[0001] The invention relates to a burner according to the preamble of claim 1 capable of
being installed in a furnace for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture.
[0002] The invention relates also to a furnace-burner assembly according to claim 16 for
burning a premixed air-fuel mixture.
[0003] So-called premix burners are used for burning a mixture of premixed fuel and air.
These burners are intended to attain low NOx emission levels. Particularly premix
burners with a long combustion head, intended to attain low NOx emissions (less than
9 ppm NOx emissions in flue gases) without substantial oxygen excesses, are disclosed
in the prior art, i.a. in the publication
US-6,238,206. This prior known burner model is provided with a combustion head associated with
the frame and extending a long way into the interior of a furnace and the low NOx
emissions require oxygen excesses of less than 12% or especially less than 6%. The
biggest downside of this burner has nevertheless been found to be a continuously relatively
high NOx emission level, not completely fulfilling the stringent emission standards
of e.g. certain states in the United States provided that the burner is to be operated
efficiently, in other words, with low oxygen excesses. The Applicant's own US application
discloses this type of burner capable of reaching low emissions but being limited
in its compatibility with commercially available furnaces.
[0004] The invention is intended to provide an improvement regarding the foregoing prior
art or at least to alleviate the drawbacks existing in the above-described prior art.
Therefore, a first objective of the invention is to provide a high-efficiency burner
installable to a furnace, as well as a furnace-burner assembly in which a premixed
air-fuel mixture can be combusted by the burner with oxygen excesses of less than
3% in such a way that the average NOx emissions in flue gases remain below 15 ppm,
and with oxygen excesses of less than 7% in such a way that the average NOx emissions
in flue gases remain below 5 ppm. It was a particular objective of the invention to
attain a NOx level of less than 2,5 ppm with oxygen excesses of less than 8% by means
of flame stabilization and phasing of mixture ratios.
[0005] A second objective of the invention was to provide a burner more readily installable
to commercially available furnaces, as well as a furnace-burner assembly obtainable
thereby.
[0006] The above objectives are attained with a burner of claim 1 capable of being installed
to a furnace for burning a premixed air-fuel mixture, as well as with a furnace-burner
assembly of claim 16 for burning an air-fuel mixture and for generating a flame in
a combustion chamber inside the furnace.
[0007] More specifically, the invention relates to a burner of claim 1 installable to a
furnace for burning an air-fuel mixture and for generating a flame in the furnace.
The burner comprises a frame member provided with an elongated combustion head protruding
from said frame member and being adaptable inside the furnace, what in a view from
the burner's frame member is a distal end of said combustion head being adapted to
generate both a main flame and a primary flame, said combustion head comprising an
outer, larger diameter channel for a mixture of combustion air and fuel, as well as
a smaller diameter, inner channel, surrounded by the outer channel, for primary air
as well as for primary gas. Hence,
the combustion head's inner channel extends from the burner's frame member to the
distal end and comprises an inner tube for primary gas and an outer tube surrounding
said inner tube, wherein a flow space for primary air is provided between the outer
side of the jacket of said inner tube and the inner side of the jacket of the outer
tube, and
the combustion head's outer channel extends from the burner's frame member to the
combustion head's distal end and can be provided with a supply of premixed air-fuel
mixture from the burner's frame member, or from that section of the combustion head
which is associated with the frame member and located, in the flowing direction of
the premixed air-fuel mixture, upstream of a combustion chamber, for generating a
main flame (B).
[0008] The space between the outer wall of the outer channel and the jacket of the outer
tube of the inner channel is constructed as a discharge channel extending from the
frame member to the distal end of the combustion head, whereby the discharge end of
said discharge channel is turned away from the longitudinal center line of the discharge
end so that the center line of said discharge end, or an extension thereof, forms
an inclined angle of incidence with the combustion head's longitudinal center line,
said angle of incidence being 90-140 degrees as said discharge end of the discharge
channel is viewed from the direction of the burner's frame member.
[0009] A flow controller is provided in the flow space for primary air, at the distal end,
for directing the flow of primary air in the flow space so that the primary air flows
from the flow guide towards the mouth of the flow space, in the vicinity of the jacket
of the outer tube of the inner channel,
[0010] a plurality of nozzles is provided in the inner tube of the inner channel, at the
distal end of said inner tube in the flowing direction of the primary gas, for directing
the primary gas into the flow space, either upstream or downstream of the flow controller
in the flowing direction of the primary air.
[0011] In a furnace-burner assembly of the invention for burning an air-fuel mixture and
for generating a flame in a combustion chamber present inside the furnace,
the burner has been defined in claim 1 and connected to the furnace in such a way
that inside the furnace's combustion chamber is left a second section of the elongated
combustion head, which protrudes from the frame member and which combustion head has
its first section left outside the furnace or connected to structures of the furnace.
A main flame is generable by conducting a premixed air-fuel mixture into the discharge
channel, from whose mouth said fuel-air mixture discharges into the furnace at an
angle, which is 90-140 degrees as said mouth of the discharge channel is viewed from
the direction of a center line passing through its end on the side of the burner's
frame.
[0012] A main flame (B) is generable
by conducting a premixed air-fuel mixture into the discharge channel, from the mouth
of discharge channel's discharge end said fuel-air mixture discharges into the combustion
chamber, the center line of said discharge end forming an inclined angle of incidence,
which angle is about 90-140 degrees, with a longitudinal center line of the combustion
head, as well as also with a longitudinal center line of the discharge channel, as
said discharge end of the discharge channel is viewed from the direction of the burner's
frame member.
