Iron and Steel - Combustion in the Open-hearth Furnace with Special Reference to Automatic Control

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
K. Huessener
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
32
File Size:
1121 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1926

Abstract

In presenting the following data on combustion in the open hearth furnace and the advisability of automatic combusion control, the author finds himself much more severely handicapped by the lack of reliable test results than he had anticipated when he first undertook to write this paper. In order thoroughly to investigate how the results of an open-hearth furnace are influenced by combustion, one would have to draw up a large number of heat-balance sheets, as Kinney and McDermottl have given for one heat in their extremely able paper on "Open Hearth Efficiency,' presented before the American Iron and Steel Institute on October 27th,1 1922. Instead of covering only one heat, however, such heat-balance sheets would have to embrace a large number of heats, and not only for one kind of fuel, but for all the various fuels in customary use. Use of Radiation-protected Pyrometer Such tests necessitate extremely careful temperature readings, and here the first serious difficulty presents itself. Nearly all the temperature readings so far published have been taken with thermocouples for the lower ranges and with optical or radiation pyrometers for the higher ranges. This method of measuring reveals the temperature of the surrounding walls, or in the case of optical or radiation measurements, the temperature of that part of the opposing walls which has been focused by the instrument. The error in ascertaining the temperature of the gases entering or the waste gases leaving the checker chambers is probably not very large, as the flowing gases impart their temperature to the walls of the flues. On the other hand, the uptakes, where the preheat temperature of gas and air are usually measured, are under the influence of radiated heat from the port ends, and correct temperature readings can here be taken only by using a radiation-protected pyrometer of the aspirating type.
Citation

APA: K. Huessener  (1926)  Iron and Steel - Combustion in the Open-hearth Furnace with Special Reference to Automatic Control

MLA: K. Huessener Iron and Steel - Combustion in the Open-hearth Furnace with Special Reference to Automatic Control. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1926.

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