![]() Typical values of excess air are indicated for various fuels in the table below. This excess air level also provides protection from insufficient oxygen conditions caused by variations in fuel composition and "operating slops" in the fuel-air control system. To avoid inefficient and unsafe conditions boilers normally operate at an excess air level. If an insufficient amount of air is supplied to the burner, unburned fuel, soot, smoke, and carbon monoxide exhausts from the boiler - resulting in heat transfer surface fouling, pollution, lower combustion efficiency, flame instability and a potential for explosion. "On-ratio" combustion used in boilers and high temperature process furnaces usually incorporates a modest amount of excess air - about 10 to 20% more than what is needed to burn the fuel completely. Process heating equipment are rarely run that way. When burned all fuel and air is consumed without any excess left over. The stoichiometric ratio is the perfect ideal fuel ratio where the chemical mixing proportion is correct. To determine the excess air or excess fuel for a combustion system we starts with the stoichiometric air -fuel ratio. ![]() With unburned components in the exhaust gas such as C, H 2, CO, the combustion process is uncompleted and not stoichiometric. ![]() Stoichiometric or Theoretical Combustion is the ideal combustion process where fuel is burned completely.Ī complete combustion is a process burning all the carbon (C) to (CO 2), all the hydrogen (H) to (H 2O) and all the sulphur (S) to (SO 2). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |