Solid-fuel burner

4422389
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Inventors

Schroder, Ulrich

Application #

392354

Filed

Jun-25-1982

Published

Dec-27-1983

Current US Class

110/264
110/347
431/284

International Classes

F23M 007/08

Field of Search

110/263 110/264 110/347 431/284 431/285

Assignee

Deutsche Babcock Aktiengesellschaft (Oberhausen, DE)

Examiners

Favors; Edward G.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Fogiel; Max

US Patent References

4147116   Pulverized coal bu...
4157889   Burner for powdere...
4270895   Swirl producer
4367686   Method for operatin...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A burner for solid fuel in pulverulent form has a central conduit for primary combustion air, a fuel conduit surrounding the central conduit for admission of the pulverulent fuel, and one (or two concentric) secondary-air outer conduits. The annular space between the fuel conduit and the single (or the innermost) outer conduit is subdivided into two annular channels by an intermediate conduit. An inlet arrangement is provided for feeding combustion air into one of these channels, and another arrangement permits the selective feeding of either only combustion air, or of a mixture of such air with pulverulent fuel, into the other of the annular channels.
 
Claims
I claim:

1. In a burner for the combustion of solid fuel in pulverulent form and having a first conduit for primary combustion-supporting fluid, the first conduit being spacedly surrounded by a second conduit for the pulverulent solid fuel, and a third conduit for secondary combustion-supporting fluid spacedly surrounding the second conduit, a combination comprising

an intermediate conduit between said second and third conduits and subdividing the space therebetween into two annular channels;

first means for admitting combustion-supporting fluid into one of said channels;

second means for selectively admitting combustion-supporting fluid, or a mixture of such fluid with pulverulent solid fuel, into the other of said channels;



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a burner in general.

More particularly, the invention relates to a solid-fuel burner.

Still more particularly, the invention relates to a burner for burning solid fuel in pulverulent form.

Burners of this general type are already known in the art. For example, a burner for a mixture of pulverulent fuel and combustion-supporting air is described in "VGB Kraftwerkstechnik 59", 1979, pages 98 and 99. That device may be provided with a tube for secondary combustion air, or even with still another combustion-air tube which surrounds the secondary-air tube. The central or primary-air tube of the burner houses the igniter lance which may be oil or gas-operated and which is fired up only during the burner start-up (in either the cold or warm start-up mode) or, if necessary, as a combustion-supporting aid during regular burner operation.

The above and other known burners of the type under discussion must necessarily operate along the just indicated lines, since in operation these burners--dependent upon the specific type of pulverulent fuel being used--permit a reduction of the burner capacity only down to at most 40-60% of their rated capacity. Even if an installation has several such burners and some of them are completely shut down, the heating capacity of the installation can generally at best be reduced only to 25-30% of the rated capacity. A reduction of the momentary heat output below this point--desirable as it may be for any of various reasons--is not feasible, for reasons of stability and to assure the necessary uniform combustion-chamber load. What this means, of course, is that the oil or gas-fired combustion lance cannot be shut down at will, so that--even tough the primary fuel is a pulverulent solid fuel--such installations require a substantial amount of oil or gas just to keep the combustion going.
 
  The invention reads on a heating boiler for solid fuel, comprising a combustion volume with fuel feeding aperture, air entry apertures and chimney flue,...  The invention is concerned to control the combustion conditions of a burner 1 supplied with a mixture of pulverized fuel and air. By use of a vortex amplifier...