[0013] A primary flame (E) is generable
by providing the flow space with a supply of primary air from the burner's frame member
or from that section of the combustion head which is associated with the frame member
and located, in the primary air flowing direction, upstream of the combustion chamber,
for conveying the flow of primary air to a flow controller which is adapted to direct
the flow of primary air to pass towards the mouth of the flow space co-directionally
with the main flame, and
by providing the inner channel's inner tube with a supply of primary gas from the
burner's frame member or from that section of the combustion head which is located,
in the primary air flowing direction, upstream of the combustion chamber, whereby
the nozzles of a plurality of nozzles in the proximity of the inner tube's free end
are adapted to direct the discharge of primary gas from the combustion head's mouth
into the flow space.
[0014] The present invention is based on the combustion head being made up of two nested
channels. In the outer channel, i.e. the discharge channel, a premixed air-gas mixture
is passed, discharging into a combustion chamber from a discharge channel's discharge
end, which becomes narrower and veers away as viewed from a center line of the combustion
head. The discharge channel's cross-sectional area diminishes in the traveling direction
of the air-gas mixture when proceeding towards the discharge end's mouth, which is
located at the combustion head's mouth.
[0015] The cross-section of the discharge channel is continuously reduced, reaching its
minimum at the mouth of the discharge channel. This gives the advantage that the premixed
air-gas mixture (main flow) is continuously accelerated in the discharge channel.
The maximum flow rate of the main flow is thus reached at the mouth of the discharge
channel.
[0016] Primary air and primary gas flow in the inner channel. The primary air is directed
towards the combustion head's mouth by way of a flow controller, such as vanes, co-directionally
with the main flame. The flow controllers direct the primary air to flow from the
flow controller towards the mouth of the flow space, in the vicinity of the jacket
of the outer tube of the inner channel. In this way, the path of the primary air from
the flow controller towards the mouth of the flow space can be directed to follow
the curvature of the inner wall of the discharge channel, away from the center line
of the combustion head.
[0017] The primary gas travels in the inner channel in its own tube and is directed to the
combustion head's mouth by means of nozzles.
[0018] In the burner, the intensity of flame and the amount of air are adjusted, and the
adjustment is precise and has a strong effect on the main flame. It is by virtue of
good adjustability that the burner is better-than-before compatible with diverse applications
and combustion chambers. In particular, the burner is more compatible than before
with water-tube boilers and other special applications.
[0019] It is by virtue of the more reliable adjustment that the novel burner enables attainment
of the emission limit of 5 ppm with acceptable stability in combustion chambers more
diverse than before. In addition to this, the novel concept enables attainment of
a NOx level of less than 2,5 ppm with oxygen excesses of less than 8% by virtue of
the further optimized flame stabilization and phasing of mixture ratios (see also
Table 1). It is by virtue of the innovative combustion head design that the risk of
occurring backfire, typical for premix burners, is minimized, thus improving both
safety and convenience of use.
[0020] The invention and benefits attainable thereby will next be illustrated in even more
detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Fig. 1 shows, in a section view, a frame member of one burner embodiment, as well
as a combustion head associated therewith.
Fig. 2A shows, in an inclined front view, one embodiment for a flow controller located
at the combustion head of a burner according to the invention.
Fig. 2B shows, likewise in an inclined front view, another embodiment for a flow controller
located at the combustion head of a burner according to the invention.
Fig. 2C shows, in an inclined front view, still another embodiment for a flow controller
located at the combustion head of a burner according to the invention.
[0021] Next follows a brief review of those aspects of a burner, as well as a furnace-burner
assembly, of the invention which are detailed in each figure 1, 2A, 2B, and 2C.
[0022] Fig. 1 shows, in a longitudinal section view, a burner 1 whose combustion head 2
extends into a furnace 9. The combustion head 2 is, in general, cylindrical and has
an annular cross-sectional profile. Figure 1 also displays how a flame A, B, C, D,
E, established inside the furnace, is generated in the burner-furnace assembly by
burning an air-fuel mixture 80 directed to a mouth 23 of the combustion head (generation
of a main flame B) or primary air 60 or primary gas 70 (generation of primary flame
E). Fig. 1 shows with arrows the advancing direction of the air-fuel mixture 80, primary
air 60, and primary gas 70 in the combustion head 2.
[0023] The burner 1 in Fig. 1 is installed in the furnace 9 in such a way that the combustion
head's 2 mouth 23 opens into an interior 90 of the furnace 9 and the burner's frame
member 6 attaches to the furnace 9 by way of a flange 91.
[0024] The burner's 1 elongated combustion head 2 protrudes from the frame member 6, and
in the interior 90 of the furnace 9 have been generated a main flame B and a primary
flame E, which are located downstream of a mouth 23 of what in a view from said frame
member 6 is a distal end 2a of the combustion head 2. The buildup of other flame zones
(A, C, D) will be described later.
[0025] The combustion head 2 comprises an outer, larger diameter channel 3 for a mixture
80 of combustion air and fuel, as well as a smaller diameter, inner channel 4, surrounded
by the outer channel 3, for primary air 60 as well as for primary gas 70.
[0026] The combustion head's 2 inner channel 4, which is surrounded by the combustion head's
2 outer channel 3, has been provided with supplies of primary gas 70 and primary air
60. The combustion head's inner channel 4 extends from the burner's frame member 6
all the way to the mouth 23 of the combustion head's 2 distal end 2a.
[0027] The combustion head's 2 inner channel 4 comprises an inner tube 4; 41 for a gaseous
fuel (primary gas) 70 and an outer tube 4; 42. The outer tube 4; 42 surrounds said
inner tube 4; 41 in a ring- shaped way. A flow space 4; 43 for primary air 60 is left
between an external surface 41a of the jacket 40 of the inner tube 41 (i.e. the side
of the jacket 41 of the inner tube 41 of the inner channel 4 facing the outer tube
4; 42) and an internal surface of the jacket 42a of the outer tube 4; 42 (i.e. the
side of the jacket 40 of the outer tube facing the inner tube) is left. The flow space
4; 43 is thus limited in the direction of the outer channel 3 by the jacket of the
outer tube 4; 42 of the inner channel 4 which is thus the inner wall of the outer
channel 3.
[0028] This annular flow space 43 between the inner channel 4, the outer tube 42 and the
inner tube 41 is now provided with a supply of primary air 60 from the frame member
6 of the burner 1, or from that section 2b of the combustion head 2 which is in communication
with the frame member 6 and is located upstream of the combustion chamber 90 in the
flowing direction of primary air 60.
[0029] Thus, primary air 60 flows in the flow space 43, from the end 43b of said flow space
43 on the side of the frame member 6 of the burner 1 all the way to the mouth 43a
of the flow space. The mouth 43a of the flow space 43 is located at the distal end
2a of the combustion head 2. The mouth 43a of the flow space 43 is part of the mouth
23 of the combustion head 2, into which primary air 60 is passed through said flow
space and primary gas 70 is arranged to flow via the inner tube 41 of the inner channel
4.
[0030] The mouth 23 of the combustion head 2 is divided into a discharge end 10a of the
discharge channel 10, and a combined mouth 43a for the flow space 43, in which primary
gas 70 flows via the inner tube 41 and primary air 60 flows via the flow space 43.
[0031] The free end of the discharge channel 10, facing the mouth 23 of the combustion head
2, comprises a discharge end 10a, whose mouth opens into the mouth 23 of the distal
end 2a of the combustion head 2. The discharge channel 10 will be described in more
detail below.
[0032] The mouth 43a of the flow space 43 of the inner channel 4 is limited, seen from the
center line of the combustion head, i.e. in the radial direction of the combustion
head 2, by the discharge end 10a of the discharge channel 10, particularly the distal
end of the jacket 42a of the outer tube 42.
[0033] A flow controller 7 is installed at the mouth 43a of the flow space 43 of the inner
channel 4, located at the free end of the flow space, seen from the frame member 6
of the burner 1, and constituting a part of the mouth 23 of the distal end 2a of the
combustion head. The flow controller 7 is thus located at the distal end 2a of the
combustion head 2, seen from the frame member 6 of the burner, close to the mouth
23 of the combustion head 2.
[0034] The flow space 4; 43 for primary air 60 extends from the burner's 1 frame member
6 to the mouth 23 of what (in a view from the frame member 6) is the combustion head's
2 distal end 2a. The outer tube's 4; 42 jacket 42a of the inner channel 4 constitutes
at the same time a boundary surface between the inner channel 4 and the outer channel
3 and separates flow space 43 and discharge channel 10 from each other.
[0035] As stated above, the jacket 42a of the outer tube 4; 42 of the inner channel 4 also
separates the discharge end 10a of the discharge channel 10 and the mouth 43a of the
flow space 43 from each other at the mouth 23 of the combustion head 2.
[0036] Viewed from the frame member 6 of the burner 1, the outer end 42A of the outer tube
42 of the inner channel 4, that is, the free end 42A, is arranged to veer outward,
i.e. in the direction of a free end 31A of the outer channel's 3 external wall 31,
as viewed from the longitudinal center line of the combustion head 2. The centre of
the radius of curvature is located outside the combustion head 2.
[0037] As seen in Fig. 1, the jacket 42 of the outer tube 42 of the inner channel 4, limiting
the flow space 43, extends approximately in parallel with the center line P of the
combustion head 2 of the burner all the way to the flow controller 7 located in the
flow space 43 of the inner channel. The distal end 42A i.e. the free end 42A of the
jacket 42a of the outer tube 42 of the inner channel 4, extending downstream of the
flow controller 7 in the flow direction of primary air 60, veers away from the center
line P of the combustion head 2 towards the outer wall 31 of the outer channel 3.
In this way, the distal end 42A of the outer tube 42 of the inner channel 4 is directed
away from the center line P of the combustion head 2 in the radial direction of the
combustion head 2.
[0038] To put it more precisely, said free end 42A of the external wall of the jacket 42a
of the outer tube 42 of the inner channel 4 is located on such a circular arc whose
radius is R1, the center of said circular arc being located outside the combustion
head 2.
[0039] In this context, the distal end 42A or free end 42A of the outer tube 42 of the inner
channel 4 refers to that part of the outer tube 42 which is placed at the outer end
2a of the combustion head 2, approximately downstream of the flow controller 7, seen
from the frame member 6 of the burner.
[0040] The flow controller 7 directs the flow of primary air 60 in the flow space 43 to
pass co-directionally with the main flame B when said primary air 60 exits the flow
space 43. The structure and the function of the flow controller 7 are shown in more
detail below in Figs. 2A to 2C.
[0041] The outer channel 3 of the combustion head, in turn, extends from the frame member
of the burner 1 to the mouth 23 of the distal end 2a of the combustion head 2. The
outer wall 31 of the outer channel 3 simultaneously constitutes the outer wall of
the combustion head 2. The free end 3A of the outer channel 3, that is, the free end
31A of the outer wall of the outer channel, veers outwards seen from the center line
10L of the discharge channel 10, that is, away seen from the center line P of the
combustion head (cf. Fig. 1) by a radius of curvature R. The center of the radius
of curvature R is also preferably located outside the combustion head 2.
[0042] The space remaining between an internal side 30 of the outer channel's 3 external
wall 31 as well as an external side of the jacket 42 of the inner channel 42 constitutes
a discharge channel 10, in which travels a premixed air-fuel mixture 80 for generating
a main flame B. The jacket 42A of the outer tube defines the inner channel 4 and thereby
serves simultaneously as the outer wall of the inner channel 4. The discharge channel
10 has its free end, which is closer to the combustion head's 2 mouth 23, comprising
a discharge end 10a whose mouth is a part of the mouth 23 of the combustion head's
2 distal end 2a.
[0043] The distal end 42A of the jacket 42a of the outer tube 42 of the inner channel 4,
serving as the inner surface of the discharge end 10a of the discharge channel 10,
and the outer wall 31 of the outer channel 3, serving as the outer surface of the
discharge end 10a of the discharge channel 10, thus veer towards each other and simultaneously
away from the center line P of the combustion head, when the combustion head is seen
from the direction of the frame member 6. Thus, the combustion end 10a has a trumpet-like
appearance at the mouth 23 of the combustion head 2, and the cross-section of the
discharge end 10a of the discharge channel 10 decreases continuously, reaching its
minimum at the mouth of the discharge channel 10.
[0044] This provides the advantage that the premixed air-gas mixture (main flow) is continuously
accelerated at the discharge end 10a of the discharge channel. The maximum flow rate
of the main flow is thus achieved at the mouth of the discharge end 10a.
[0045] As mentioned above, the free ends 31A and 42A of the discharge channel's 10 external
wall 31 and the discharge channel's internal wall, i.e. those of the outer tube's
42 jacket 42a, have both a "trumpet-like" general appearance at the combustion head's
2 distal end 2a. Hence, the respective free ends 31A and 42A of the discharge channel's
10 external wall 31 and the discharge channel's internal wall 42a curve respectively
outward from the discharge channel's center line 10L as well as from the combustion
head's center line P, the radii of curvature thereof being respectively R and R1,
wherein R and R1 are equal or unequal. The centers of these radii R and R1 of curvature
are located outside the combustion head.
[0046] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the centers of the radii R and R1 of
curvature are located, seen from the frame member 6 of the burner, on the side of
the such a cross-sectional plane of the center line P of the combustion head, facing
the mouth 23 of the combustion head 2, which extends approximately via the flow controller
7 located at the distal end of the combustion head 2.
[0047] Since the free end 31A of the discharge channel's 10 external wall 31 and the free
end 42A of the discharge channel's internal wall 42a curve outward as seen from the
discharge channel's 10a center line 10L and as seen from the combustion head's 2 center
line P, respectively, the entire discharge end 10a is directed away as seen from the
combustion head's center line P.
[0048] Since the discharge channel 10a in itself is ring-shaped, the discharge channel's
center line 10L refers here to what is a ring-shaped center line 10L of the ring-shaped
discharge channel 10a as seen in a longitudinal section of the discharge channel (cf.
fig. 1). Thus, an angle of incidence between the center line 10L of the discharge
channel's 10 discharge end 10a (in a longitudinal section of the discharge end) and
the combustion head's 2 longitudinal center line P is an inclined angle of incidence
t. The same inclined angle of incidence t is also formed between the center line 10A
of the discharge end 10a and the discharge channel's 10 (its longitudinal section)
center line 10L. Said inclined angle of incidence t is approximately 90-140 degrees
when viewing said angle of incidence t between the center line 10A of the discharge
end and the longitudinal center line P of the combustion head and the discharge end
10a of the discharge channel 10 from the direction of the burner's 1 frame member
6.
[0049] Generally, the free end 42A of the discharge channel's 10 internal wall 42 (the free
end 42A of the outer tube 42), which has a radius of curvature R1, arches more vigorously
than the free end 31A of the discharge channel's 10 external wall 31, which has a
radius of curvature R, whereby R > R1. Hence, the discharge channel's 10 entire discharge
end 10a becomes narrower and turns outward when proceeding in the traveling direction
of a premixed air-gas mixture 80 towards the mouth of the discharge channel's 10 discharge
end 10a, which is a part of the combustion head's mouth 23 (cf. fig. 1). As a result,
the cross-sectional area of the discharge channel's 10 discharge end 10a diminishes
in the traveling direction of the premixed air-gas mixture 80 when proceeding towards
the discharge end's 10a mouth, which is located at the combustion head's 2 mouth 23.
