Boiler Water Treatment
Boiler Water Treatment
Boiler Water Treatment
Chapter 42
Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
Steam generation and use involve thermal and physical processes of heat transfer, fluid flow, evaporation, and condensation. However, steam and water are not chemically inert physical media. Pure water dissociates to form low concentrations of hydrogen and hydroxide ions, H + and OH, and both water and steam dissolve some amount of each material that they contact. They also chemically react with materials to form oxides, hydroxides, hydrates, and hydrogen. As temperatures and velocities of water and steam vary, materials may dissolve in some areas and redeposit in others. Such changes are especially prevalent where water evaporates to form steam or steam condenses back to water, but they also occur where the only change is temperature, pressure, or velocity. In addition, chemical impurities in water and steam can form harmful deposits and facilitate dissolution (corrosion) of boiler structural materials. Therefore, to protect vessels, tubing, and other components used to contain and control these working fluids, water and steam chemistry must be controlled. Water used in boilers must be purified and treated to inhibit scale formation, corrosion, and impurity contamination of steam. Two general approaches are used to optimize boiler water chemistry. First, impurities in the water are minimized by purification of makeup water, condensate polishing, deaeration and blowdown. Second, chemicals are added to control pH, electrochemical potential, and oxygen concentration. Chemicals may also be added to otherwise inhibit scale formation and corrosion. Proper water chemistry control improves boiler efficiency and reduces maintenance and component replacement costs. It also improves performance and life of heat exchangers, pumps, turbines, and piping throughout the steam generation, use, and condensation cycle. The primary goals of boiler water chemistry treatment and control are acceptable steam purity and acceptably low corrosion and deposition rates. In addition to customized boiler-specific guidelines and procedures, qualified operators are essential to achieving
Steam 41 / Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
these goals, and vigilance is required to detect early signs of chemistry upsets. Operators responsible for plant cycle chemistry must understand boiler water chemistry guidelines and how they are derived and customized. They must also understand how water impurities, treatment chemicals, and boiler components interact. Training must therefore be an integral, ongoing part of operations and should include management, control room operators, chemists, and laboratory staff. General water chemistry control limits and guidelines have been developed and issued by various groups of boiler owners and operators (e.g., ASME,1,2,3 EPRI4 and VGB5 ), water treatment specialists6,7,8 utilities and industries. Also, manufacturers provide recommended chemistry control limits for each boiler and for other major cycle components. However, optimum water and steam chemistry limits for specific boilers, turbines, and other cycle components depend on equipment design and materials of construction for the combination of equipment employed. Hence, for each boiler system, boiler-specific water chemistry limits and treatment practices must be developed and tailored to changing conditions by competent specialists familiar with the specific boiler and its operating environment.
Chemistry-boiler interactions
To understand how water impurities, treatment chemicals and boiler components interact, one must first understand boiler circuitry, and steam generation and separation processes. Boiler feed pumps provide feedwater pressure and flow for the boiler. From the pumps, feedwater often passes through external heaters and then through an economizer where it is further heated before entering the boiler. In a natural circulation drum-type unit, boiling occurs within steel tubes through which a water-steam mixture rises to a steam drum. Devices in the drum separate steam from water, and steam leaves through connections at the top of the drum. This steam is replaced by feedwater which is supplied
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company by the feedwater pumps and injected into the drum just above the downcomers through a feedwater pipe where it mixes with recirculating boiler water which has been separated from steam. By way of downcomers, the water then flows back through the furnace and boiler tubes. Boiler water refers to the concentrated water circulating within the drum and steam generation circuits. Chapters 1 and 5 provide detailed descriptions of steam generation and boiler circulation. Boiler feedwater always contains some dissolved solids, and evaporation of water leaves these dissolved impurities behind to concentrate in the steam generation circuits. If the concentration process is not limited, these solids can cause excessive deposition and corrosion within the boiler and excessive impurity carryover with the steam. To avoid this, some concentrated boiler water is discarded to drain by way of a blowdown line. Because the boiler water is concentrated, a little blowdown eliminates a large amount of the dissolved solids. Since steam carries very little dissolved solids from the boiler, dissolved and suspended solids entering in the feedwater concentrate in the boiler water until the solids removed in the blowdown (boiler water concentration times the blowdown rate lb/h or kg/s) equal the solids carried in with the feedwater (lb/h or kg/s). A small amount of dissolved solids is carried from the