NZ536701A - Detonative cleaning apparatus - Google Patents

Detonative cleaning apparatus

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Publication number
NZ536701A
NZ536701A NZ53670104A NZ53670104A NZ536701A NZ 536701 A NZ536701 A NZ 536701A NZ 53670104 A NZ53670104 A NZ 53670104A NZ 53670104 A NZ53670104 A NZ 53670104A NZ 536701 A NZ536701 A NZ 536701A
Authority
NZ
New Zealand
Prior art keywords
oxidizer
fuel
conduit
downstream
vessel
Prior art date
Application number
NZ53670104A
Inventor
Thomas R A Bussing
Donald W Kendrick
Original Assignee
United Technologies Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US10/718,855 external-priority patent/US7104223B2/en
Priority claimed from US10/733,717 external-priority patent/US20050125932A1/en
Application filed by United Technologies Corp filed Critical United Technologies Corp
Publication of NZ536701A publication Critical patent/NZ536701A/en

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Abstract

An apparatus for cleaning a surface within a vessel having a vessel wall separating a vessel exterior from a vessel interior and having a wall aperture is disclosed. The apparatus includes an elongate conduit (26) which has an upstream first and a downstream second end. The elongate conduit (26) is positioned to direct a shock wave from the second end into the vessel interior. A source of fuel and oxidizer (32) is coupled to the conduit (26) to deliver the fuel and oxidizer to the conduit (26) and an initiator (50) is positioned to initiate a reaction of the fuel and oxidizer to produce a detonation wave within the conduit (26) for generating the shock wave. A supplemental gas inlet is provided for receiving a supplemental gas, and a supplemental gas outlet is provided for discharging the supplemental gas so that it will to pass into the vessel.

Description

536 7 o 1 Intellectual Property Office of M.2. 1 9 MOV 2004 RECEIVED Patents Form No. 5 Patents Act 1953 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION DETONATIVE CLEANING APPARATUS We, United Technologies Corporation, a corporation of the State of Delaware, United States of America, United Technologies Building, Hartford, Connecticut 06101, United States of America, hereby declare the invention for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement: 1 (to be followed by 1a) TITLE: DETONATIVE CLEANING APPARATUS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The invention relates to industrial equipment. More particularly, the invention relates to the detonative cleaning of industrial equipment.
Surface fouling is a major problem in industrial equipment. Such equipment includes furnaces (coal, oil, waste, etc.), boilers, gasifiers, reactors, heat exchangers, and the like. Typically the equipment involves a vessel containing internal heat transfer surfaces that are subjected to fouling by accumulating particulate such as soot, ash, minerals and other products and byproducts of combustion, more integrated buildup such as slag and/or fouling, and the like. Such particulate build-up may progressively interfere with plant operation, reducing efficiency and throughput and potentially causing damage. Cleaning of the equipment is therefore highly desirable and is attended by a number of relevant considerations. Often direct access to the fouled surfaces is difficult. Additionally, to maintain revenue it is desirable to minimize industrial equipment downtime and related costs associated with cleaning. A variety of technologies have been proposed. By way of example, various technologies have been proposed in U.S. patents 5,494,004 and 6,438,191 and U.S. patent application publication 2002/0112638. Additional technology is disclosed in Huque, Z. Experimental Investigation of Slag Removal Using Pulse Detonation Wave Technique, DOE/HBCU/OMI Annual Symposium, Miami, FL., March 16-18, 1999. Particular blast wave techniques are described by Hanjalic and Smajevic in their publications: Hanjalic, K. and Smajevic, I., Further Experience Using Detonation Waves for Cleaning Boiler Heating Surfaces, International Journal of Energy Research Vol. 17, 583-595 (1993) and Hanjalic, K. and Smajevic, I., Detonation-Wave Technique for On-load Deposit Removal from Surfaces Exposed to Fouling: Parts I and II, Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power, Transactions of the ASME, Vol. 1,116 223-236, January 1994. Such systems are also discussed in Yugoslav patent publications P 1756/88 and P 1728/88. Such systems are often identified as "soot blowers" after an exemplary application for the technology.
Nevertheless, there remain opportunities for further improvement in the field. 1a SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION One aspect of the invention involves an apparatus for cleaning a surface within a vessel. A vessel wall separates a vessel exterior from a vessel interior and has a wall aperture. An elongate conduit has an upstream first and a downstream second 5 end and is positioned to direct a shock wave from the second end into the vessel interior. A source of fuel and oxidizer is coupled to the conduit to deliver the fuel and oxidizer to the conduit. An initiator is positioned to initiate a reaction of the fuel and oxidizer to produce a detonation wave within the conduit for generating the shock wave. A source of purge gas is coupled to the conduit to introduce the purge gas to 10 the conduit to drive reaction products of the fuel and oxidizer downstream.