[0050] This provides that the flow rate of the premixed air-gas mixture 80 flowing in the
discharge channel is continuously accelerated when passing towards the mouth of the
discharge end 10a. The flow rate and the magnitude of its acceleration will depend
on the angle of incidence 5 between the center line 10A of the discharge channel and
the longitudinal center line P of the combustion head, as well as on the mutual relationship
between the radii R and R1 of curvature.
[0051] It is by virtue of the novel design of the discharge channel's 10 discharge end 10a
that the risk of causing backfire, typical for premix burners, has been minimized,
thereby improving both safety and convenience of use.
[0052] The outer channel's 3 discharge channel 10 is provided with a supply of premixed
air-fuel mixture 80 for generating a main flame B visible in fig. 1. The premixed
air-fuel mixture 80 arrives in the outer channel's 3 discharge channel 10 from the
frame member 6, or from a section 2b of the combustion head 2 associated with the
frame member and located, in the flowing direction of the premixed air-fuel mixture,
upstream of a combustion chamber 90.
[0053] What in the flowing direction of a primary gas 70 is a distal end 41a of the inner
tube 4; 41 is in turn provided with a plurality of nozzles 8 for conducting the primary
gas 70 into a flow space 4; 43 and then to the mouth 43a of the flow space 43. The
primary gas is conveyed into the flow space in the flowing direction of a primary
air 60 upstream or downstream of a flow deflector 7 located at a free end 43 of the
flow space 43. The inner channel's 4 inner tube 4; 41 is provided with a supply of
primary gas 70 from the burner's 1 frame member 6, or from that section 2b of the
combustion head 2 which is associated with the frame member 6 and located, in the
flowing direction of primary gas 70, upstream of the combustion chamber 90.
[0054] The primary flame E is generated as primary air 60 introduced into the flow space
43 and the flow of primary gas 70 merge with each other after the mouth of the flow
end of the flow space 43. The flow space mouth is a part of the combustion head's
2 mouth 23.
[0055] Figs. 2A, 2B and 2C illustrate, in a view obliquely from the front, the structural
and functional options for a flow controller 7 fitted in the inner channel's flow
space 43 of a burner of the invention. In each figure is further sketched a flow of
primary air 60 arriving at the flow controller 8, as well as a flow of primary gas
70; 701 arriving in the same flow space 43 from the inner tube 4; 41.
[0056] As depicted in fig. 1, the flow of primary air 60 is adapted to flow from the burner's
frame member 6 into the flow space 43 and further through the flow controller 7.
[0057] The flow controller 7, used for directing the primary air 60, may come in diverse
designs and shapes, the most important aspect being, however, that the flow of primary
air 6, arriving at the flow controller 7 from the flow space 43, will be directed
by the flow controller 7 towards the main flame B and the outer wall of the flow space,
which is at the same time the jacket 42a of the outer tube . The main flame is generated
by means of an air-fuel mixture 80 flowing in the discharge channel 10.
[0058] The flow controller 7; 7a may comprise, as depicted for example in fig. 2A, a plurality
of vanes 7
1, 7
2, 7
3...7
n. The flow controller's 7; 7a vanes 7
1,7
2,7
3...7
n are fitted to encircle the inner tube 4; 41 at an equal distance from a free end
41A of the inner tube 41. Relative to the flow of primary air 60 passing through between
two adjacent vanes (e.g. 7
1 and 7
2 or 7
2 and 7
3), each vane 7
1, 7
2, 7
3... 7
n has its surface area and orientation adapted to be such that, downstream of the vanes
7, said flow of primary air 60 is directed towards the mouth 23 of the flow space
43, and at the same time that of the combustion head 2, co-directionally with the
main flame B. Preferably, the flow of primary air 60 is directed to the proximity
of the outer tube's 4; 42 internal surface by the action of the flow controller 7.
[0059] The vanes 7
1, 7
2, 7
3... 7
n are at least in a partially crosswise orientation with respect to the flowing direction
60 of primary air 60 in the flow space 43. Preferably, the vanes 7
1, 7
2, 7
3...7n are at an angle of 20-90 degrees relative to the primary air's flowing direction
60.
[0060] In fig. 2B, the flow controller 7; 7b consists of single circular shaped disc surrounding
the inner tube 41, and disc's plane is in a transverse direction relative to a lengthwise
direction of the inner tube 41. The disc includes slots in its radial direction at
a distance from each other, whereby the flow of primary air 60 arriving at a bottom
surface of the disc will be directed from the slots towards the mouth 23 of the flow
space 43 co-directionally with the main flame B.
[0061] Fig. 2C shows still another embodiment for a flow controller 7c. The flow controller
7; 7c consists of a single circular shaped disc surrounding the inner tube 41, and
the disc's plane is in a transverse direction relative to a lengthwise direction of
the inner tube 41. The flow of primary air 60 arriving at a bottom surface of the
disc circumvents the disc and is directed towards the mouth 23 of the flow space 43
co-directionally with the main flame B.
[0062] Next follows a still further review of a few important details of the invention with
reference to the preceding description of the Figures 1, 2A, 2B, 2C.
[0063] The flow space 4; 43 enlarges when proceeding towards the combustion head's 2 mouth
23, because the free end 42A of the outer tube's jacket 42 curves away as viewed from
a center line P of the combustion head 2.
[0064] It is by virtue of the reliable main flame B adjustment that enables the burner to
attain a 5 ppm emission limit with acceptable stability in several combustion chambers
that were earlier difficult to control. In addition to this, the novel concept enables
attainment of a NOx level of < 2.5 ppm (O2 ref 3%) in the combustion chamber by virtue
of further optimized flame stabilization and phasing of mixture ratios.
