Gambar halaman
PDF
ePub

ILLUSTRATIONS

Figure

1. Curves Showing Heat Losses Due to Excess Air..

Page

9

[blocks in formation]

12. Size Elements of Lump Coal and Screenings..

46

13. Percentage of Weight of Coal Which Passes Through Various Screens

48

14. Influence of Moisture in Coal on Evaporative Power of the Fuel. 51 15. Influence of Ash on Fuel Value of Dry Coal....

52

16.

Colloidal Fuel After Standing One Year Under Water.
The Oil Tanker "Nuuanu”.

62

18.

21.

22.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

17.

An Oil Barge on San Francisco Bay.

19. Delivering Fuel Oil to a Mail Steamer.

20. Pump for Loading Barges with Fuel Oil..

Derrick for Handling Heavy Hose on Barge.
A Tank Car....

23. Storage Tank Along the Mexican Railway.

24. Locomotive Loading-Tanks Along Lines of the United Railways of Havana

Reservoir Tank with Automatic Float Valve..
Steel Storage-Tank for Fuel Oil....

27. A Typical Reinforced Concrete Fuel Oil Reservoir.

28. Concrete Oil Tanks Which Without Damage Withstood a Hurricane and Flood..

30. Temperature-Capacity Curve for Mechanical Oil Burner. Heater Used with Live or Exhaust Steam........

33. Pumps and Heaters at City and County Hospital Power Plant,

70

71

72

73

74

75

78

79

81

82

83

92

115

119

120

121

[blocks in formation]

Fuel Oil Pumping, Heating, and Regulating System for Power
Boilers

[blocks in formation]

47. An Oil-Burner Under a Vertical Tubular Boiler.

138

48. Oil Burning System for Scotch Marine Boilers..

139

49. Application of Oil-Burning System to the Stirling Watertube Boiler

140

50. Oil Burning System Applied to Return-Tubular Boiler.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

60.

Hinged Firing Front for Scotch Marine Boilers.

62. General Arrangement of the Staples and Pfeiffer System for Scotch Marine Boilers...

56. "Coaling Ship"

58. Fuelling Station at Palik Papan, Dutch Borneɔ. 59. Fire Room of S. S. Manoa...

61. Oil-Burning French S. S. Lieutenant de Missiessy.

63. Oil Burning Equipment as Applied to Santa Fe Locomotives... 174 64. Locomotive Firebox and Fire Pan Arrangement with Oil Burn

158

163

164

165

166

169

173

ers

175

65.

66.

The Booth Oil Burner Used as a Standard on the Santa Fe.
Von Boden-Ingalls Burner..

177

178

[blocks in formation]

72. Swinging Oil Burners in Open-Hearth Furnace.

67. Arrangement of Oil Burning Equipment as Used by The Baldwin Locomotive Works..

70. Sketch of Oil Burning Open-Hearth Furnace.

Water Cooled Oil-Burner in Open-Hearth Furnace.

73. Layout of Oil System...

180

184

185

186

187

187

188

74. Construction of Oil Storage Tank.

189

75. Charging an Oil-Burning Open-Hearth Furnace...

191

76. Furnace for Case Hardening and Heat Treating Gears.

[blocks in formation]

81. Oil Heaters and Pumps in California Electric Plant.

201

82. Boiler Room Showing Piping for Oil Burners in California Electric Plant

[blocks in formation]

88. Oil-Driven Tractor Pulling Plows on Sugar Estate.

[blocks in formation]

98. Oil-Burner Installation at San Francisco Hospital.

231

99.

Firebox Construction of Schoolhouse Hot-Air Furnace. 100. Oil-Burner Equipment Installed in San Francisco Schools. 101. Fuel Oil Burner Installation in Chicago Schools.. 102. Boiler Room of Modern 60-Room Apartment Hotel.