In various implementations, the conduit may have a first portion and a second portion downstream thereof. The first portion may have a first characteristic cross-sectional area and the second portion may have a second characteristic cross-sectional area is which may also be greater than the first. The initiator may be positioned to initiate a deflagration of the fuel and oxidizer in the first portion so that a deflagration-to-detonation transition from such deflagration produces the detonation wave. The source of fuel and oxidizer may include first fuel and oxidizer sources of first fuel and oxidizer and second fuel and oxidizer sources of second fuel and 20 oxidizer. The second fuel and oxidizer sources may be coupled to the conduit downstream of where the first fuel and oxidizer sources are coupled.
Another aspect of the invention involves a method for cleaning a surface within a vessel. The vessel has a wall with an aperture therein. Fuel and oxidizer are 25 introduced to a conduit. A reaction of the fuel and oxidizer is initiated so as to cause a shock wave to impinge upon the surface. A pressurized purge gas is then introduced to the conduit.
In various implementations, the method may be formed in a repeated sequential way.
The reaction may comprise a deflagration-to-detonation transition. The purge gas may comprise, in major portion, air. The purge gas may be introduced through a purge gas port in an upstreammost 20% of a flowpath length within the conduit. The introduction of fuel and oxidizer may include introducing a first fuel and oxidizer forming a first fuel/oxidizer mixture and introducing a second fuel and oxidizer 2 forming a second fuel/oxidizer mixture, the second mixture being less detonable than the first mixture. The second oxidizer may be less oxygen-rich than the first oxidizer. The second fuel/oxidizer mixture may be introduced as a mixture. The second fuel/oxidizer mixture may provide a slower reaction chemistry than a reaction chemistry of the first fuel/oxidizer mixture. A major portion of the first fuel/oxidizer mixture may be provided before or after a major portion of the second fuel/oxidizer mixture is provided.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is a view of an industrial furnace associated with several soot blowers positioned to clean a level of the furnace.
FIG. 2 is a side view of one of the blowers of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a partially cut-away side view of an upstream end of the blower of FIG. 2. FIG. 4 is a longitudinal sectional view of a main combustor segment of the soot blower of FIG. 2.
FIG. 5 is an end view of the segment of FIG. 4.
FIG. 6 is a side view of an alternate discharge end portion of a combustion tube assembly.
FIG. 7 is a view of an air curtain flange of the assembly of FIG. 6.
FIG. 8 is a downstream end view of the flange of FIG. 7.
FIG. 9 is a downstream end view of a thermal isolation flange assembly.
FIG. 10 is an exploded view of the assembly of FIG. 9.
FIG. 11 is a view of a nozzle assembly.
FIG. 12 is a downstream end view of a nozzle assembly of FIG. 11.
FIG. 13 is a longitudinal sectional view of the nozzle assembly of FIG. 12, taken along line 13-13.
FIG. 14 is an enlarged view of a flange portion of the nozzle assembly of FIG. 13. FIG. 15 is a partial longitudinal sectional view of a downstream end portion of the nozzle assembly of FIG. 11.
FIG. 16 is a partial longitudinal sectional view of an alternate air curtain flange. 3 Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION FIG. 1 shows a furnace 20 having an exemplary three associated soot blowers 22. In the illustrated embodiment, the furnace vessel is formed as a right parallelepiped and the soot blowers are all associated with a single common wall 24 of the vessel and are positioned at like height along the wall. Other configurations are possible (e.g., a single soot blower, one or more soot blowers on each of multiple levels, and 10 the like).
Each soot blower 22 includes an elongate combustion conduit 26 extending from an upstream distal end 28 away from the furnace wall 24 to a downstream proximal end 30 closely associated with the wall 24. Optionally, however, the end 30 may be well within the furnace. In operation of each soot blower, combustion of a fuel/oxidizer 15 mixture within the conduit 26 is initiated proximate the upstream end (e.g., within an upstreammost 10% of a conduit length) to produce a detonation wave which is expelled from the downstream end as a shock wave along with associated combustion gases for cleaning surfaces within the interior volume of the furnace. Each soot blower may be associated with a fuel/oxidizer source 32. Such source or 20 one or more components thereof may be shared amongst the various soot blowers. An exemplary source includes a liquified or compressed gaseous fuel cylinder 34 and an oxygen cylinder 36 in respective containment structures 38 and 40. In the exemplary embodiment, the oxidizer is a first oxidizer such as essentially pure oxygen. A second oxidizer may be in the form of shop air delivered from a central air 25 source 42. In the exemplary embodiment, air is stored in an air accumulator 44. Fuel, expanded from that in the cylinder 34 is generally stored in a fuel accumulator 46. Each exemplary source 32 is coupled to the associated conduit 26 by appropriate plumbing below. Similarly, each soot blower includes a spark box 50 for initiating combustion of the fuel oxidizer mixture and which, along with the source 32, 30 is controlled by a control and monitoring system (not shown). FIG. 1 further shows the wall 24 as including a number of ports for inspection and/or measurement. Exemplary ports include an optical monitoring port 54 and a temperature monitoring port 56 associated with each soot blower 22 for respectively receiving an infrared and/or visible light video camera and thermocouple probe for viewing the surfaces to 4 be cleaned and monitoring internal temperatures. Other probes/monitoring/sampling may be utilized, including pressure monitoring, composition sampling, and the like. FIG. 2 shows further details of an exemplary soot blower 22. The exemplary detonation conduit 26 is formed with a main body portion formed by a series of 5 doubly flanged conduit sections or segments 60 arrayed from upstream to downstream and a downstream nozzle conduit section or segment 62 having a downstream portion 64 extending through an aperture 66 in the wall and ending in the downstream end or outlet 30 exposed to the furnace interior 68. The term nozzle is used broadly and does not require the presence of any aerodynamic contraction, 10 expansion, or combination thereof. Exemplary conduit segment material is metallic (e.g., stainless steel). The outlet 30 may be located further within the furnace if appropriate support and cooling are provided. FIG. 2 further shows furnace interior tube bundles 70, the exterior surfaces of which are subject to fouling. In the exemplary embodiment, each of the conduit segments 60 is supported on an 15 associated trolley 72, the wheels of which engage a track system 74 along the facility floor 76. The exemplary track system includes a pair of parallel rails engaging concave peripheral surfaces of the trolley wheels. The exemplary segments 60 are of similar length U and are bolted end-to-end by associated arrays of bolts in the bolt holes of their respective flanges. Similarly, the downstream flange of the 20 downstreammost of the segments 60 is bolted to the upstream flange of the nozzle 62. In the exemplary embodiment, a reaction strap 80 (e.g., cotton or thermally/structurally robust synthetic) in series with one or more metal coil reaction springs 82 is coupled to this last mated flange pair and connects the combustion conduit to an environmental structure such as the furnace wall for resiliently 25 absorbing reaction forces associated with discharging of the soot blower and ensuring correct placement of the combustion conduit for subsequent firings. Optionally, additional damping (not shown) may be provided. The reaction strap/spring combination may be formed as a single length or a loop. In the exemplary embodiment, this combined downstream section has an overall length L2. 30 Extending downstream from the upstream end 28 is a predetonator conduit section/segment 84 which also may be doubly flanged and has a length L3. The predetonator conduit segment 84 has a characteristic internal cross-sectional area (transverse to an axis/centerline 500 of the conduit) which is smaller than a characteristic internal cross-sectional area (e.g., mean, median, mode, or the like) of 35 the downstream portion (60, 62) of the combustion conduit. In an exemplary embodiment involving circular sectioned conduit segments, the predetonator cross-sectional area is a characterized by a diameter of between 8 cm and 12 cm whereas the downstream portion is characterized by a diameter of between 20 cm and 40 cm. Accordingly, exemplary cross-sectional area ratios of the downstream portion to the 5 predetonator segment are between 1:1 and 10:1, more narrowly, 2:1 and 10:1. An overall length L between ends 28 and 30 may be 1-15 m, more narrowly, 5-15 m. In the exemplary embodiment, a transition conduit segment 86 extends between the predetonator segment 84 and the upstreammost segment 60. The segment 86 has upstream and downstream flanges sized to mate with the respective flanges of the 10 segments 84 and 60 has an interior surface which provides a smooth transition between the internal cross-sections thereof. The exemplary segment 86 has a length L4. An exemplary half angle of divergence of the interior surface of segment 86 is < 12°, more narrowly 5-10°.
A fuel/oxidizer charge may be introduced to the detonation conduit interior in a variety of ways. There may be one or more distinct fuel/oxidizer mixtures. Such mixture(s) may be premixed external to the detonation conduit, or may be mixed at or subsequent to introduction to the conduit. FIG. 3 shows the segments 84 and 86 configured for distinct introduction of two distinct fuel/oxidizer combinations: a 20 predetonator combination; and a main combination. In the exemplary embodiment, in an upstream portion of the segment 84, a pair of predetonator fuel injection conduits 90 are coupled to ports 92 in the segment wall which define fuel injection ports. Similarly, a pair of predetonator oxidizer conduits 94 are coupled to oxidizer inlet ports 96. In the exemplary embodiment, these ports are in the upstream half of 25 the length of the segment 84. In the exemplary embodiment, each of the fuel injection ports 92 is paired with an associated one of the oxidizer ports 96 at even axial position and at an angle (exemplary 90° shown, although other angles including 180° are possible) to provide opposed jet mixing of fuel and oxidizer. Discussed further below, a purge gas conduit 98 is similarly connected to a purge gas port 100 30 yet further upstream. An end plate 102 bolted to the upstream flange of the segment 84 seals the upstream end of the combustion conduit and passes through an igniter/initiator 106 (e.g., a spark plug) having an operative end 108 in the interior of the segment 84. 6 In the exemplary embodiment, the main fuel and oxidizer are introduced to the segment 86. In the illustrated embodiment, main fuel is carried by a number of main fuel conduits 112 and main oxidizer is carried by a number of main oxidizer conduits 110, each of which has terminal portions concentrically surrounding an associated 5 one of the fuel conduits 112 so as to mix the main fuel and oxidizer at an associated inlet 114. In exemplary embodiments, the fuels are hydrocarbons. In particular exemplary embodiments, both fuels are the same, drawn from a single fuel source but mixed with distinct oxidizers: essentially pure oxygen for the predetonator mixture; and air for the main mixture. Exemplary fuels useful in such a situation are 10 propane, MAPP gas, or mixtures thereof. Other fuels are possible, including ethylene and liquid fuels (e.g., diesel, kerosene, and jet aviation fuels). The oxidizers can include mixtures such as air/oxygen mixtures of appropriate ratios to achieve desired main and/or predetonator charge chemistries. Further, monopropellant fuels having molecularly combined fuel and oxidizer components may be options.