drum by moisture (water) droplets with the steam. Because moisture separation from steam depends on the difference between their densities, moisture separation is less efficient at high pressures where there is less difference between the densities. Therefore, to attain the same steam purity at a higher pressure, the dissolved solids concentration in boiler water must generally be lower. In a drum boiler, the amount of steam generated is small compared to the amount of water circulating through the boiler. However, circulation is also largely driven by the difference in densities between the two fluids, so as pressure increases the ratio of water flow to steam flow decreases. At 200 psi (1379 kPa), water flow through the boiler must be on the order of 25,000 pph (3 kg/s) to produce just 1000 pounds per hour of steam. Even at 2700 psi (18.6 MPa), 2500 to 4000 pounds of water circulates to produce 1000 pounds of steam. By contrast, most or all of the water entering a once-through boiler is converted to steam without recirculation. Some boiler operators have asked why boiler water concentrations change so slowly once a source of contamination is eliminated and the continuous blowdown rate is increased. How quickly can excess chemical be purged from a boiler? How much impurity or additive is needed to upset boiler water chemistry? How quickly do chemical additions circulate through the boiler? To answer these questions and explore some other chemistry-boiler interactions, consider for example a typical 450 MW natural circulation boiler, generating 3,000,000 pounds of steam per hour. It has a room temperature water capacity of 240,000 pounds and an operating water capacity of 115,000 pounds. The furnace wall area is 33,000 square feet, about 5800 of which are in the maximum heat flux burner zone. Impurities purge slowly from the boiler because the boiler volume is large compared to the blowdown rate. For example, at maximum steaming capacity with a blowdown rate 0.3% of the steam flow from the drum, 17 hours may be required to decrease the boiler water concentration of a non-volatile impurity by 50%. Almost two hours are required to effect a 50% reduction in the boiler water concentration even at a blowdown rate of 3%. Without blowdown, dissolved sodium with a fractional carryover factor of 0.1% would have a half life of 52 hours. While long periods of time are generally required to purge impurities, mixing within the boiler is rapid. For the boiler being used as an example, the internal recycle rate is about one boiler volume per minute, and steam is generated at a rate of one boiler volume every 5 minutes. The rate of steam generation is such that replacement feedwater must be essentially free of hardness minerals and oxides that deposit in the boiler. For example, feedwater carrying only 1 ppm of hardness minerals and oxides could deposit up to 25,000 lb (11,340 kg) per year of solids in the boiler, so the boiler might require chemical cleaning as often as 3 or 4 times per year. Also, small chemical additions have a large effect on boiler water chemistry. For example, addition of 0.2 lb (0.09 kg) of sodium hydroxide to the boiler water increases the sodium concentration by 1 ppm, which can significantly affect the boiler water chemistry. Similarly, a small amount of chemical hideout can have a large effect on boiler water concentration. Hideout or hideout return of only 0.01 gram per square foot (0.1 g/m2 ) in the burner zone can change the boiler water concentration by 1 ppm.
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company from corrosion of pre-boiler cycle components. Scaling occurs when these minerals and oxides precipitate and adhere to boiler internal surfaces where they impede heat transfer. The result can be overheating of tubes, followed by failure and equipment damage. Deposits also increase circuitry pressure drop, especially detrimental in once-through boilers. Effective feedwater and boiler water purification and chemical treatment minimizes deposition by minimizing feedwater hardness and by minimizing corrosion and associated iron pickup from the condensate and feedwater systems. Also, phosphate and other water treatment chemicals are used in drum boilers to impede the formation of particularly adherent and low thermal conductivity deposits. Some chemicals become corrosive as they concentrate. Corrosion can occur even in a clean boiler, but the likelihood of substantial corrosion is much greater beneath thick porous deposits that facilitate the concentration process. Concentration at the base of deposits can be more than 1000 times higher than that in the boiler water and the temperature at the base of these deposits can substantially exceed the saturation temperature. Hence, as deposits accumulate, control of boiler water chemistry to avoid the formation of corrosive concentrates becomes increasingly important. Since chemistry upsets do occur, operation of a boiler with excessively thick deposits should be avoided. Because local concentration of boiler water impurities and treatment chemicals is inherent to steam generation, water chemistries must be controlled so the concentrates are not corrosive. On-line corrosion is often caused by concentration of sodium hydroxide, concentration of caustic-forming salts such as sodium carbonate, or concentration of acid-forming salts such as magnesium chloride or sulfate.10 Effective feedwater and boiler water treatment minimizes corrosion by minimizing ingress of these impurities and by add-
Fig. 1 Three years of operation resulted in light deposits because of good water treatment. The upper right figure is the heated side, and the lower right figure is the unheated side.
