Using Excess Power to Save Coal - Industrial & Engineering

Note: In lieu of an abstract, this is the article's first page. Click to increase image ... Chemistry in the Control of Plant Enemies. Industrial ... ...
1 downloads 0 Views 465KB Size
September, 1923

INDUSTRIAL A N D ENGINEERING CHEiMlSTRY

plish more than one purpose and it is highly advantageous to do this in one operation. However, this turns the spray barrel into a chemical laboratory. Because Ingredient A is effective for one purpose and Ingredient B for another, it does not follow that A and B mixed together will retain their valuable characters in full degree, or even a t all. They may, instead, gain a new character that makes them highly harmful. The sprays to be worked out for the future must be devised, not only with reference to their individual qualities, but with reference' to their compatability one with another.

UNSOLVED PROBLEMS I n many of the new fields of inquiry we cannot even lay claim to a good start. Early blight once started in a potato field can, and sometimes does, sweep through it so rapidly that the ordinary grower, aware of the existence of the disease only when it has gained headway, cannot stop it before it has utterly destroyed his crop. The plant pathologist, taking it in time, can spray and check it. Rut what can we offer the grower that will prevent infection? A recent list prepared by a committee of plant pathologists gives more than a hundred plant diseases carried by seeds.

913

More than fifty of these are endophytes living within the substance of the seed. Some of these diseases take enormous toll of our crops. How shall we treat seeds on the large scale in which they must be handled in farm practice and sterilize them successfully? Investigators have worked diligently to discover the cause of the mosaic diseases affecting various plants. We do not yet know what the cause may be. Without this knowledge we are badly handicapped in our search for means of control. I n certain sections of the East a serious plant enemy has become established, known as the potato wart disease. About the only recommendation that can be offered the grower is to change to varieties of potatoes that have been found to possess more or less resistance. We need to discover a definite and specific means of solving this and other equally unsolved problems. Nine times out of ten, perhaps ninety-nine times out of a hundred, our constantly increasing reliance in all this must be placed on discoveries in chemistry, working in intimate alliance with the biological sciences, with plant pathology, entomology, and bacteriology. It is an enormous field and the possibilities are equally tremendous.

Using Excess Power to Save Coal Electrical Generation of Steam for Heating and Process Work By E. H. Horstkotte GENERAL ELECTRIC Co., SCHENECTADY, N. Y.

FF-PEAK periods of demand for power on idle days when plants are shut down and Sundays and holidays often present important problems in fuel economy to plant engineers who are obliged to keep steam on the system for heating or other purposes. Heretofore, it has been necessary to keep at least one fuel-fired boiler in action, with the attendant expense of firemen, to say nothing of the fuel consumed. Textile mills, chemical plants, manufacturers of pulp and paper, and other industries, including central stations from whom such plants purchase power, if they do not make it themselves, are alike affected by this problem. OF GENERATISG PLANT DESCRIPTION The recent development of practical and economical means for the electrical generation of steam is affording an interesting solution to this problem of fuel economy through the use of an electric steam boiler which in effect may be said to form a complete steam-generating plant capable of operation with minimum attendance. The complete equipment consists of the shell with supporting feet, the electrodes, insulators, steam and water gages, safety vdve, circulating pump and motor, and a panel on which is mounted the control equipment (Fig. 1). The tank, or generator shell, is mounted vertically, and divided horizontally into two compartments, the upper known as the electrode compartment, where the actual generation of steam takes place, and the lower forming a self-contained hot well. Water entering the hot well from the feed-water pipe is forced into the upper chamber by a motor-driven centrifugal pump located on a short external pipe linc. From this chamber it flows back into the hot well through a number of small holes on the outer circumference of the dividing plate. This arrangement provides

0

a continual circulation of heated water, the water level in the electrode chamber being held a t the desired level by setting the valve in the circulating pump discharge line. The upper, or electrode chamber, where the steam is generated, contains three large, round, iron electrodes rigidly supported from the roof, the current-carrying supporting rods coming in through specially designed insulating bushings. These bushings are provided with a small duct in the top leading to the outside air. Thus, if steam does succeed in leaking through the packing into the upper section of the bushing, it passes out freely instead of creating a pressure that might blow out the side of the insulator. The electrical operation resembles that of a three-phase arc furnace. Normally, the electrodes are submerged in the water, and the three-phase current passes through the water to the sides of the tank, or from electrode to electrode. The steam is generated by current flowing through the water, which is of high resistance. The temperature of all the water in the system is practically uniform. If the steam pressure lowers owing to an increased demand, rapid steam generation due to the high temperature of the water and the degree to which the electrodes are submerged quickly brings the pressure up again. Another operating feature is that since the water level is maintained by the adjustment of the throttle of the circulating pump, the energy consumption of the generator is not dependent on the operation of the feed-water pump. The supply of water in the hot well is regulated by an automatic feed-water regulator. Furthermore, when it is desired to reduce the load, the generator does not have to be blown, which means that water does not have to be pumped in subsequently against full pressure. The only energy losses in the circulating pump are the motor losses and the pump

914

I S D U S T R I A L S N D EfiGINEERIlVG CHEMISTRY

and bearing friction losses; therefore, all energy delivered to the pump eventually goes into heat in the water, and there is no wastage. The control equipment consists of an incoming line panel carrying automatic circuit breakers, necessary meters and instrument transformers, and the control apparatus for the

FIG.~-EI.ECTRIC STEAM GENERATOK

circulating pump. Since the kilowatt capacity of these boilers is comparatively large, the devices used 011 the board are of the same heaTy construction and have the same currentcarrying and rupturing capacity as those used for similar duty in substations, heavy feeder circuits, tie lines, etc. SAFETYFACTOR Of vital importance in this, as in all apparatus for the production of steam, is the safety factor. For several reasons, it may be said that the safety factor of the steam generator is even greater than that of the average boiler, highly developed as the latter is. The safety valve takes care of excess pressure, as on the standard variety of boiler, and the method of protecting the insulators has been described. Further contingencies are taken care of by what may be described as the interlocking of the various controls. Suppose, for example, the circulating pump ceases to function from voltage failure or other cause. The water in the electrode chamber simply drains into the hot well, and since the electrodes are no longer submerged, no more steam is generated. On resumption of the pumping, since there is no hot metal surface in the electrode furnace, there is no danger of an explosion similar to that due to a hot crown sheet in a boiler. Moreover, when the water drains out there is no danger of burning any part of the electrode chamber, because when there is no water 110 heat is generated. Too high a level of the water is prevented by an emergency drain of large diameter the top of which is some distance from the top of the electrode chamber. ADVANTAGESOF GENERATOR A consideration of the steam supply problems of industrial plants has disclosed many cases where the steam generator

Vol. 15, No. 9

has proved a valuable adjunct to the plant equipment, either in utilizing excess electric power, formerly wasted, or in providing process steam directly where it is needed. In paper mills there are a t least fifty-nine days in the year when the plant is idle; yet, a supply of steam must be maintained for various purposes. In textile mills steam is necessary to heat the plant, when the motors are not running. Ordinarily, this means that a certain amount of steam must be kept up in the boilers and that, in addition to the fuel, necessitates the presence of firemen and engineers over the idle period. The electric steam generator operates practically without attendance, except for a cursory inspection by a watchman, and its use permits the banking of the fires if coal is used, or the shutting down of oil-fired boilers when the plant is idle. iMany mills purchase power on a maximum demand basis, and here the savings effected by the steam generator are just as tangible, but arise from a different cause. Suppose, for example, a factory contracts for 10,000 kilowatts maximum demand. It is possible that, owing to one cause or another, the load factor for the year may be as low as 75 per cent. In such a case 2500 kilowatt-years, or 21,900,000 kilowatts are being paid for but not used. By installing an electric steam generator to utilize this energy the fuel bills would be cut materially, as follows: Assuming a coal-fired boiler with an efficiency of 66 per cent and coal with 13,000 B. t. u. per pound, for every 4953 kilowatt-hours used in the generator, one ton of coal would be saved, or 4421 tons per year. If oil-fired boilers are used, operating at 76 per cent efficiency and using oil weighing 8 pounds per gallon with 18,700B. t. u. per pound, for every 32.9 kilowatt-hours there would be saved one gallon of oil, or 665,650 gallons per year. These figures are calculated on the basis that all the excess energy would be utilized. If only 75 per cent were so utilized, She savings would still be enough to more than justify the installation of a steam generator. In addition to these, other possibilities have presmted themselves. Central stations have found it of mutual advantage to themselves and their customers to instal and maintain one of these generators in the customer's fadory, metering the steam, and charging the customer according to the amount consumed. Industrial plants supplied with power by their own hydroelectric generating stations can use the excess energy available during high water periods to generate steam, and thus save fuel. Another field is in factories needing small amounts of process steam a t widely separated points. It would be much more economicd to instal a generator at the point of utilization than to transmit steam for long distances i'rom a central source of supply. As time goes on and the knowledge of the advantages of &e electric steam generators is more widely spread, doubtkm many other uses will be found which are at present undeveloped. Four installations, totaling 15,000 kilowatts, have been made of this system of steam generation. An interesting feature of Operation in one plant has been reported by e~ user who states that a careful check has shown a saving of between $50 and $60 per day in coal, when the electric boiler was in operation. This plant, which obtains its power hydroelectrically, utilizes excess power available during the high water periods in the spring and fall of the year. Another plant operates the boiler as an auxiliary to the main power plant when excess power is available and also for sueh operation on Sundays as is necessary. A 2500-kilowatt unit is being installed in northern New York State for the heating of a number of school buildings from a central heating plant. The electric boiler will fumish steam for this purpose from hydroelectric power.