In operation, at the beginning of a use cycle, the combustion conduit is initially empty except for the presence of air (or other purge gas). The predetonator fuel and oxidizer are then introduced through the associated ports filling the segment 84 and extending partially into the segment 86 (e.g., to near the midpoint) and 20 advantageously just beyond the main fuel/oxidizer ports. The predetonator fuel and oxidizer flows are then shut off. An exemplary volume filled the predetonator fuel and oxidizer is 1-40%, more narrowly 1-20%, of the combustion conduit volume. The main fuel and oxidizer are then introduced, to substantially fill some fraction (e.g., 20-100%) of the remaining volume of the combustor conduit. The main fuel and 25 oxidizer flows are then shut off. The prior introduction of predetonator fuel and oxidizer past the main fuel/oxidizer ports largely eliminates the risk of the formation of an air or other non-combustible slug between the predetonator and main charges. Such a slug could prevent migration of the combustion front between the two charges.
With the charges introduced, the spark box is triggered to provide a spark discharge of the initiator igniting the predetonator charge. The predetonator charge being selected for very fast combustion chemistry, the initial deflagration quickly transitions to a detonation within the segment 84 and producing a detonation wave. Once such 7 a detonation wave occurs, it is effective to pass through the main charge which might, otherwise, have sufficiently slow chemistry to not detonate within the conduit of its own accord. The wave passes longitudinally downstream and emerges from the downstream end 30 as a shock wave within the furnace interior, impinging upon 5 the surfaces to be cleaned and thermally and mechanically shocking to typically at least loosen the contamination. The wave will be followed by the expulsion of pressurized combustion products from the detonation conduit, the expelled products emerging as a jet from the downstream end 30 and further completing the cleaning process (e.g., removing the loosened material). After or overlapping such venting of 10 combustion products, a purge gas (e.g., air from the same source providing the main oxidizer and/or nitrogen) is introduced through the purge port 100 to drive the final combustion products out and leave the detonation conduit filled with purge gas ready to repeat the cycle (either immediately or at a subsequent regular interval or at a subsequent irregular interval (which may be manually or automatically determined by 15 the control and monitoring system)). Optionally, a baseline flow of the purge gas may be maintained between charge/discharge cycles so as to prevent gas and particulate from the furnace interior from infiltrating upstream and to assist in cooling of the detonation conduit.
In various implementations, internal surface enhancements may substantially increase internal surface area beyond that provided by the nominally cylindrical and frustoconical segment interior surfaces. The enhancement may be effective to assist in the deflagration-to-detonation transition or in the maintenance of the detonation wave. FIG. 4 shows internal surface enhancements applied to the interior of one of 25 the main segments 60. The exemplary enhancement is nominally a Chin spiral, although other enhancements such as Shchelkin spirals and Smirnov cavities may be utilized. The spiral is formed by a helical member 120. The exemplary member 120 is formed as a circular-sectioned metallic element (e.g., stainless steel wire) of approximately 8-20mm in sectional diameter. Other sections may alternatively be 30 used. The exemplary member 120 is held spaced-apart from the segment interior surface by a plurality of longitudinal elements 122. The exemplary longitudinal elements are rods of similar section and material to the member 120 and welded thereto and to the interior surface of the associated segment 60. Such enhancements may also be utilized to provide predetonation in lieu of or in addition 8 to the foregoing techniques involving different charges and different combustor cross-sections.
The apparatus may be used in a wide variety of applications. By way of example, 5 just within a typical coal-fired furnace, the apparatus may be applied to: the pendents or secondary superheaters, the convective pass (primary superheaters and the economizer bundles); air preheaters; selective catalyst removers (SCR) scrubbers; the baghouse or electrostatic precipitator; economizer hoppers; ash or other heat/accumulations whether on heat transfer surfaces or elsewhere, and the like. 10 Similar possibilities exist within other applications including oil-fired furnaces, black liquor recovery boilers, biomass boilers, waste reclamation burners (trash burners), and the like.
Further steps may be taken to isolate the combustion conduit (or major portion 15 thereof) from chemical contamination and thermal stresses.