trated in Fig. 3 accumulate, they restrict flow to the surface. Some boiler water chemicals concentrate on tube walls during periods of high load and then return to the boiler water when the load is reduced. This is termed hideout and hideout return. This can greatly complicate efforts to control boiler water chemistry. Typical boiler deposits are largely hardness precipitates and metal oxides. Hardness, easily precipitated minerals (mainly calcium and magnesium), enters the cycle as impurities in makeup water and in cooling water from condenser leaks. Metal oxides are largely
Fig. 2 Schematic of the wick boiling mechanism (adapted from Reference 9).
Fig. 3 An example of internal deposits resulting from poor boiler water treatment. These deposits, besides hindering heat transfer, allowed boiler water salts to concentrate, causing corrosion.
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company ing treatment chemicals (such as trisodium phosphate) that buffer against acid or caustic formation. However, corrosion and excessive precipitation can also be caused by improper use of buffering agents and other treatment chemicals. For example, underfeeding or overfeeding of treatment chemicals, out-of-specification sodiumto-phosphate ratios, or out-of-specification free-chelant concentrations can cause corrosion. Dissolved carbon dioxide and oxygen can also be corrosive and must be eliminated from feedwater. Carbon dioxide from air in-leakage and from decomposition of carbonates and organic compounds tends to acidify feedwater and steam condensate. Oxygen is especially corrosive because it facilitates oxidation of iron, copper, and other metals to form soluble metal ions. At higher temperatures, oxygen is less soluble in water and the rate of chemical reaction is increased. As boiler feedwater is heated, oxygen is driven out of solution and rapidly corrodes heat transfer surfaces. The combination of oxygen and residual chloride is especially corrosive, as is the combination of oxygen and free chelant. Carryover of impurities from boiler water to steam is also inherent to boiler operation. Though separation devices remove most water droplets carried by steam, some residual droplets containing small amounts of dissolved solids always carry through with the steam. Also, at higher pressures, there is some vaporous carryover. Excessive impurities can damage superheaters, steam turbines, or downstream process equipment.
Boiler feedwater
To maintain boiler integrity and performance and to provide steam of suitable turbine or process purity, boiler feedwater must be purified and chemically conditioned. The amount and nature of feedwater impurities that can be accommodated depend on boiler operating pressure, boiler design, steam purity requirements, type of boiler water internal treatment, blowdown rate, and whether the feedwater is used for steam attemperation. Feedwater chemistry parameters to be controlled include dissolved solids, pH, dissolved oxygen, hardness, suspended solids, total organic carbon (TOC), oil, chlorides, sulfides, alkalinity, and acid or base forming tendencies. At a minimum, boiler feedwater must be softened water for low pressure boilers and demineralized water for high pressure boilers. It must be free of oxygen and essentially free of hardness constituents and suspended solids. Recommended feedwater limits are shown in Table 1. Use of high-purity feedwater minimizes blowdown requirements and minimizes the potential for carryover, deposition, and corrosion problems throughout the steam-water cycle. Operation within these guidelines does not by itself ensure trouble-free operation. Some feedwater contaminants such as calcium, magnesium, organics, and carbonates can be problematic at concentrations below the detection limits of analytical methods commonly used
Table 1
Recommended Feedwater Limits Drum Boilers
with AVT* Pressure, psig (MPa) pH, all ferrous heaters pH, copperbearing heaters Total hardness, as ppm CaCO3, maximum Oxygen, ppm maximum*** Iron, ppm maximum Copper, ppm maximum Organic, ppm TOC max. Cation conductivity, S/cm max. 15 to 300 (0.10 to 2.07) 9.3 to 10.0 8.8 to 9.2 301 to 600 (2.08 to 4.14) 9.3 to 10.0 8.8 to 9.2 601 to 900 (4.14 to 6.21) 9.3 to 10.0 8.8 to 9.2 901 to 1000 (6.21 to 6.90) 9.3 to 9.6 8.8 to 9.2 1001 to 1500 (6.90 to 10.34) 9.3 to 9.6 8.8 to 9.2 >1500 (>10.34) 9.3 to 9.6 8.8 to 9.2 All 9.3 to 9.6
