RI 2727 Boiler Water Conditioning With Special Reference To High Operating Pressure And Corrosion ? The Scope Of Boiler Water Conditioning

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. E. Hall
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
7
File Size:
2675 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1926

Abstract

When the criterion for control of scale prevention on the evaporating surfaces is made the conditions in the concentrated boiler water, then this control becomes an exact operation amenable to an accuracy commensurate with all other operations in the boiler room. The responsibility in boiler water conditioning, however, includes more than clean surfaces. Corrosion in feed lines, economizers and the boiler is a function of the condition of the later, and must be controlled. Steam line and turbine blading deposits must be obviated by the system of conditioning. By the chemical treatment employed, the amount and character of noncondensable uses in the steam must be controlled in accordance with the intended use of the steam. All. in all, the responsibility in boiler crater conditioning ends not with the entrance of the water into the boiler but with the passage from the boiler nozzle of steam, the dryness and rarity of which are defined by the uses to be made thereof. A clearer conception of the scope of boiler water conditioning can be obtained by reference to a diagram of the surfaces (Figure 1) at which it functions. Consideration of this diagram leads to the following outline for the problems of boiler water conditioning: (a) Prevention of scale formation on surfaces (1) In contact with water but at which no evaporation occurs. (2) At which evaporation is occurring.
Citation

APA: R. E. Hall  (1926)  RI 2727 Boiler Water Conditioning With Special Reference To High Operating Pressure And Corrosion ? The Scope Of Boiler Water Conditioning

MLA: R. E. Hall RI 2727 Boiler Water Conditioning With Special Reference To High Operating Pressure And Corrosion ? The Scope Of Boiler Water Conditioning. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1926.

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