US134373A - Improvement in regenerators for metallurgy furnaces - Google Patents

Improvement in regenerators for metallurgy furnaces Download PDF

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US134373A
US134373A US134373DA US134373A US 134373 A US134373 A US 134373A US 134373D A US134373D A US 134373DA US 134373 A US134373 A US 134373A
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regenerators
combustion
air
chamber
gas
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F28HEAT EXCHANGE IN GENERAL
    • F28FDETAILS OF HEAT-EXCHANGE AND HEAT-TRANSFER APPARATUS, OF GENERAL APPLICATION
    • F28F21/00Constructions of heat-exchange apparatus characterised by the selection of particular materials
    • F28F21/04Constructions of heat-exchange apparatus characterised by the selection of particular materials of ceramic; of concrete; of natural stone

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  • Fig. 2 is a vertical longitudinal section ⁇ to the chambers through which the waste products of combustion are caused to pass on their way from the combustion chamber to the stack.7
  • regenerators operate to take up from the waste products of combustion the heat they may still retain, and to transmit or impart the same to the inowin g air, or air and gas, in their passage to the combustionchamber. This is accomplished in various ways; as, rst, by alternately exposing the regenerators,77 which are b'uilt of a refractory material and with numerous passages or iues for the passage of the currents of air and gas to the influence of the heated spent gases or products of combustion from the combustionchamber, and to the currents of air and gas entering or flowing to the combustion-chamber. By this method.
  • Another method is to build the re generators with vertical and transverse llues, and to cause the waste products of combustion to descend through one series of lues, and while the inflowing air and gas pass upward through another series of lues, so that the heat will be transmitted through the bricks or tile, of which c the regenerator is built, fromV the outflowin g current to theinowing currents of gas and air.
  • regenerators Among the various methods of building the regenerators is that of constructing them ot' alternate solid and hollow ⁇ bricks, the solid bricks being placed vertically and laterally and the hollow bricks transversely relatively to each other, so as to form the desired lues or passage.
  • the hollow bricks have openings passings through them longitudinally, and all the bricks used in this regenerator are necessarily very small.
  • My invention consists in constructing the regenerators A A of bricks or tile having vertical openings, passages, or lues l 1 and transverse openings or iues 2 2.
  • each regenerator A there are one, two, or more series of y chambers and lues, B B, each series having an entrance-flue, 3, for the admittance of the air or gas; a chamber, 4, into which it passes from the flue 3; an intermediate chamber, 5, which it enters by the openings 2, and from which it passes by the openings 2 into the chamber 6, which completes the series of ascending passages.
  • the ascending current passes directly from the chamber 6 into the 'line leading to the combustion-chamber.
  • the descending ues or passages to accommodate the heated waste products of combustion consist of the drop-flue 7 which leads from the combustion-chamber, the distributingtlue 8, and the vertical passages or flues 1 1 which lead down into the ilue l0 running directly to the stack.
  • regenerators A A, one for the gas and the other for the air, to be used in the combustion-chamber.
  • the admission ot' these into the regenerators is regulated by suitable valves and passages, which, not forming any part of the subject-matter of this application, I will not further mention.
  • the operation is as follows:
  • the spent gases or waste products of combustion passing out of the neck of the furnace enter the drop-fine 7, and from thence pass into and through the distributing-fines 8 into the passages l, down which they pass, imparting their heat to the surrounding walls, and from thence into the ue l0 which leads to the stack.
  • the heat taken up by the walls is transmitted through them and imparted to the inowing currents of air and gas, which are thereby raised in temperature as they ascend.
  • regenerator A A The great advantages of this construction of the regenerator A A are its great simplicity and cheapness.
  • This construction I am enabled to subject the inowing air and gas to a steady, invariable heat, and secure a regenerator with very few joints.
  • the bricks of which the regenerators are constructed form the subject-matter ot' another application, and are made, in the usual way, ot' a refractory material. They are made of any desired size, and with any number of passages 1 and 2. Each wall may be made in one piece, or may be composed of two, three, or more bricks, if desired; the less the better, as it reduces the number ot' joints.
  • regenerators A constructed of bricks having vertical ilues or openings 1 and transverse openings 2 2, substantially as described.