FIG. 6 shows an outlet/discharge end assembly 140 extending to an outlet 30'. The outlet end assembly 140 may be used as a downstream nozzle/outlet conduit section in place of the section 62 of FIG. 2. Although identified as a nozzle, this does not 20 require the presence of any particular convergence, divergence, or combination thereof in the nozzle. The exemplary assembly 140 provides means for thermally and chemically isolating upstream portions of the combustion conduit. From upstream to downstream, the assembly 140 includes a doubly flanged conduit segment 142 having upstream and downstream bolting flanges 144 and 146. The 25 body of the conduit segment 142 may have a number of instrumentation and/or sampling ports 148 which may be plugged to the extent not in use. The flange 144 has an upstream face for mounting to the downstream face of the downstream flange of the penultimate conduit segment. This junction may also serve for connection of the reaction strap or other means. The flange 146 has a downstream face for mating 30 with the upstream face of an air curtain flange 150 which, as described below, provides chemical isolation for portions of the combustion conduit upstream thereof. The air curtain flange 150 has a downstream face for mating with the upstream face of a thermal isolation flange 152 which is cooled to isolate upstream portions of the combustion conduit from heating (thermal soakback) from the furnace. The thermal 9 isolation flange 152 has a downstream face for mating with an upstream face of a flange 154 of a nozzle assembly 156 having a nozzle body 158 extending to the outlet 30' and further cooled as described below. Nut and bolt combinations 160 extend through the bolt holes of the flanges 146, 150, 152 and 154 to structurally and 5 sealingly secure the assembly components together.
The exemplary air curtain flange 150 (FIGS. 7 and 8) includes the upstream and downstream faces, an exterior perimeter surface 170 and an interior surface 172 circumscribing the combustion gas flowpath. An array of bolt holes extend between 10 the upstream and downstream faces. The interior surface 172 is at substantially even radius from the detonation conduit centerline as is the interior surface of the adjacent conduit segment 142. An annular channel 174 is formed in one of the faces (e.g., the downstream face) and is in communication via a connecting passageway 176 with an exterior port 178 on the perimeter surface. An interior rim 180 (shown as is a portion of the downstream face separated from the remainder by the channel) of the channel along the interior surface is segmented or castellated by a circumferential array of slots 182. In the assembled condition, the mouth of the rim is closed by the adjacent face of its mating flange (e.g., the upstream face of the thermal isolation flange or the downstream face of downstream flange 146 of the 20 conduit segment 142). Gas (e.g., air, N2, C02, or other relatively inert gas) may be introduced to the channel 174 through the passageway and port (which may be provided with an appropriate connection fitting (not shown in FIGS. 7 and 8)). When so introduced, the gas fills the channel and flows inward into the combustion conduit interior through the slots. Exemplary air curtain flanges may be machined (e.g., 25 directly or from a casting or forging) of appropriate metal (e.g., steel or nickel-or cobalt-based superalloy).
FIG. 16 shows an alternate thermal isolation flange 184 including a channel 185 and passageway 186. The alternate flange 184 may be similarly constructed to the 30 flange 150. The exemplary alternate flange 184 differs in that its outlets are provided by full holes 188 in the inboard/interior surface rather than by recesses. Furthermore, those holes are angled so that the discharge outflow is off-radial (e.g., by an angle 0 so as to have a downstream longitudinal component). The hole centerlines may, also, be oriented with a tangential component if a tangential flow 35 component is desired. The downstream longitudinal flow component may further assist in preventing contaminant from passing upstream from the furnace. Exemplary values for 0 are between 5° and 60°.
In operation, the gas flow may supplement or replace a baseline continuous purge gas flow. The proximity of the air curtain flange 150 to the outlet 30' may provide improved resistance to the upstream reinfiltration of combustion gases discharged from the apparatus and infiltration of general furnace gases as well as particulate contamination. In addition to contamination from particulates generated within the furnace, the air curtain flow prevents accumulation of particulate reaction products from the combustion gases especially as such gases may cool and precipitate out particles or liquid condensate which may, in turn, accommodate particle formation or sludge formation. If operated in a baseline fashion, the continuous gas flow may also provide supplemental cooling of the conduit (especially downstream of the point of introduction).