Once-Through Boilers
Oxygen
* All volatile treatment. ** AVT not recommended for copper-bearing cycles and associated low feedwater pH where the drum pressure is less than 400 psig. *** By mechanical deaeration before chemical scavenging of residual. Note: ppm = mg/kg
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company for industrial boilers. Also, operators must be sensitive to changes in feedwater chemistry and boiler operating conditions, and must adapt accordingly. cially for all boilers operating at pressures greater than 1000 psi (6.9 MPa). Sodium cycle softening, often called sodium zeolite softening, replaces easily precipitated hardness minerals with sodium salts, which remain in solution as water is heated and concentrated. The major hardness ions are calcium and magnesium. However, zeolite ionexchange softening also removes dissolved iron, manganese, and other divalent and trivalent cations. Sodium held by a bed of organic resin is exchanged for calcium and magnesium ions dissolved in the water. The process continues until the sodium ions in the resin are depleted and the resin can no longer absorb calcium and magnesium efficiently. The depleted resin is then regenerated by washing it with a high concentration sodium chloride solution. At the high sodium concentrations of this regeneration solution, the calcium and magnesium are displaced by sodium. Variations of the process, in combination with chemical pre-treatments and post-treatments, can substantially reduce hardness concentrations and can often reduce silica and carbonate concentrations. For higher pressure boilers, evaporative or more complete ion-exchange demineralization of makeup water is recommended. Any of several processes may be used. Evaporative distillation forms a vapor which is recondensed as purified water. Ion exchange demineralization replaces cations (sodium, calcium, and magnesium in solution) with hydrogen ions and replaces anions (bicarbonate, sulfate, chloride, and silicate) with hydroxide ions. For makeup water treatment, two tanks are normally used in series in a cation-anion sequence. The anion resin is usually regenerated with a solution of sodium hydroxide, and the cation resin is regenerated with hydrochloric or sulfuric acid. Reverse osmosis purifies water by forcing it through a semi-permeable membrane or a series of such membranes. It is increasingly used to reduce total dissolved solids (TDS) in steam cycle makeup water. Where complete removal of hardness is necessary, reverse osmosis may be followed by a mixed-bed demineralizer. Mixed-bed demineralization uses simultaneous cation and anion exchange to remove residual impurities left by reverse osmosis, evaporator, or twobed ion exchange systems. Mixed-bed demineralizers are also used for polishing (removing impurities from) returned steam condensate. Before regenerating mixed-bed demineralizers, the anion and cation resins must be hydraulically separated. Caustic and acids used for regeneration of demineralizers and other water purification and treatment chemicals present serious safety, health, and environmental concerns. Material Safety Data Sheets must be obtained for each chemical and appropriate precautions for handling and use must be formulated and followed. Dissolved organic contaminants (carbon-based molecules) are problematic in that they are often detrimental to boilers but are not necessarily removed by deionization or evaporative distillation. Organic contamination of feedwater can cause boiler corrosion, furnace wall tube overheating, drum level instability, carryover, superheater tube failures, and turbine cor42-5
