efficiency
Typically 15% to 20% including latent and sensible heat With natural gas, 10% of energy in fuel is lost as latent heat of vaporization With fuel oil, 4% of energy in fuel is lost as latent heat Remainder of stack loss is sensible heat Sensible heat loss increases with excess air
Condensing Boilers
One ft3 natural gas yields two ft3 water vapor. Two ft3 water vapor condenses to one ounce water About 9% of the BTU content in each ft3 natural gas burned leaves the stack as latent heat of vaporization in this water vapor By condensing this water and lowering the stack temperature, 98% efficiency can be reached. Some heat pump supplement boilers can achieve this. A 1 million BTU/hr boiler will produce 6 gallons/hr liquid water when fully condensing This water will only condense at gas temp <135F No manufacturers boiler can take full advantage of typical 160 to 180F hydronic applications
Cautions !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Any boiler can be a condensing boiler
Just return water cooler than 130F Water will condense somewhere in the boiler
Pulse Boilers
Use fuel energy to pull in combustion air
No combustion air blower motor (except for start)
High water volume design Require vibration isolation on mount and piping Special designs available for low emitted noise Extremely compact
Is not sensitive to water flow Uses very little electrical energy 0.25 amps, 120V
Very few condensing boilers can burn oil #2 oil is used as a back-up in some designs
Boiler is prevented from condensing when on oil Water temperature is automatically raised
Premix Burner
Hydro-Formed water-tubes
Compact 316L heat exchanger allows one unit to be applied for hydronic or domestic hot water
Condensate is acidic
Neutralize with limestone chips Use trap to keep flue gasses out of neutralizer and out of boiler room
Purge all air from system Balance flow through operating boilers Prevent thermal shock damage to boilers Prevent steaming - maintain water pressure Keep water inlet and outlet temperatures within design limits
41
Water to and from Building System Could be 1000s of Gallons stored in piping
(c ) (f)
(d)
(e)
This system shows motorized isolation valves (a) to allow flow to be directed to operating boilers only. Flow control valves (b) are shown bypassing the on-off valves to make certain that there is some flow through the boiler to keep vessel hot. Blend pumps (c ) serve to equalize the temperature within the boiler when in keep warm mode. Typically the lead pump (d) would run continuously, and would support the lead boiler. The first lag pump (e) would start and stop with the first lag boiler. A signal from boiler return temperature could be used to cut back on the building pumping rate if the return water temperature fell below the minimum (150 degF for CB firetube boilers. Manual shutoff valves (f) would isolate a boiler from the loop for cold standby duty.
Modulate operating boilers in parallel Reduce or stop flow through standby boilers Maintain minimum flow through operating units
Common header temp sensor needs flow Minimum flow depends on boiler design
Boiler 1
Boiler 2
Boiler 3
Thank you!