FIGS. 9 and 10 show details of the exemplary thermal isolation flange 152. The flange includes the upstream and downstream faces and an exterior perimeter surface 190. It further includes an interior surface 192 encircling the combustion gas flowpath at substantially even radius as the interior surfaces of the adjacent components. An array of bolt holes extend between the upstream and downstream faces. A channel 194 formed on one of the faces (e.g., the downstream face) extends longitudinally inward therefrom. In the illustrated embodiment, the channel has two general portions: a deep base portion 196 which is less than a full annulus; and a mouth portion 198 which extends to the associated face and is a full annulus. The mouth portion is wider than the base portion extending both radially outward and radially inward therefrom to define a pair of annular shoulder surfaces 200 and 202. In the exemplary embodiment, the channel is machined in two steps. The mouth portion may be machined and then the base portion may be machined below a base of the mouth portion, leaving a divider portion 204 of the flange between two ends of the base portion. Alternatively, the base portion may initially be formed as a full annulus and then a separate divider element inserted to turn the base channel into the partial annulus. A pair of passageways 206 and 208 connect the associated end portions of the channel base portion to associated exterior ports 210 and 212 (e.g., in the flange perimeter surface). The exterior ports may be equipped with appropriate 11 fittings. In the exemplary embodiment, the mouth portion of the channel accommodates a full annulus sealing ring 214 which seats against the shoulder surfaces of the remaining body piece of the flange and may be welded in place to close the channel. Alternatively, in the absence of a mouth portion and sealing ring, 5 the adjacent flange itself may close and seal the channel. In operation, a heat transfer fluid is introduced through one of the ports and withdrawn from the other after passing circumferentially through the channel. Exemplary heat transfer fluid may be liquid (e.g., aqueous (water or a water/glycol mixture) or oil-based) or gaseous (e.g., air or compressed/refrigerated C02 or N2) as may be appropriate for 10 desired heat transfer. Similarly, the heat transfer flowpath (e.g., channel) geometry and the flow rate may be tailored to achieve a desired heat transfer. The heat transfer fluid can both assist in cooling of the nozzle and in isolating elevated nozzle temperatures from upstream components. Such a thermal isolation flange may be used elsewhere in the system and may be used in other soot blower and different 15 applications where thermal isolation is required. Materials and manufacturing techniques similar to those of the air curtain flange may be used.
FIGS. 11-14 show further details of the nozzle assembly 156. FIG. 13 shows the nozzle assembly as including a main tube 220 having an interior surface 222 and an 20 exterior surface 224 and extending from an upstream rim 226 to a downstream rim 230 essentially defining the outlet 30'. The interior surface may be at substantially even radius from the centerline as interior surfaces of other components described above. The flange 154 includes a main upstream piece 232 having upstream and downstream faces 234 and 236, an interior surface 237, and an exterior peripheral 25 surface 238. The main piece 232 is secured to an upstream portion of the main tube 220 with its interior surface contacting the exterior surface of the tube. Exemplary connection is by welding. An annular plenum 240 may be machined in the main flange piece 232 (e.g., as a rebate of an inboard portion of the downstream face). An outboard portion of the channel is closed by the second flange piece 242 having 30 upstream and downstream faces 244 and 246, an interior surface 248, and an exterior periphery 250. The upstream face 244 may abut the first piece downstream face 236 and be sealed thereto such as via an O-ring 252 residing at least partially in a channel in one or both of the pieces. The two pieces may be held together by the same bolts/nuts 160 or by separate bolts, welds, or the like. The interior surface 248 35 is spaced slightly apart from the tube exterior surface 224. A sleeve 254 has interior 12 and exterior surfaces 256 and 258 and extends from an upstream end/rim 260 to a downstream end/rim 262 (FIG. 13). The interior surface 256 is similarly spaced apart from the tube exterior surface 224 and an upstream end portion is secured to the flange second piece (e.g., accommodated in an annular rebate and welded thereto).
A metering ring 264 circumscribes the plenum 240 to separate radially inboard and outboard portions thereof and has a plurality of apertures therein. One or more feed passageways 270 (two shown) are in communication with the plenum 240. The passageways 270 are in communication with ports (e.g., in the flange first piece) 272 carrying fittings 274. A cooling fluid (e.g., a gas which may be similar to the air 10 curtain gas) is introduced along a nozzle cooling flowpath downstream through the fittings, passageways, and into the outboard portion of the plenum 240. The ring 264 and its apertures meter the flow from the outboard portion of the plenum 240 to the inboard portion and help circumferentially distribute the flow when there are a relatively small number of discrete feed ports. From the inboard/downstream portion 15 of the plenum 240, the flow proceeds downstream in generally annular space 276 between the sleeve 254 and tube 220. In the exemplary embodiment, the cooling gas flow is discharged from a cooling gas outlet 278 between the sleeve downstream rim 262 and the adjacent portion of the tube exterior surface 224. In the exemplary embodiment, the sleeve downstream rim is slightly recessed relative to the tube 20 downstream rim so as to mitigate the influence of the detonation wave on the cooling gas flow and mitigate the effect of the wave on the potentially relatively thin and fragile sleeve.
