John_187
Mechanical
- Apr 21, 2018
- 68
Hello, there is a project with an industrial boiler. The client is wanting to use the heat rejection of the boiler to help out the space heat load calculation (to require less unit heaters). The majority of the space heat load is from combustion air, so that airflow load would vary linearly with boiler load. Thus the combustion air load is only on when the boiler is on, so you can count the heat rejection.
The client says the boiler won't operate any higher than 75 % load, and that the reported heat rejection of the boiler into the space won't differ compared to 100 %. They claim that the surface temperature of the boiler will be the same, so the boiler heat rejection will be the same at 75 % load compared to 100 % load.
Is this assumption reasonable? Even if it is reasonable at 75 % load, it doesn't seem that it would be true at lower boiler loads (such as 50 %, 25 %).
What assumptions should be made here? That the boiler heat rejection would decrease linearly as boiler load decreases (starting at 75 % down to 0 % assuming their reported heat rejection at 75 % is correct).
Thanks for your input
The client says the boiler won't operate any higher than 75 % load, and that the reported heat rejection of the boiler into the space won't differ compared to 100 %. They claim that the surface temperature of the boiler will be the same, so the boiler heat rejection will be the same at 75 % load compared to 100 % load.
Is this assumption reasonable? Even if it is reasonable at 75 % load, it doesn't seem that it would be true at lower boiler loads (such as 50 %, 25 %).
What assumptions should be made here? That the boiler heat rejection would decrease linearly as boiler load decreases (starting at 75 % down to 0 % assuming their reported heat rejection at 75 % is correct).
Thanks for your input