[0065] In order to generate a primary flame E, the amount of supplied primary air 60 is
5-30% of the total amount of air delivered into the burner's combustion head 2, and
it is the adjustment of the relative amount and flow rate of primary air 60 and primary
gas 70 that enables precise control of the intensity of primary flame E. This provides
a major contribution to the intensity and stability of the main flame B. Preferably,
the amount of primary air 60 supplied for generating the primary flame E is about
20% of the total amount of air used for generating a main flame B by means of a premixed
air-gas mixture 80 as well as for generating a primary flame E by means of primary
air 60.
[0066] All the premixed air and fuel is delivered into the site of a main flame B or into
a B-zone in fig. 1, most of the burning talking place within this zone. At the combustion
head's mouth 23 develops a primary flame E, whose intensity and amount of air can
be adjusted for making a difference regarding the temperature of a flue gas flowing
into the main flame B zone. This way, the burner's 1 stability and emissions can be
optimized for various applications and combustion chambers. It is by virtue of good
adjustability that the burner is better-than-before compatible with diverse applications
and combustion chambers. In particular, the burner is more compatible than before
with water-tube boilers and other special applications.
[0067] In an A-flame zone, visible in fig. 1, there also occurs some burning, the fuel and
air ending up in the A-flame zone from the main flame's B-zone. The flue gas circulates
in the A-zone and simultaneously cools down. The flue gas, which has cooled down in
the A-zone, eventually returns into the B-zone, lowering at the same time the main
flame temperature and reducing the burner's NOx emissions. It is also from zone C
of a flame C that into the main flame's B-zone flows some partially cooled flue gas,
which both dilutes and cools down the B-zone, cooling the flame's temperature profile
and thereby reducing the burner's NOx emissions.
[0068] In front of the combustion head's 2 mouth 23 there is a strong backflow. The flue
gas discharges from the main flame's B-zone along the furnace's 9 walls, while cooling
down at the same time, and a portion thereof returns back by way of a middle section
of the combustion chamber 9 in the form of a backflow D-C. The backflow D-C both cools
down and dilutes the B-zone established by the main flame. In a D-zone of the flame,
at an end of the combustion chamber 90, there are no significant backflows, yet there
still occurs some complete combustion of carbon monoxide.
[0069] In the burner-furnace combination according to the invention, thanks to the radial
direction of the fluids, the flame becomes very different when compared with competing
technologies. The flame becomes compact (wide and short) but still surprisingly large
in volume. Increasing the diameter of the flame will affect the volume of the flame
more than increasing the length. (Cylinder volume = PI*(D/2)^2 *) Because of the shape
of the flame, the return flows (A and D) dilute and cool the flame more efficiently
than in competing technologies. These differences provide the following advantages:
the flame is cool, and therefore the NOx emissions are low.
[0070] If the burner is used with high excess air, a smaller excessive air quantity will
be sufficient to achieve the require NOx emission. If the burner is used in combination
with external flue gas recirculation (FGR), a smaller amount of recirculated flue
gas will be sufficient. Moreover, a shorter flame is advantageous in many applications,
because a shorter furnace is sufficient.
[0071] With the exemplary burner-furnace combination according to the invention, low Nox
values were achieved, thanks to the design of the combustion head and the shape of
the resulting flame. Table 1 gives the quantity of Nox emissions resulting from flue
gases of the furnace as a function of excess oxygen [dry, mol-%].
Table 1:
| Oxygen excess |
| O2 [dry mol-%] |
NOx [ppm, dry, O2=3%] |
| 6 |
< 9 |
| 7 |
< 5 |
| 8 |
< 2,5 |
Reference numerals for main components
[0072]
| Burner |
1 |
| Combustion head |
2 |
| |
distal end |
2a |
| |
section of combustion head upstream of combustion chamber |
2b |
| |
mouth |
23 |
| Outer channel |
3 |
| |
free end |
3A |
| |
external wall |
31 |
| |
|
interior |
30 |
| |
|
free end |
31A |
| Inner channel |
4 |
| |
inner tube |
;41 |
| |
|
jacket |
41a |
| |
|
external wall |
40 |
| |
outer tube |
42 |
| |
|
free end |
42A |
| |
|
jacket |
42a |
| |
flow space |
43 |
| |
free end |
43a |
| Burner's frame member |
6 |
| Flow controller |
7 |
| |
vanes |
|
71,72, 73 ..7n |
| Nozzles |
8 |
| Furnace |
9 |
| |
interior, combustion chamber |
|
90 |
| Flange for a joint between furnace and burner |
91 |
| Discharge channel |
10 |
| |
discharge end |
|
10a |
| Primary air |
60 |
| |
Primary air discharging from the mouth |
|
602 |
| Primary gas |
70 |
| |
primary gas discharging into the flow space |
|
701 |
| Premixed air-fuel mixture |
80 |
| Reverse flame |
A |
| Main flame |
B |
| Side flame immediately behind primary flame |
C |
| More distant side flame behind primary flame |
D |
| Primary flame |
E |
| Longitudinal center line of the combustion head |
P |
| Radius of curvature for the outer channel's free end |
R |
| Radius of curvature for the outer tube's free end |
R1 |
| Center line of the discharge channel |
10L |
| Center line of the discharge end |
10A |
1. A burner (1) installable to a furnace (9) for burning an air-fuel mixture and for
generating a flame in the furnace (9), said burner (1) comprising a frame member (6)
