US1776178A - Furnace construction - Google Patents

Furnace construction Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1776178A
US1776178A US241568A US24156827A US1776178A US 1776178 A US1776178 A US 1776178A US 241568 A US241568 A US 241568A US 24156827 A US24156827 A US 24156827A US 1776178 A US1776178 A US 1776178A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
tubes
pit
walls
ash
furnace
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status 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 status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US241568A
Inventor
Carlson Carl Thomas
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
CASEY HEDGES Co
CASEY-HEDGES Co
Original Assignee
CASEY HEDGES Co
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
Application filed by CASEY HEDGES Co filed Critical CASEY HEDGES Co
Priority to US241568A priority Critical patent/US1776178A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1776178A publication Critical patent/US1776178A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23MCASINGS, LININGS, WALLS OR DOORS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR COMBUSTION CHAMBERS, e.g. FIREBRIDGES; DEVICES FOR DEFLECTING AIR, FLAMES OR COMBUSTION PRODUCTS IN COMBUSTION CHAMBERS; SAFETY ARRANGEMENTS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR COMBUSTION APPARATUS; DETAILS OF COMBUSTION CHAMBERS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F23M5/00Casings; Linings; Walls
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23MCASINGS, LININGS, WALLS OR DOORS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR COMBUSTION CHAMBERS, e.g. FIREBRIDGES; DEVICES FOR DEFLECTING AIR, FLAMES OR COMBUSTION PRODUCTS IN COMBUSTION CHAMBERS; SAFETY ARRANGEMENTS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR COMBUSTION APPARATUS; DETAILS OF COMBUSTION CHAMBERS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F23M5/00Casings; Linings; Walls
    • F23M5/08Cooling thereof; Tube walls
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23MCASINGS, LININGS, WALLS OR DOORS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR COMBUSTION CHAMBERS, e.g. FIREBRIDGES; DEVICES FOR DEFLECTING AIR, FLAMES OR COMBUSTION PRODUCTS IN COMBUSTION CHAMBERS; SAFETY ARRANGEMENTS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR COMBUSTION APPARATUS; DETAILS OF COMBUSTION CHAMBERS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F23M2700/00Constructional details of combustion chambers
    • F23M2700/005Structures of combustion chambers or smoke ducts