Description

` ZSheets--SheetL H.FRANK.
Begenerators 'for Metallurgie Furnaces. No. 134,373. y Patented 1396.31, 1872.
TEEEES /Wm J ./507,
. da@ y Y f/ywwgp/M 2 Sheets--Sheet 2.
H. FRANK.
Regenera'tors for Metallurgie l-'urnaceY Patented Dec.31, 1872.
NITED STATES Freiraum arten.
HIMAN FRANK, OF PITTSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA.
Speciicationhforming part of Letters Patent No. 134,373, dated December 31, 1872.
To all whom it may concern: A
Be it known that l, HDIAN FRANK, of Pittsburg, in the county of Allegheny and State of Pennsylvania, have invented a new and useful Improvement in the Construction of Begenerators for Metallurgie and other Furnaces; and I do hereby declare the following to be a full, clear, and exact description thereof, reference being had to the accompanying drawing forming a part of this specitication, in whichfFigure 1 is a vertical cross-section of my improved regenerator through the line a' x in Fig.
3. Fig. 2 is a vertical longitudinal section` to the chambers through which the waste products of combustion are caused to pass on their way from the combustion chamber to the stack.7 These regenerators operate to take up from the waste products of combustion the heat they may still retain, and to transmit or impart the same to the inowin g air, or air and gas, in their passage to the combustionchamber. This is accomplished in various ways; as, rst, by alternately exposing the regenerators,77 which are b'uilt of a refractory material and with numerous passages or iues for the passage of the currents of air and gas to the influence of the heated spent gases or products of combustion from the combustionchamber, and to the currents of air and gas entering or flowing to the combustion-chamber. By this method. the heat acquired from the heated products of combustion by the regenerators will be taken up by the inliowing air and gas.' This method is objectionable, since it produces variations of temperature in the intlowin g air, which is very highly heated when it first passes through the regenerator, but, as the latter cools, is reduced in temperature.
Another method is to build the re generators with vertical and transverse llues, and to cause the waste products of combustion to descend through one series of lues, and while the inflowing air and gas pass upward through another series of lues, so that the heat will be transmitted through the bricks or tile, of which c the regenerator is built, fromV the outflowin g current to theinowing currents of gas and air.
Among the various methods of building the regenerators is that of constructing them ot' alternate solid and hollow` bricks, the solid bricks being placed vertically and laterally and the hollow bricks transversely relatively to each other, so as to form the desired lues or passage. The hollow bricks have openings passings through them longitudinally, and all the bricks used in this regenerator are necessarily very small.
One great objection to this last method is that the bricks being very small, there are, consequently, very many joints to the regenerator, which are liable to leak and permit the air and gas to mingle with the waste products of combustion. In no case have the regenerators been constructed with walls having both vertical and transverse passages running through them.
My invention consists in constructing the regenerators A A of bricks or tile having vertical openings, passages, or lues l 1 and transverse openings or iues 2 2. In each regenerator A there are one, two, or more series of y chambers and lues, B B, each series having an entrance-flue, 3, for the admittance of the air or gas; a chamber, 4, into which it passes from the flue 3; an intermediate chamber, 5, which it enters by the openings 2, and from which it passes by the openings 2 into the chamber 6, which completes the series of ascending passages. The ascending current passes directly from the chamber 6 into the 'line leading to the combustion-chamber. The descending ues or passages to accommodate the heated waste products of combustion consist of the drop-flue 7 which leads from the combustion-chamber, the distributingtlue 8, and the vertical passages or flues 1 1 which lead down into the ilue l0 running directly to the stack.
In connection with the furnace to which I have applied my improvement, I make use of two regenerators, A A, one for the gas and the other for the air, to be used in the combustion-chamber. The admission ot' these into the regenerators is regulated by suitable valves and passages, which, not forming any part of the subject-matter of this application, I will not further mention.
The operation is as follows: The air or gas, being admitted into the fines 3 3, passes into the chamber 4, and from thence, by means of the openings 2, throu gh the wall, into the chamber 5, whence it passes, by means of the passages 2, into the chamber 6 on either side, and from thence upward into the flue leading to the combustion-chamber or bed of the furnace. The spent gases or waste products of combustion passing out of the neck of the furnace enter the drop-fine 7, and from thence pass into and through the distributing-fines 8 into the passages l, down which they pass, imparting their heat to the surrounding walls, and from thence into the ue l0 which leads to the stack. The heat taken up by the walls is transmitted through them and imparted to the inowing currents of air and gas, which are thereby raised in temperature as they ascend.
The great advantages of this construction of the regenerator A A are its great simplicity and cheapness. By this construction I am enabled to subject the inowing air and gas to a steady, invariable heat, and secure a regenerator with very few joints.
The bricks of which the regenerators are constructed form the subject-matter ot' another application, and are made, in the usual way, ot' a refractory material. They are made of any desired size, and with any number of passages 1 and 2. Each wall may be made in one piece, or may be composed of two, three, or more bricks, if desired; the less the better, as it reduces the number ot' joints.
What I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
1. The regenerators A A constructed of bricks having vertical ilues or openings 1 and transverse openings 2 2, substantially as described. v
2. rlhe vertical ues running through the .center of the walls of the regenerator, through which the products of combustion pass to the stack, in combination with the chambers and transverse openings in the walls, through which the air and gas pass to the combustionchamber, substantially as and for the purposes described.
In testimony whereof I, the said HIMAN FRANK, have hereunto set my hand.
. HIM'AN FRANK.
. Witnesses:
A. S. NICHOLSON, Trios. B. KERR.
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