RI 2730 Experiences WithThe Combustion Of Fuel Oil In Power Plant Boilers

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
J. F. Barkley
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
7
File Size:
676 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 1, 1926

Abstract

"In the course of the Government's Fuel Economy Survey of its own power plants, studies and tests have been made of various oil-burning equipments under power-plant boilers. There are now many types of burners being offered in the relatively limited field of power-plant use. The majority of the types used may be grouped into two general classes- those using steam to effect the atomizing of the oil, and those using mechanical means.Burners using steam have had the most prominence in this field for a long period. The mechanical atomizing type of burner successfully applied on shipboard, however, pointed to a possible betterment in land work. The vision presented itself of a burner that would need no steam for atomizing that would permit of air inlets or registers compactly arranged as a part of the entire burner, and that would only require the natural stack draft usually available in land boiler furnaces. Hence, rather recently there has been much development along this line, resulting in various types of burners.In Table 1 are grouped test items chosen from many tests showing representative analyses of the products of combustion obtained with various burners installed in various types of furnaces. In all these tests the burners were handled by experts and represent practically the best attainable for that particular arrangement. The boiler efficiencies ranged from 70% to 80%. It will be noted that the burners using steam for atomizing were able to secure slightly better 002 and less 02 without the presence of CO."
Citation

APA: J. F. Barkley  (1926)  RI 2730 Experiences WithThe Combustion Of Fuel Oil In Power Plant Boilers

MLA: J. F. Barkley RI 2730 Experiences WithThe Combustion Of Fuel Oil In Power Plant Boilers. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1926.

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