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Rothemuhle Air Heaters Plugged, Advice?

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bpreston

Mechanical
Aug 10, 2020
3
One of our units is down for a major outage (coal fired steam turbine). Months before the unit came offline we one of our fuel sources had opened up and delivered us a bad seam of coal with high sulfur, nitrogen content, and high ash. Running it we began experiencing ID/FD fan stalling and lots of ash appearing everywhere around the unit from the PA fans, around the boiler, and out around the ID/FD fans. We continued to run worse and worse, over the course of 6 months or so we began losing PA fans running the unit at lower load until only 2 of 5 PA fans were operable where we ran for about a month.

This unit has a relatively new SCR prior to the air heaters that injects ammonia into the flue gas. To make things worse in this 6 months operations began over injecting ammonia to try and reduce our NOx from running this poor quality coal at low temperatures. Gas into the SCR at this time sat around 700°F and there's not many times there's gas leaving the SCR below 650°F, while the cold end baskets look like they are averaging about 160°F where air is coming into the heaters. Upon opening the doors on the APH we found the cold end baskets almost entire plugged of with hard build-up and the intermediate baskets filled with fly-ash.

We are typically running coal of a sulfur composition around 0.17-0.38 % by wt, and have a 1% conversion of SO2 to SO3 through the reactor. Even with the higher sulfur content coal (0.5 %) I'm not sure if how much of this deposit might be from the condensing of the product of SO3 and NH3 in the cold end baskets, from what I've been told our SO3 is almost none existent. We are required to remain below 2ppm of NH3 slip, so at most at any point that's the highest that would have made its way through the air heaters to the scrubbers. However, I suspect that it is ABS forming from condensing NH3 through the heater elements. This stuff is hard and sticky, and mixed with our ash is almost like concrete at this point. We sent out a bid to several companies who have experience cleaning air heaters. Two of them came back and told us that this is common, they were both confident they could clear the build-up with hydro blasting.

We've been blasting the baskets at 4000 psi manually with "shotgun" lances for over a week now. Yesterday we removed a few sets of the hot and intermediate baskets to see how the blasting was going. While the several feet of fly ash is removed from the intermediate baskets that buildup still remains on un-exposed side of the cold end baskets. Talking with the contractors they aren't sure 4000 psi is going to be able to cut through this material. We plan to bump up to 5000 psi and then 6000 psi to attempt to clear the build-up without having to remove all of the intermediate/hot baskets. If this does not work or begins to damage/fold our baskets, removing baskets to access the cold end elements is going to take us a month at least I would guess. Original start-up date was tomorrow, so there will be motivation to try and find a solution to this.

Does anyone have any experience clearing build-up like this from air heaters?
 
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What is the material of air finned baskets? Is it iron? Corrosion in the low rank of baskets, where dew point ocours, is expected. I think if possible, you have to by-pass the air pre heater, to permit you to install a new preheater, at the plugged low level.
 
I believe when we introduced the SCR into this system (2016) we replaced the cold end baskets with Corten material that has a ceramic coating. It is meant to be corrosion resistant and washed if some build-up ever occurred. I believe at this point though we are well beyond the build-up that the design manual mentions. The intermediate and hot end baskets are mild steel. As far as what I've seen for corrosion, I would say the baskets are in decent condition. Some of the ceramic coating is peeling away on the cold end as we bumped up to 6000 psi on the hydro blasting today, and they are plugged, but in decent shape otherwise. The hot and intermediate baskets are now oxidizing and are a nice sheen of red since introducing water in there and water still going through them must be carrying some basket material away.

Plan is still to take some time and care at 6000 psi and go back through the troubled areas. Hoping this works, we have no way to bypass these heaters, and new baskets a pricey and like a year out.
 
Have you tried caustic (NaOH) washing on this to see if it either dissolves or softens?
 
Your boiler surely has soot blowers to clean the superheaters occasionally?

Soot blowers normally use medium pressure steam.

Do the same on the air preheaters. You would be amazed.

DHURJATI SEN
Kolkata, India


 
Our boiler has soot blowers but they do not use steam. We inject compressed air from lances that move in and out between the super heaters. We do also have some soot blowing by air on the pre heaters.

I had some ice blasters here to clean our catalyst layers, while they were here I had them try their hand at the air heaters. It didn't do anything at all. Other than that, we have just tried high pressure hydro blasting. It is removing the build-up, but very slowly. I'd say 30% of the rock like material after almost 300 hours.

As these guys are already mobilized our management wants to keep at it with just hydro... I will look into caustic washing.

Thank you!
 
Hi,
You may need to contract company using ultra high-pressure jet blast, let say above 1000 bars to perform the task.
Be very cautious with chemical cleaning.
Pierre
 
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