Makeup water Boiler feedwater is generally a mix of returned steam condensate and fresh makeup water. For utility boilers, most of the steam is usually returned as condensate, and only 1 to 2% makeup is necessary. However, for some industrial cycles, there is little or no returned condensate, so as much as 100% makeup may be necessary. Chemistry requirements for makeup water depend on the amount and quality of returned steam condensate. Where a large portion of the feedwater is uncontaminated condensate, makeup water can generally be of lesser purity so long as the mixture of condensate and makeup meet boiler feedwater requirements. The feedwater concentration for each chemical species is the weighted average of the feedwater and makeup water concentrations:
Feedwater concentration = (condensate concentration flow (1) + makeup concentration makeup flow) / total feedwater flow
The selection of equipment for purification of makeup water must consider the water chemistry requirements, raw water composition, and quantity of makeup required. All natural waters contain dissolved and suspended matter. The type and amount of impurities vary with the source, such as lake, river, well or rain, and with the location of the source. Major dissolved chemical species in source water include sodium, calcium, and magnesium positive ions (cations) as well as bicarbonate, carbonate, sulfate, chloride, and silicate negative ions (anions). Organics are also abundant. The first steps in water purification are coagulation and filtration of suspended materials. Natural settling in still water removes relatively coarse suspended solids. Required settling time depends on specific gravity, shape and size of particles, and currents within the settling basin. Settling and filtration can be expedited by coagulation (use of chemicals to cause agglomeration of small particles to form larger ones that settle more rapidly). Typical coagulation chemicals are alum and iron sulfate. Following coagulation and settling, water is normally passed through filters. The water is chlorinated to kill micro-organisms, then activated charcoal filters may be used to remove the final traces of organics and excess chlorine. Subsequently, various processes may be used to remove dissolved scale-forming constituents (hardness minerals) from the water. For some low pressure boilers, removal of hardness minerals and scale-forming minerals is adequate. For other boilers, the concentration of all dissolved solids must be reduced or nearly eliminated. For low pressure boilers, the capital and operating cost for removal must be weighed against costs associated with residual dissolved solids and hardness. These include increased costs for boiler water treatment, more frequent chemical cleaning of the boiler, and possibly higher rates of boiler repair. Demineralized water nearly free of all dissolved solids is recommended for higher pressure boilers and espeSteam 41 / Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
The Babcock & Wilcox Company rosion. The degree to which any of these difficulties occurs depends on the concentration and nature of the organic contaminant. Removal of organics may require activated carbon filters or other auxiliary purification equipment. injection pumps or alternative feedwater pH control is achieved using a feedback signal from a specific conductivity monitor. Conductivity provides a good measure of ammonium hydroxide concentration, and automated conductivity measurement is more reliable than automated pH measurement. Also, the linear rather than logarithmic relationship of conductivity to ammonia concentration gives better control. Fig. 4 shows the relationship between ammonium concentration, pH, and conductivity of demineralized water. While an equilibrium concentration of ammonium hydroxide remains in the boiler water, much of the ammonium hydroxide added to feedwater volatilizes with the steam. Conversely, the solubility of ammonium hydroxide is such that little ammonia is lost by deaeration. Hence, returned condensate often has a substantial concentration of ammonium hydroxide before further addition. Common alternative pH control agents include neutralizing amines, such as cyclohexylamine and morpholine. For high pressure utility boilers with superheaters, the more complex amines are thermally unstable and the decomposition products can be problematic.