Definitions

  • the primary object of the invention is to provide furnace structure for use particularly in the burning of pulverulent or finely divided fuel, by the use of which the ash or residue chamber of the furnace is maintained at substantially even and cool temperature Further, it is an object to so construct the furnace as to protect the walls of the hopper and ash pit, and to prevent the accumulation of refractory products of liquid ash so as to obviate clogging or choking of the furnace.
  • a still further object is to adequately protect against intense heat all surfaces over which the ash or residue of combustion travels in precipitation to the ash pit, and to extract the heat from such residue or ash during its travel and after it has accumulated in the pit.
  • a further object is to provide means for the accomplishment of this heat extraction operation'associated directly with the water circulating system of the furnace, whereby the headerjlt at the lower end of the side heat extracted is utilized in raising the temperature of the water.
  • Fig. 1 is a vertical sectional view taken through the lower part of a furnace struc ture involving the familiar water tube construction, and illustrating the arrangeemnt of cooling tubes in accordance with the invention
  • Fig. 2 is a horizontal sectional view talten through the furnace with part of the casing and refractory material removed, and
  • Fig. 3 is a diagrammatic perspective view illustrating a preferable arrangement of water tubes.
  • l represents the side walls of the hopper
  • 5 is a p1t into which the ash or residue of combustion precipitates. This pit is relatively narrow
  • the walls 4 converge downwardly to communicate with the upper end of the pit.
  • the bottom of the pit is closed by a gate 6 of any suitable construction and operating in any preferred manner.
  • the upper ends of 56 the hopper walls 4 connect with the lower ends of the'side walls of the furnace, and it will be understood that combustion occurs within the chamber between these walls.
  • the hopper walls a are constructed in the I ordinary manner, that is, having refractory material 8 backed with insulating material 9 and held in place by the metal covering or casing 10. These walls have arranged thereon tubes 11 in relatively close relation and resting upon or within the refractory ma-. terial 8. These tubes are disposed parallel with the end walls of thefurnace, and connect preferablyr at their upper ends with headers 12 disposed at 'theupper end of the hopper and preferably at the juncture of the hopper walls with the side walls 71 Arranged adjacent to the juncture of the hopper walls 4 with the side walls 13 of the pit and extending the full length of the furnace are secondary headers 14:, with which the tubes 11 are iii-communication.
  • Certain of the tubes 11 communicate directly with supporting said tubes, while others of the' tubes extend across the hopper and directly above the ash pit so as to communicate with the header 14 at the opposite side of the pit. Should all of the tubes of the series 11 extend across the ash pit to the headers at the oposite'side', a net-work of tubes would occur at the topof the pit sufficiently close to constitute a support for a large part if not sub-' stantialy all of the ash or precipitate of com bustion, whereby the furnace would become, clogged.
  • the refractory wall of the hopper is eflectively pro-j I tected, and ash or other matter dropping thereon will slide down upon the tubes'or the refractory material to the pit 5.
  • the inclination of the walls 4 is sufliciently steep to permit of ready precipitation.
  • the ash and residue of combustion 5 in its downward travel upon or in rear proximity to these tubes will have the heat extracted therefrom by the relatively cool water in the tubes.
  • Ash accumulated in the pit 5 will be cooled bythe crossed pipes at the upper part of the pit, as well as by the relatively cool water in the headers 14.
  • the particular arrangement of the crossmg of the tubes insures proper cooling at the lower part of the furnace. and yet does not.
  • the headers 12 are shown as having vertical tubes 15 connected thereto. In such case, 46* the upper ends of these tubes 15 will connect with headers 16, and from the latter steam and water would circulate back into the boiler (not shown). Such construction is by no means essential but is merely shown as one means of carrying out the circulation. Should the tubes 15 be dispensed with, water may be circulated directly into the boiler from the headers 12. WVater may be supplied to the tube system at any convenient or 503 desired place, pipe connections 20 being shown as introducing water to the header 14 at one side of the system.
  • a hopper having oaf downwardly converging walls, a pit at the lower end of said walls and below the latter, tubes associated with each of said walls and extending toward said pit, and tubes of each Wall extending across said pit to communicate with tubes of the other wall; the crossing of such tubes being above the bottom of said pit.
  • a hopper having downwardly converging walls, a pit communicating with the lower ends of said walls, headers at the juncture of the pit andhopper walls, tubes carried by said hopper walls, some of said tubes communicating with the adjacent header, and other of said tubes extending across said pit and in communication with the header in the opposite side thereof.
  • a hopper having downwardly converging Walls, a pit communicating with the lower ends of said walls, headers arranged in parallel relation at the upper and lower ends of said walls, tubes on each wall connecting said headers ofthat wall, and tubes connecting the upper header of each wall with the lower header of the opposite wall.
  • a hopper having downwardly converging walls, pit walls communicating with the lower ends of said hopper walls and extending downwardly, headers at the upper and lower ends of said hoper walls, tubes on each wall connecting headother tubes on each wall communicating with the headers at the upper ends of that wall and extending downwardly thereon parallel to the other tubes and communicating with the lower headers of the opposite hopper walls.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Gasification And Melting Of Waste (AREA)