Advantageously, means are provided for maintaining the circumferentially 25 spaced-apart relationship between the tube 220 and sleeve 254. Exemplary means include one or more spacer elements. The spacer elements may be associated with means for measuring temperature parameters of the nozzle body largely defined by the tube and sleeve downstream of the flange. FIG. 11 shows an exemplary first spacer 280. The exemplary first spacer is forked, having two tines 282 and 284 30 extending from upstream ends to a junction 286 from which a single leg 288 extends further downstream to a leg downstream end proximate the sleeve downstream end. The space between the tines may accommodate an additional thermocouple (not shown) adjacent the junction and with its wires running back upstream and passing through a thermocouple fitting port 290 in the main flange piece 232. FIG. 15 shows 35 a second spacer 292 as an elongate, nominally rectangular, strip extending from an 13 upstream end at the sleeve upstream end to a downstream end at the tube downstream end 230. The exemplary spacer 292 has, at its downstream end, an aperture between its outboard and inboard surfaces an aligned similar blind aperture extends inward from the tube exterior surface. A thermocouple 294 is mounted 5 within the blind aperture and has its body 296 extending outward, around the sleeve, and through a protective tube 298 (also FIG. 11) secured to the exterior surface of the sleeve. The thermocouple 294 serves to measure temperatures at the tube downstream rim. Flange materials and mounting techniques may be similar to those of the air curtain and thermal isolation flanges. Tube, sleeve, and ring materials may 10 be similar and may be made by a variety of known manufacturing techniques (e.g., rolling and welding of sheet stock or machining).
In operation, the control and monitoring system uses the first thermocouple 294 to principally monitor the temperature of the nozzle assembly portion exposed to the is furnace interior. The aforementioned additional thermocouple may be monitored as a back-up in the event of a failure of the first thermocouple when it is not desirable to immediately initiate a shutdown for repair. The same or different critical temperatures may be utilized in determining shutdown based upon the outputs of the two thermocouples.
Returning to FIG. 6, the nozzle assembly may be provided with an interface plate 300 largely closing the portion of the furnace wall aperture outboard of the nozzle body. In operation, the plate 300 is normally positioned in close or contacting proximity to the furnace wall outer surface. The plate may have a number of 25 apertures for accommodating various measuring, sampling, observation, and other equipment. These apertures may be provided with covers when not in use. A series of struts 302 connect the plate 300 to the flange 154 to hold the plate relative to the flange. The plate may have an aperture closely encircling the body 158. The plate normally blocks the wall aperture to at least partially restrict flow of gases and 30 particles from between the combustion tube and wall aperture (e.g., inflow with a negative pressure furnace). Upon discharge of the apparatus, the exemplary plate recoils with the combustion conduit and is returned along therewith to its original place by the action of the reaction strap/spring combination. The exemplary plate 14 material is steel or nickel- or cobalt-based superalloy, optionally provided with an insulating layer (e.g., cementaceous material).
One or more embodiments of the present invention have been described.
Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the invention may be adapted for use with a variety of industrial equipment and with variety of soot blower technologies. Aspects of the existing equipment and technologies may influence aspects of any particular implementation. Other shapes of combustion conduit (e.g., non-straight sections to navigate external or internal obstacles) may be possible. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims. »

Claims (25)

  1. CLAIMS 1. 5 10 15 2. 20 3. 25 30 4.
  2. An apparatus for cleaning a surface within a vessel having a vessel wall separating a vessel exterior from a vessel interior and having a wall aperture, the apparatus comprising: an elongate conduit having an upstream first and a downstream second end and positioned to direct a shock wave from the second end into the vessel interior; a source of fuel and oxidizer coupled to the conduit to deliver the fuel and oxidizer to the conduit; an initiator positioned to initiate a reaction of the fuel and oxidizer to produce a detonation wave within the conduit for generating the shock wave; a supplemental gas inlet for receiving a supplemental gas; and a supplemental gas outlet for discharging the supplemental gas to pass into the vessel.
  3. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising: a source of a purge gas coupled to the conduit to introduce the purge gas to the conduit to drive reaction products of the fuel and oxidizer downstream.
  4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein: the conduit comprises a first portion and a second portion downstream of the first portion; the first portion has a first characteristic cross-sectional area and the second portion has a second characteristic cross-sectional area, greater than the first characteristic cross-sectional area; and the initiator is positioned to initiate a deflagration of the fuel and oxidizer in the first portion, with a deflagration-to-detonation transition from said deflagration producing said detonation wave.
  5. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the source of fuel and oxidizer comprises: a first fuel source of a first fuel; a first oxidizer source of a first oxidizer; a second fuel source of a second fuel; and Intellectual Property Office of N.2. 16 '28 SEP 2006 a second oxidizer source of a second oxidizer. 5 6. 10 25 8. 30 9.
  6. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein: the second fuel and oxidizer sources are coupled to the conduit downstream of where the first fuel and oxidizer sources are coupled.
  7. The apparatus of claim 1 further characterized by an outlet section having: a mounting flange for coupling the apparatus to the upstream portion of the conduit and having: first and second faces; an inboard surface bounding a central aperture; an outboard perimeter; and an array of bolt holes between the first and second faces; a conduit segment extending downstream from the flange and having: inner and outer walls along at least a portion of a length; and a space between the inner and outer walls for carrying said supplemental gas as a cooling fluid.