231

232

233

234

103. Fuel Oil Heating Residence Boiler and Kitchen Range. 104. Oil-Burner Applied to Hotel Range.

[blocks in formation]

CHAPTER I

PRINCIPLES OF FUEL OIL COMBUSTION

Combustion is nothing more nor less than a chemical union of oxygen with some combustible material such as carbon. The decaying autumn leaf is an example of combustion. In this case the organic matter of the leaf forms a slow chemical union with the oxygen of the air. Heat accelerates all chemical unions and the greater the intensity of the heat applied, the more rapidly the elements unite. The process of the combustion of the autumn leaf is slow because insufficient heat is developed to induce rapid combustion.

The explosion of black powder, dynamite or any other of the high explosives, is another example of combustion. Black powder is a mechanical mixture of sulphur, charcoal and potassium. nitrate. In this mixture theoretically each particle of sulphur has beside it one particle of charcoal and one particle of potassium nitrate. Sulphur, which burns easily, is put in the mixture to generate sufficient heat for the liberation of the oxygen which is contained in the potassium nitrate. Inasmuch as all of the elements necessary for combustion, that is, heat-giving substance, combustible material, and oxygen are combined in black powder. the rate of burning is thousands of times greater than is that of the decaying automn leaf. Since sulphur, charcoal, and potassiumi nitrate are only mechanically mixed, it follows that in practice every particle of sulphur does not have adjacent to it a particle of charcoal and a particle of potassium nitrate. Accordingly the speed of combustion of black powder is relatively slow as compared with that of the high explosives in which the oxygen-carrying material and the combustible are chemically united so that no matter how finely the explosive may be divided, each atom is composed of the combustible and of the oxygen-giving material. The heat necessary for the union of combustible and oxygen in the high explosives is generated by an easily explosible detonator. The intense rapidity of combustion in high explosives is shown by the fact that if a pipe five miles long were filled with nitroglycerine

5

and a blasting cap detonated at one end, the entire column would be converted into gas in about one second.

From these examples it will be seen that the speed and efficiency of combustion depend upon the intimacy of the mixture of combustible material with oxygen, and that combustion may extend over a long period of time or may be instantaneous. To the engineer, combustion means the chemical union of the combustible of a fuel and the oxygen of the air at such a rate as to cause rapid increase in temperature.

Fuel oil consists principally of various combinations of hydrogen whose chemical symbol is H, and carbon (C), together with small amounts of nitrogen (N), oxygen (O), sulphur (S), and water (H,O). The moisture in oil fuel should not exceed two percent because it not only acts as an inert impurity, but must be converted into steam in the furnace, which still further reduces the heat value of the fuel per pound. In the ordinary furnace all the oxygen for the combustion of fuel oil is obtained from the air which is a mechanical mixture of 79.3 parts of nitrogen by volume and 20.7 parts of oxygen.

When the combustible elements of fuel oil unite with oxygen they do so in definite proportions which are always the same Carbon, hydrogen and sulphur require theoretically a certain fixed amount of air for complete burning. The formula for the complete combustion of carbon is C + O2 = CO2. One pound of carbon requires for complete combustion 2.66 pounds of oxygen. The dry air requirements for the combustion of one pound of carbon are 11.58 pounds. The formula for the combustion of hydrogen is 2H2 +02 = 2(H2O) (water). One pound of hydrogen requires for complete combustion 8.00 pounds of oxygen. For the combustion of one pound of hydrogen, 34.8 pounds of dry air are required. The formula for the complete combustion of sulphur is S+O2 = SO2. One pound of sulphur requires for its complete combustion 1.00 pound of oxygen. For the combustion of one pound of sulphur, 4.35 pounds of dry air are necessary. The theoretical air requirements for different densities of fuel oil have been compiled by C. R. Weymouth (Trans., A. S. M. E., Vol. 30, p. 803), and are given in Table 1.

It is not possible to burn oil practically with the theoretical air requirements, and sometimes in furnaces of poor design 100

« SebelumnyaLanjutkan »