provided with an elongated combustion head (2) protruding from said frame member (6)
and being adaptable inside the furnace (9), what in a view from the burner's (1) frame
member (6) is a distal end (2a) of said combustion head (2) being adaptable to generate
both a main flame (B) and a primary flame (E), said combustion head (2) comprising
an outer, larger diameter channel (3) for a mixture (80) of combustion air and fuel,
as well as a smaller diameter, inner channel (4), surrounded by said outer channel
(3), for primary air (60) as well as for primary gas (70), whereby
the inner channel (4) extends from the burner's frame member (6) to the distal end
(2a) and comprises an inner tube (4, 41) for primary gas (70) and an outer tube (4;
42) surrounding said inner tube (4; 41), wherein a flow space (4; 43) for primary
air (60) is provided between the outer side of the jacket (41a) of said inner tube
and the inner side of the jacket of the outer tube, and which combustion head's (2)
outer channel (3) extends from the burner's frame member (6) to the combustion head's
distal end (2a) and can be provided with a supply of premixed air-fuel mixture (80)
from the burner's frame member (6), or from that section of the combustion head (2)
which is associated with the frame member and located, in the flowing direction of
the premixed air-fuel mixture (80), upstream of a combustion chamber (90), for generating
the main flame B),
characterized in that
the space delimited by the outer wall (31) of the outer channel (3) and the jacket
of the outer tube (42) of the inner channel (4) is constructed as a discharge channel
(10) extending from the frame member (6) to the distal end (2a) of the combustion
head (2), whereby the discharge end (10a) of said discharge channel is veered away
from the longitudinal center line (P) of the combustion head (2) so that the center
line (10A) of said discharge end (10a), or an extension thereof, forms an inclined
angle of incidence (t) with the combustion head's (2) longitudinal center line (P),
said angle of incidence (t) being 90-140 degrees as said discharge end (10a) of the
discharge channel (10) is viewed from the direction of the burner's (1) frame member
(6),
a flow controller (7) is provided in the flow space (4; 43) for primary air, at the
distal end (2a) of the combustion head (2), for directing the flow of primary air
(60) in the flow space (43) so that the primary air (60) flows from the flow controller
(7) towards the mouth (43a) of the flow space (43), in the vicinity of the jacket
(42a) of the outer tube (4; 42) of the inner channel (4),
a plurality of nozzles (8) is provided in the inner tube (4; 41) of the inner channel
(4), at the distal end (41a) of said inner tube (4) in the flowing direction of the
primary gas (70), for directing the primary gas (70) into the flow space (4; 43),
either upstream or downstream of the flow controller (7) in the flowing direction
of the primary air (60).
2. A burner (2) according to claim 1, characterized in that the outer wall (31) of the outer channel (3), which is simultaneously the outer wall
(10d) of the discharge channel (10), veers outward from the longitudinal center line
(P) of the combustion head (2) at the discharge end (10a), when said outer wall (10d)
of the discharge channel (10) is seen from the direction of the frame member (6) of
the burner.
3. A burner (2) according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the inner wall (10c) of the discharge channel (10), which is simultaneously the jacket
of the outer tube (42) of the inner channel (4), veers outward from the longitudinal
center line (P) of the combustion head (2) at the discharge end (10a), when said inner
wall of the discharge channel (10), or jacket of the outer tube (42a), is seen from
the direction of the frame member (6) of the burner.
4. A burner according to claim 1, characterized in that the mouth (23) of the combustion head (2) comprises the mouth (10a) of the discharge
channel (10) and the mouth (43a) of the flow space (43).
5. A burner (2) according to claim 1, characterized in that the flow controller (7) comprises a plurality of vanes (71, 72, 73...7n), whose surface area and orientation, relative to the flow of primary air (60) passing
through between the same, have been adapted to be such that the flow of primary air
(60) is directed, downstream of said vanes, towards a mouth of the flow space (43),
discharging into the combustion chamber (90) co-directionally with the main flame
(B).
6. A burner according to claim 1, characterized in that the flow controller (7) is made up of a circular shaped disc encircling the inner
tube (4; 41), the plane of said disc being transversely directed with respect to a
lengthwise direction of the inner tube (4; 41).
7. A burner (1) according to any of the preceding claims, characterized in that the flow controller (7) comprises a disc or vanes (71, 72, 73.. 7n), which is/are mounted to encircle the inner tube (41) of the inner channel (4) at
an equal distance from a free end (41A) of the inner tube, said disc or said vanes
(71, 72, 73.. 7n) being at least partially transversely directed with respect to the flowing direction
of primary air (60).
8. A burner (1) according to claim 6, characterized in that the vanes (71, 72, 73...7n) of the plurality of vanes are at an angle of 20-90 degrees relative to the flowing
direction of primary air (60).
9. A burner (1) according to any of the preceding claims, characterized in that the flow space (4; 43) enlarges in the direction of the mouth (43a) of the flow space
(43), which mouth (43a) is encircled by the inner walls of the discharge channel (10)
at the discharge end (10a).