  8. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein: the space extends from an upstream end outside the vessel wall at least partially downstream within the wall; the supplemental gas outlet is along the conduit segment; and the supplemental gas inlet is along the flange.
  9. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein: the inner and outer walls each have a downstream rim; and the supplemental gas outlet is between the inner and outer walls.
  10. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein: the inner wall is essentially formed by a first tubular piece extending from an upstream rim to a downstream rim and having interior and exterior surfaces, along an upstream portion, the interior surface providing the flange inboard surface. 17 Intellectual Property „ Office of N.z. 2 8 SEP 2006 The apparatus of claim 1 further characterized by a thermal isolation flange along the conduit and comprising: a body having: first and second faces; an inboard surface bounding a central aperture; an outboard perimeter; an array of bolt holes between the first and second faces; a channel inboard of the bolt holes; and first and second ports in communication with the channel; and a flow of liquid through the channel and entering the flange through the first port and exiting the flange through the second port.
  11. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein: the channel is in the first face; a sealing ring resides in an outboard portion of the channel; and the first and second ports are formed in the perimeter.
  12. The apparatus of claim 1 further characterized by a gas curtain flange along the conduit and comprising: a body having: first and second faces; an inboard surface bounding a central aperture; an outboard perimeter; an array of bolt holes between the first and second faces; a channel inboard of the bolt holes; said supplemental gas inlet being outboard of the inboard surface in communication with the channel; and said supplemental gas outlet being in the inboard surface in communication with the channel.
  13. The apparatus of claim 12 wherein: the supplemental gas inlet is in the perimeter; Intellectual Property Office of N.2. 2 8 SEP 2006 10 15 20 25 the channel is in the first face; the supplemental gas outlet comprises a plurality of recesses in an inboard rim of the channel or a plurality of full holes in the inboard surface; and the at least one second port is positioned so that the introduction of a pressurized fluid into the channel through the supplemental gas inlet produces a plurality of discharge streams from the at least one second port at least partially radially inward from the inboard surface.
  14. 14. A method for cleaning a surface within a vessel, the vessel having a wall with an aperture therein, the method comprising: introducing fuel and oxidizer to a conduit; initiating a reaction of the fuel and oxidizer so as to cause a shock wave to impinge upon the surface; and introducing a supplemental gas to a wall of the conduit to discharge into the vessel.
  15. 15. The method of claim 14 performed in a repeated sequential way.
  16. 16. The method of claim 14 wherein: the supplemental gas cools a nozzle.
  17. 17. The method of claim 14 wherein: the supplemental gas forms an air curtain to resist the upstream reinfiltration of combustion gases discharged from the apparatus and infiltration of general furnace gases as well as particulate contamination.
  18. 18. The method of claim 14 wherein: a purge gas is introduced through a purge gas port in an upstreammost 20% of a flowpath length within the conduit.
  19. 19. The method of claim 14 wherein the introduction of the fuel and oxidizer comprises: introducing a first fuel and a first oxidizer forming a first fuel/oxidizer mixture; and introducing a second fuel and a second oxidizer forming a second fuel/oxidizer I l"%C,ual Property 19 I . Offrce of N.Z. / 2 8 SEP 2006 [Received V 10 mixture, the second mixture being less detonable than the mixture.
  20. 20. The method of claim 19 wherein: the second oxidizer is less oxygen-rich than the first oxidizer; and the second fuel/oxidizer mixture is introduced as a mixture.
  21. 21. The method of claim 19 wherein: the second fuel/oxidizer mixture provides a slower reaction chemistry than a reaction chemistry of the first fuel/oxidizer mixture.
  22. 22. The method of claim 19 wherein: a major portion of said first fuel/oxidizer mixture is provided before a major portion of said second fuel/oxidizer mixture is provided. 15
  23. 23. The method of claim 19 wherein: a major portion of said first fuel/oxidizer mixture is provided after a major portion of said second fuel/oxidizer mixture is provided.
  24. 24. An apparatus for cleaning a surface within a vessel substantially as hereinbefore 20 described with reference to any one of the accompanying drawings.
  25. 25. A method for cleaning a surface within a vessel substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the accompanying drawings.
NZ53670104A 2003-11-20 2004-11-19 Detonative cleaning apparatus NZ536701A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/718,855 US7104223B2 (en) 2003-11-20 2003-11-20 Detonative cleaning apparatus
US10/733,717 US20050125932A1 (en) 2003-12-11 2003-12-11 Detonative cleaning apparatus nozzle

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NZ536701A true NZ536701A (en) 2007-01-26

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US8651066B2 (en) 2010-09-28 2014-02-18 Bha Altair, Llc Pulse detonation cleaning system

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US5430691A (en) * 1994-05-27 1995-07-04 Fridman; Igor Shock wave generator
US5494004A (en) * 1994-09-23 1996-02-27 Lockheed Corporation On line pulsed detonation/deflagration soot blower

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AU2004229044B2 (en) 2007-04-26

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