BradF
Mechanical
- Feb 6, 2009
- 7
I am designing a small scale Waste Heat Recovery power system (Rankine cycle) for various applications of generating electricity from waste heat. We will use a Waste Heat Recovery Unit (Heat Exchanger) as our "boiler" - note that it will NOT be a fired unit. We can run either on steam or on a refrigerant (Organic Rankine Cycle) and I am looking for some more information on typical requirements for system supervision.
I have been told that Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) systems are exempt from the requirement of having a licensed boiler operator supervising the system, as required for using steam as a working fluid, where supposedly you need a full time supervision by a licensed operator for any steam above 15 psig. This seems like kind of a loophole if it is true, considering high pressure/high temp vapor (around 180 psig, up to 500 F) would seem to be equally dangerous if it were a refrigerant or water. Both systems are closed-loop, completely self contained.
Our applications are small (usually less than 500 kW thermal energy), and licensing requirements will be a obviously very important factor for Operations & Maintenance, if indeed they do not apply to ORC systems. I realize the regulations are likely to vary by State and by Country, but are there any consistent guidelines? I think the ASME International Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code is probably the relevant guideline, but what I've found so far has been vague between water/refrigerant. Can you get away with not having constant supervision of an unfired steam boiler (just heat exchangers, pump, turbine, piping) at any power level if you are pressurizing to 180 psig? Does superheating impose additional limits? Do the US, Europe, Asia operate under the same general rules?
Thanks for any help or direction you can give.
Brad
I have been told that Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) systems are exempt from the requirement of having a licensed boiler operator supervising the system, as required for using steam as a working fluid, where supposedly you need a full time supervision by a licensed operator for any steam above 15 psig. This seems like kind of a loophole if it is true, considering high pressure/high temp vapor (around 180 psig, up to 500 F) would seem to be equally dangerous if it were a refrigerant or water. Both systems are closed-loop, completely self contained.
Our applications are small (usually less than 500 kW thermal energy), and licensing requirements will be a obviously very important factor for Operations & Maintenance, if indeed they do not apply to ORC systems. I realize the regulations are likely to vary by State and by Country, but are there any consistent guidelines? I think the ASME International Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code is probably the relevant guideline, but what I've found so far has been vague between water/refrigerant. Can you get away with not having constant supervision of an unfired steam boiler (just heat exchangers, pump, turbine, piping) at any power level if you are pressurizing to 180 psig? Does superheating impose additional limits? Do the US, Europe, Asia operate under the same general rules?
Thanks for any help or direction you can give.
Brad