Description

p 93 c. T. 'CARLSON l;776,178
Y FURNAICE CONSTRUCTION Filed Dec. 21, 1927 9 2. BY ATTORNEY.
Patented Sept. 16, 1930 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE CARL THOMAS cARLsOn, OF NORTH GHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE, ASSIGNOR TO THE CASEY-HEDGES COMPANY, OFGI-IATTANQOGA,TENNESSEE, A CORPORATION OF OHIO FURNACE OONsTRUOTI N Application filedDecember'Ql, 197.7. ,1 Serial No. 241,568.
The primary object of the inventionis to provide furnace structure for use particularly in the burning of pulverulent or finely divided fuel, by the use of which the ash or residue chamber of the furnace is maintained at substantially even and cool temperature Further, it is an object to so construct the furnace as to protect the walls of the hopper and ash pit, and to prevent the accumulation of refractory products of liquid ash so as to obviate clogging or choking of the furnace.
A still further object is to adequately protect against intense heat all surfaces over which the ash or residue of combustion travels in precipitation to the ash pit, and to extract the heat from such residue or ash during its travel and after it has accumulated in the pit. I
A further object is to provide means for the accomplishment of this heat extraction operation'associated directly with the water circulating system of the furnace, whereby the headerjlt at the lower end of the side heat extracted is utilized in raising the temperature of the water. I
Other objects and advantages will appear from the more detailed description which follows.
In the drawings:
Fig. 1 is a vertical sectional view taken through the lower part of a furnace struc ture involving the familiar water tube construction, and illustrating the arrangeemnt of cooling tubes in accordance with the invention,
Fig. 2 is a horizontal sectional view talten through the furnace with part of the casing and refractory material removed, and
Fig. 3 is a diagrammatic perspective view illustrating a preferable arrangement of water tubes.
Referring now to the drawing, l represents the side walls of the hopper, 5 is a p1t into which the ash or residue of combustion precipitates. This pit is relatively narrow,
and the walls 4 converge downwardly to communicate with the upper end of the pit. The bottom of the pit is closed by a gate 6 of any suitable construction and operating in any preferred manner. The upper ends of 56 the hopper walls 4 connect with the lower ends of the'side walls of the furnace, and it will be understood that combustion occurs within the chamber between these walls.
The hopper walls a are constructed in the I ordinary manner, that is, having refractory material 8 backed with insulating material 9 and held in place by the metal covering or casing 10. These walls have arranged thereon tubes 11 in relatively close relation and resting upon or within the refractory ma-. terial 8. These tubes are disposed parallel with the end walls of thefurnace, and connect preferablyr at their upper ends with headers 12 disposed at 'theupper end of the hopper and preferably at the juncture of the hopper walls with the side walls 71 Arranged adjacent to the juncture of the hopper walls 4 with the side walls 13 of the pit and extending the full length of the furnace are secondary headers 14:, with which the tubes 11 are iii-communication. Certain of the tubes 11 communicate directly with supporting said tubes, while others of the' tubes extend across the hopper and directly above the ash pit so as to communicate with the header 14 at the opposite side of the pit. Should all of the tubes of the series 11 extend across the ash pit to the headers at the oposite'side', a net-work of tubeswould occur at the topof the pit sufficiently close to constitute a support for a large part if not sub-' stantialy all of the ash or precipitate of com bustion, whereby the furnace would become, clogged. Tovobviate this occurrence, only a comparatively few of the'tubes are brought across the ash pit, and the furnace may be found to operate satisfactorily and in a high.- ly efficient manner by having one of each three or'four of the tubes cross in'the manner described. Thecrossingtubes are thus sufliciently spaced apart so as to-not in any way interfere with draft and to obviate the possibility of an accumulation of ash to such degree as to choke the furnace or render the ash diflicult of removal. r WVith the tubes thus arranged, the refractory wall of the hopper is eflectively pro-j I tected, and ash or other matter dropping thereon will slide down upon the tubes'or the refractory material to the pit 5. It will be noted that the inclination of the walls 4 is sufliciently steep to permit of ready precipitation. The ash and residue of combustion 5 in its downward travel upon or in rear proximity to these tubes will have the heat extracted therefrom by the relatively cool water in the tubes. Ash accumulated in the pit 5 will be cooled bythe crossed pipes at the upper part of the pit, as well as by the relatively cool water in the headers 14. Possibly, under normal conditions of operation, the accumulated ash will rise above the crossed tubes 11 at the upper end of the pit, and by reason of the intimate contact of these tubes with the highly heated ash, the heat will be readily extracted, and this heat thus utilized in raising the temperature of the water contained within the pipes 11 and the w headers 14.
The particular arrangement of the crossmg of the tubes insures proper cooling at the lower part of the furnace. and yet does not.
hinder the ashes from precipitating to the pit, or in falling through when the gate 6 is opened. Furthermore, this particular crossing arrangement of the tubes and the extension of tubes of one set to a header at the opposite side of the hopper furnishes a furnace structure possessing the desired flexibility with increased strength. As the upper part of the pit is comparatively narrow, a p
' ers of that wall and lying upon the latter, and
correspondingly short spanning length of tube over the ash pile is provided, and a more even'temperat'ure is thus obtained in this part of the tubewith a more uniform heat absorption.
The headers 12 are shown as having vertical tubes 15 connected thereto. In such case, 46* the upper ends of these tubes 15 will connect with headers 16, and from the latter steam and water would circulate back into the boiler (not shown). Such construction is by no means essential but is merely shown as one means of carrying out the circulation. Should the tubes 15 be dispensed with, water may be circulated directly into the boiler from the headers 12. WVater may be supplied to the tube system at any convenient or 503 desired place, pipe connections 20 being shown as introducing water to the header 14 at one side of the system. i The foregoing is a description of practical embodiments of the invention with alternate ?forms, however, it will be understood that the invention resides in the particular arrangement of tubes 11 associated with the hopper walls and with the ash pit, and any desirable means for carrying out circulation maybe reeolfsorted to without departing from the spirit of the invention.
'I-Iaving thus described my invention, I claim: V
1. In furnace structure, a hopperhaving oaf downwardly converging walls, a pit at the lower end of said walls and below the latter, tubes associated with each of said walls and extending toward said pit, and tubes of each Wall extending across said pit to communicate with tubes of the other wall; the crossing of such tubes being above the bottom of said pit.
2. In furnace structure, a hopper having downwardly converging walls, a pit communicating with the lower ends of said walls, headers at the juncture of the pit andhopper walls, tubes carried by said hopper walls, some of said tubes communicating with the adjacent header, and other of said tubes extending across said pit and in communication with the header in the opposite side thereof.
3. In furnace structure, a hopper having downwardly converging Walls, a pit communicating with the lower ends of said walls, headers arranged in parallel relation at the upper and lower ends of said walls, tubes on each wall connecting said headers ofthat wall, and tubes connecting the upper header of each wall with the lower header of the opposite wall.
A. In a furnace structure, a hopper having downwardly converging walls, pit walls communicating with the lower ends of said hopper walls and extending downwardly, headers at the upper and lower ends of said hoper walls, tubes on each wall connecting headother tubes on each wall communicating with the headers at the upper ends of that wall and extending downwardly thereon parallel to the other tubes and communicating with the lower headers of the opposite hopper walls.
In testimony whereof I aifix my signature.
CAR-L THOMAS CARLSON.
US241568A 1927-12-21 1927-12-21 Furnace construction Expired - Lifetime US1776178A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US241568A US1776178A (en) 1927-12-21 1927-12-21 Furnace construction

