Troy Paper - Boilers and Boiler Settings for Blast Furnaces

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
F. W. Gordon
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
8
File Size:
347 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1884

Abstract

Since the waste gases of the blast-furnace came to be generally utilized in heating the blast and raising steam, the gradual improvement in the economy of fuel, mainly through the nse of higher temperature in the blast, has impoverished the gases. The increased output per unit of measurement of the furnace, and the increased height of the furnace, have markedly increased the resistance to the blast, thus enormously increasing the duty required from the gases. In other words, a gas reduced in heating power by a further dilution of CO, is required to raise the temperature of the blast to 1800' Fahr., where formerly 600' was a good temperature, and at the same time to raise steam enough to drive the air into the furnace at a pressure of from four to eight pounds in coke practice, and from eight to twelve pounds in anthracite practice, and also pump at least double the water formerly used at furnaces. Hence the necessity for the employment of the best scheme for thoroughly consuming these gases with the least dilution of air, and the use of the best device for absorbing the heat prodnced for the purposes above mentioned. In a former paper before this Society the writer called attention to such improvements as had been made by his firm, by which it was claimed 1400' Fahr. could be maintained in the blast by a less consumption of gas than was required to maintain 900' when using pipe-ovens; and it would not be too much to say that 1600' Fahr. might now be written in place of the 1-400. The object of this paper is to give the practice of our firm in the
Citation

APA: F. W. Gordon  (1884)  Troy Paper - Boilers and Boiler Settings for Blast Furnaces

MLA: F. W. Gordon Troy Paper - Boilers and Boiler Settings for Blast Furnaces. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1884.

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