Bulletin 18 The Transmission Of Heat Into Steam Boilers

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Henry Kreisinger WALTER T. RAY
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
186
File Size:
141408 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1912

Abstract

The investigation of the transmission of heat into steam boilers is one of several researches now being carried on by the Bureau of Mines that have for their object the testing of methods by which the mineral fuels in this country may be used more efficiently. A better understanding of the laws governing heat transmission into boilers will result in the design of more efficient boilers, and more efficient boilers will reduce waste in the use of fuel. The results of the investigations described in this report indicate that the conductivity of the heating plates of steam boilers is so high that the present steaming capacities can be tripled or quadrupled by forcing over the heating surfaces three or four times the weight of gases now passed over them. With well-designed mechanical-draft apparatus this greater weight of gases can be forced through the boilers at a small operating cost. It is possible to increase the capacity of many of the present boilers in this way without reducing their efficiency much; in fact by a proper arrangement of the heating surfaces the efficiency can be made higher than the present rating. The efficiency of any boiler can be increased by arranging its heating surfaces in series with respect to the path of hot gases. New boilers of high efficiency can be constructed by making the cross section of the gas passages small in comparison with the length. In Bryan Donkin's book, entitled "The Practical Physics of the Modern Steam Boiler," it is stated that James Watt obtained nearly as good an evaporation per pound of coal and per square foot of heating surface as is obtained now. The remark is probably true. At any rate, about the only decided superiority of the modern steam boilers over older types is in mechanical construction, and for this superiority credit should be given to the designers of machine tools quite as much as to the boiler engineer. The main reason for tardi- ness in boiler improvement probably lies in the reluctance of educated engineers to do the dirty and disagreeable work involved in boiler tests.
Citation

APA: Henry Kreisinger WALTER T. RAY  (1912)  Bulletin 18 The Transmission Of Heat Into Steam Boilers

MLA: Henry Kreisinger WALTER T. RAY Bulletin 18 The Transmission Of Heat Into Steam Boilers. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1912.

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