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US241568A US1776178A (en) 1927-12-21 1927-12-21 Furnace construction

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1776178A true US1776178A (en) 1930-09-16

Family

ID=22911224

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US241568A Expired - Lifetime US1776178A (en) 1927-12-21 1927-12-21 Furnace construction

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1776178A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2709424A (en) * 1950-09-01 1955-05-31 Babcock & Wilcox Co Vapor generator furnace
US10119700B2 (en) 2014-10-03 2018-11-06 Valmet Technologies Oy Arrangement and method in soda recovery boiler

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2709424A (en) * 1950-09-01 1955-05-31 Babcock & Wilcox Co Vapor generator furnace
US10119700B2 (en) 2014-10-03 2018-11-06 Valmet Technologies Oy Arrangement and method in soda recovery boiler

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1452045A (en) Apparatus for furnace-slag disposal
US1973705A (en) Furnace for burning wet material
US1776178A (en) Furnace construction
US1999984A (en) Steam boiler
US2087800A (en) Furnace
US3499401A (en) Cyclone furnace
US2157993A (en) Incineration
US1858450A (en) Pulverized fuel combustion
US1858451A (en) Pulverized fuel combustion
US1939535A (en) Water cooled furnace
US2242762A (en) Furnace
US1659376A (en) Furnace
US1423540A (en) Liquid-cooled conduit for furnaces
US1772097A (en) Pulverized-fuel furnace
US1730243A (en) Furnace
US1999568A (en) Steam boiler and furnace
US1762319A (en) Art of generating steam by the burning of fuel in suspension
US1955996A (en) Cooled furnace wall
US1387827A (en) Gas-burner-attaching means
US1710444A (en) Furnace
US2155120A (en) Down-draft burner
US1808230A (en) Slag screen
US1986667A (en) Furnace
US1430445A (en) Ore-treating furnace
US2508458A (en) Incinerator provided with drying chamber