Returned condensate condensate polishing For many boilers, a large fraction of the feedwater is returned condensate. Condensate has been purified by prior evaporation, so uncontaminated condensate does not generally require purification. Makeup water can be mixed directly with the condensate to form boiler feedwater. In some cases, however, steam condensate is contaminated by corrosion products or by in-leakage of cooling water. Where returned condensate is contaminated to the extent that it no longer meets feedwater purity requirements, mixed-bed ion-exchange purification systems are commonly used to remove the dissolved impurities and filter out suspended solids. Such demineralization is referred to as condensate polishing. This is essential for satisfactory operation of oncethrough utility boilers, for which feedwater purity requirements are especially stringent. While high pressure drum boilers can operate satisfactorily without condensate polishing, many utilities recognize the benefits in high pressure plants. These benefits include shorter unit startup time, protection from condenser leakage impurities, and longer intervals between acid cleanings. Condensate polishing is recommended for all boilers operating with all volatile treatment (AVT) and is essential for all boilers operating with all volatile treatment and seawater cooled condensers. Provisions for polishing vary from adequate capacity for 100% polishing of all returned condensate to polishing only a portion of the condensate. However, all must be adequate to meet feedwater requirements under all anticipated load and operating conditions. Most of the pressure vessels that contain ion exchange resins have under-drain systems and downstream traps or strainers to prevent leakage of ion exchange resins into the cycle water. These resins can form harmful decomposition products if allowed to enter the high temperature portions of the cycle. Unfortunately, the under-drain systems and the traps and strainers are not designed to retain resin fragments that result from resin bead fracture. Also, the resin traps and strainers can fail, resulting in resin bursts. Resin intrusion can be minimized by controlling flow transients, reducing the strainers screen size, increasing flow gradually during vessel cut-in, and returning the polisher vessel effluent to the condenser during the first few minutes of cut-in. Feedwater pH control Boiler feedwater pH is monitored at the condensate pump discharge and at the economizer inlet. When the pH is below the required minimum value, ammonium hydroxide or an alternate alkalizer is added. Chemicals for pH control are added either downstream of the condensate polishers or at the condensate pump discharge for plants without polishers. For high purity demineralized feedwater, ammonium hydroxide
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Deaeration and chemical oxygen scavengers Oxygen and carbon dioxide enter the cycle with undeaerated makeup water, with cooling water which
Fig. 4 Approximate relationship between conductivity and pH for ammonia solutions in demineralized water.
The Babcock & Wilcox Company leaks into the condenser, and as air leaking into the vacuum portion of the cycle. For turbine cycles, aeration of the feedwater is initially limited by use of air ejectors to remove air from the condenser. Utility industry standard practice is to limit total air in-leakage to less than one standard cubic foot of air per minute per 100 MW of generating capacity (approximately 0.027 Nm3/100 MW), as measured at the condenser air ejectors. Final removal of oxygen and other dissolved gases adequate for boiler feedwater applications is generally accomplished by thermal deaeration of the water ahead of the boiler feed pumps. Thermal deaeration is accomplished by heating water to reduce gas solubility. Gases are then carried away by a counter flow of steam. The process is typically facilitated by the use of nozzles and trays which disperse water droplets to increase the steamto-water interfacial area. Thermal deaeration can reduce feedwater oxygen concentration to less than 7 parts per billion (ppb). It also essentially eliminates dissolved carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and argon. Chemical agents are generally used to scavenge residual oxygen not removed by thermal deaeration. Traditional oxygen scavengers have been sodium sulfite for low pressure boilers and hydrazine for high pressure boilers. Sulfite must not be used where the boiler pressure is greater than 900 psig (6.2 MPa). Other oxygen scavengers (erythorbic acid, diethylhydroxylamine, hydroquinone and carbohydrazide) are also used. Hydrazine has been identified as a carcinogen and this has increased the use of alternative scavengers. Scavengers are generally fed at the exit of the condensate polishing system and/or at the boiler feed pump suction. ter evaporation. Water chemistry must be carefully controlled to assure that this concentrate does not precipitate solids or cause corrosion within the boiler circuitry. Boiler water chemistry must also be controlled to prevent excessive carryover of impurities or chemicals with the steam. Customized chemistry limits and treatment practices must be established for each boiler. These limits depend on steam purity requirements, feedwater chemistry, and boiler design. They also depend on boiler owner/operator preferences regarding economic tradeoffs between feedwater purification, blowdown rate, frequency of chemical cleaning, and boiler maintenance and repair. Direct boiler water treatment (usually referred to as internal treatment) practices commonly used to control boiler water chemistry include all volatile treatment, coordinated phosphate treatments, high-alkalinity phosphate treatments, and high-alkalinity chelant and polymer treatments. In all cases, when treatment chemicals are mixed, the identity and purity of chemicals must be verified and water of hydration in the weight of chemicals must be taken into account. The specific treatment used must always be developed and managed by competent water chemistry specialists. Feedwater is the primary source of solids that concentrate in boiler water, and feedwater purity defines the practical limit below which the boiler water solids concentration can not be reduced with an acceptable blowdown rate. Additionally, hardness and pre-boiler corrosion products carried by the feedwater play major roles in defining the type of boiler water treatment that must be employed. Where substantial hardness is present in feedwater, provision must be made to ensure that the hardness constituents remain in solution in the boiler water or to otherwise minimize the formation of adherent deposits. This is often accomplished by use of chelant, polymer, or high-alkalinity phosphate boiler water treatment. Where substantial hardness is not present, boiler water treatment can be optimized to minimize impurity carryover in the steam and to minimize the potential for boiler tube corrosion. Because boiler water impurities and treatment chemicals carry over in the steam, steam purity requirements play a major role in defining boiler water chemistry limits. Boiler specifications normally include a list of boiler-specific water chemistry limits that must be imposed to attain a specified steam purity. Limits must always be placed on the maximum dissolved solids concentration. Limits must also be placed on impurities and conditions that cause foaming at the steam-water interface in the drum. These include limits on oil and other organic contaminants, suspended solids, and alkalinity. The carryover factor is the ratio of an impurity or chemical species in the steam to that in the boiler water.
