Bulletin 237 Tests of A Large Boiler Fired with Powdered Coal At the Lakeside Station, Milwaukee

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 88
- File Size:
- 15340 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1925
Abstract
This report gives the results of 26 tests of a four-pass Edgemoor
boiler fired with powdered coal at the Lakeside station of the Milwaukee
Electric Railway & Light Co. The tests were made by the
fuel section of the Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the research
department of the Combustion Engineering Corporation and the
operating department of the Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light
Co. The object of the tests was to determine the thermal efficiencies
and capacities obtainable by burning powdered coal under large
central-station boilers, and the possibility of operating such boilers
continuously at high efficiency and capacity without destructive
effect on the furnaces and without difficulties in refuse removal.
In any system for burning pulverized coal the furnace is the most
important part because, to justify the cost of pulverizing, the powdered
coal must be burned with higher efficiency than coal fired with
mechanical stokers. In other words, it is the furnace that by giving
higher thermal efficiency must pay for the installation, maintenance,
and operation of the pulverizing equipment. No matter how simple
the apparatus for the preparation of pulverized coal may be, or how
simple the pulverizing process, unless the furnace is so designed that
it can be operated continuously with high thermal efficiency, the
whole system is a failure.
For high thermal efficiency the coal must be burned almost completely
with low excess air. But low excess air and complete combustion
give high furnace temperature, which in turn causes erosion
of the furnace lining and fusion of the ash; and removal of the fused
ash is difficult. The necessity of complete combustion with low
excess air thus brings with it these two important problems in the design of a furnace for burning powdered coal: 1, Prevention of
erosion of the furnace lining; 2, easy removal of refuse from the
furnace.
For the purpose of solving these problems, the boiler tested was
equipped with a furnace having hollow walls, through which about
60 per cent of the air needed for combustion passed before it entered
the furnace. By passing through the hollow walls, the air cooled the
furnace lining and prevented excessive erosion. A water screen was
placed in the furnace about 3 feet above the bottom to keep the
refuse deposited at the bottom from fusing and to make its removal
easy. The design of the furnace, water screen, and burners was
based on the experience gained in the previous cooperative tests1
with a smaller furnace, experimental water screen, and burners at
the Oneida Street station of the Milwaukee Electric Railway &
Light Co.
The boiler tested had 13,057 square feet of heating surface. It
was one of eight boilers fired with powdered coal, and was designated
as boiler No. 8. The Lakeside station is the largest central station
in the world that burns powdered coal exclusively.
The coal used in the first five tests came from Illinois. The fuel
in the other tests -:vas a mixture of Illinois and Pittsburgh coals.
Citation
APA:
(1925) Bulletin 237 Tests of A Large Boiler Fired with Powdered Coal At the Lakeside Station, MilwaukeeMLA: Bulletin 237 Tests of A Large Boiler Fired with Powdered Coal At the Lakeside Station, Milwaukee. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1925.