10. A burner (1) according to any of the preceding claims, characterized in that the nozzles, included in a plurality of nozzles (8) in the proximity of a free end
of the inner tube (4), are adapted to direct the primary gas (70) from the inner tube
(4; 41) into the flow space (43) or to the mouth (43a) of the flow space (43) in the
flowing direction of primary air (60) upstream or downstream of the flow controller
(7) located at a free end (2a) of the combustion head of the flow space (43).
11. A burner (1) according to any of the preceding claims, characterized in that the discharge channel (10) is adapted to become narrower and to veer away, as viewed
from a center line (P) of the combustion head, when proceeding in the traveling direction
of the premixed air-gas mixture (80) towards a mouth of the discharge channel's (10)
discharge end (10a).
12. A burner according to claim 11 characterized in that the cross-sectional area of the discharge end (10a) of the discharge channel (10)
diminishes in the traveling direction of the premixed air-gas mixture (80) when proceeding
towards the mouth of the discharge end (10a) which remains outside the inner wall
(10c) of the discharge channel (10).
13. A burner (1) according to claim 11 or 12, characterized in that the external wall (10d) of discharge end (10a) of the discharge channel (10) is located
on such a circular arc which has a radius R, and the inner wall of the discharge end
(10a) of the discharge channel (10) is located on such a circular arc which has a
radius R1, whereby the centers of the radii R and R1 are located outside the combustion
head (2).
14. A burner (1) according to any of claims 11-13, characterized in that the discharge channel's (10) external wall (31) and the discharge channel's (10)
internal wall (42a) are curving outward as viewed from the combustion head's center
line (P) with the radii of curvature (R) and (R1) being equal or unequal.
15. A burner (1) according to claim 14, characterized in that the internal wall (42) of the discharge end (10a) of the discharge channel (10),
which has the radius of curvature (R1), curves more vigorously outward, seen from
the center line (P) of the combustion head, than the external wall (31) of the discharge
end (10a) of the discharge channel (10), which has the radius of curvature R, whereby
R1 > R.
16. A furnace-burner assembly for burning an air-fuel mixture (80) and for generating
a flame (B, E) in a combustion chamber (90) present inside the furnace,
said burner (1) having been defined in claim 1 and connected to a furnace (9) in such
a way that inside the furnace's combustion chamber (90) is left a second section of
an elongated combustion head (2), which protrudes from a frame member (6) and which
combustion head (2) has its first section left outside the furnace (9) or connected
to structures of the furnace (9),
characterized in that
a main flame (B) is generable
by conducting some premixed air-fuel mixture (80) into a discharge channel (10), from
the mouth of discharge channel's discharge end (10a) said fuel-air mixture (80) discharges
into the combustion chamber (90), whereby a center line (10L), or its extension, of
said discharge end (10a) forms an inclined angle of incidence (t), which angle (t)
is about 90-140 degrees, with a longitudinal center line (P) of the combustion head
(2), as well as also with the longitudinal center line (10L) of the discharge channel
(10), as said discharge end (10a) of the discharge channel (10) is viewed from the
direction of the burner's 1 frame member 6, and
- a primary flame (E) is generable
by providing a flow space (4; 43) with a supply of primary air (60) from the burner's
(1) frame member (6) or from that section of the combustion head (2) which is associated
with the frame member and located, in the flowing direction of primary air (60), upstream
of the combustion chamber (90), for conveying the flow of primary air (60) to a flow
controller (7) which is adapted to direct the flow of primary air (60) to pass towards
a mouth of the flow space (43) co-directionally with the main flame (B), and
by providing an inner channel's (4) inner tube (4; 41) with a supply of primary gas
(70) from the burner's (1) frame member (6) or from that section of the combustion
head (2) which is located, in the flowing direction of primary air (60), upstream
of the combustion chamber (90), whereby the nozzles of a plurality of nozzles (8)
in the proximity of a free end (4a) of the inner tube (4; 41) are adapted to direct
the primary gas (70) to discharge from the combustion head's mouth (2a) into the flow
space (4; 43).
17. A furnace-burner assembly according to claim 16, characterized in that the primary gas (70) is delivered from the inner tube (4; 41) by means (8) of the
nozzles (8) into the flow space (4; 43) in the flowing direction of primary air (60)
upstream or downstream of the flow controller (7) located at a free end (43a) of the
flow space (4; 43).
18. A furnace-burner assembly according to claim 16, characterized in that the discharge channel (10) becomes narrower and veers outward, as viewed from a center
line (P) of the combustion head (2), when proceeding, in the traveling direction of
the premixed air-gas mixture (80), towards the discharge channel's (10) discharge
end (10a), whereby speed of said air-gas mixture (80) increases as it flows towards
a mouth of the discharge channel's (10) discharge end (10a).
19. A furnace-burner assembly according to claim 16, characterized in that the flame's backflow, jointly with the flow controller (7), is adapted to direct
the flow of primary air (60), proceeding by way of the flow controller (7), towards
a mouth of the flow space (43) in the proximity of the outer tube's internal surface.
20. A furnace-burner assembly according to claim 16, characterized in that the intensity and stability of the primary flame (E) are controllable by adjusting
the amount and speed of primary air (60) and primary gas (70).
21. A furnace-burner assembly according to claim 16, characterized in that the amount of primary air (60) supplied for generating the primary flame (E) is 5-30%
of the total amount of air, which is used for generating the main flame (B) by means
of the premixed air-gas mixture (80), as well as for establishing the primary flame
(E) by means of the primary air.