Attemperation water Water spray attemperation is used to control steam temperature. Attemperation for utility boilers is discussed in the Steam temperature adjustment and control section of Chapter 19, Boilers, Superheaters and Reheaters. The spray water is feedwater, polished feedwater, or steam condensate. As the spray water evaporates, all chemicals and contaminants in the water remain in the steam. This addition must not be excessive. It must not form deposits in the attemperator piping, and it must not excessively contaminate the steam. If a superheated steam purity limit is imposed, the steam purity after attemperation must not exceed this limit. To meet this requirement, the weighted average of the spray water total solids concentration and the saturated steam total solids concentration must not exceed the final steam total solids limit. Additionally, spray water attemperation must not increase the steam total solids concentration by more than 0.040 ppm. Independent of other considerations, the spray water solids concentration must never exceed 2.5 ppm. Ideally, the purity of attemperation water should equal the desired purity of the steam.
Blowdown The dissolved solids concentration of boiler water is intermittently or continuously reduced by blowing down some of the boiler water and replacing it with feedwater. Blowdown rate is generally expressed as a percent relative to the steam flow rate from the drum.
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company Blowdown is accomplished through a pressure letdown valve and flash tank. Heat loss is often minimized by use of a regenerative heat exchanger. The ratio of the concentration of a feedwater impurity in the boiler water to its concentration in the feedwater is the concentration factor, which can be estimated by use of Equation 1. However, a more complex formula must be used where there is substantial carryover. If there is no blowdown, solids concentrate until carryover with the steam is sufficient to carry away all of the solids that enter the boiler with the feedwater. For example, where the feedwater silica concentration is 0.01 ppm and 10% of the silica in the boiler water carries over with the steam, the equilibrium boiler water silica concentration is 0.1 ppm. viet Union (FSU). It can only be used where there is no copper in the pre-boiler components beyond the condensate polisher, and where feedwater is consistently of the highest purity, e.g., cation conductivity < 0.15 S/cm at 77F (25C). A low concentration of oxygen is added to the condensate. The target oxygen concentration is 0.050 to 0.150 ppm for once-through boilers and 0.040 ppm for drum boilers. With oxygen treatment, the feedwater pH can be reduced, e.g., down to 8.0 to 8.5. An advantage of oxygen treatment is decreased chemical cleaning frequencies for the boiler. In addition, when oxygen treatment is used in combination with lower pH, the condensate polisher regeneration frequency is reduced.
Traditional all volatile treatment For all volatile treatment (AVT), no solid chemicals are added to the boiler or pre-boiler cycle. Boiler water chemistry control is by boiler feedwater treatment only. No chemical additions are made directly to the drum. Feedwater pH is controlled with ammonia or an alternate amine. Because ammonia carries away preferentially with the steam, the boiler water pH may be slightly lower (0.2 to 0.4 pH units) than the feedwater pH. For traditional all volatile treatment, as opposed to oxygen treatment, hydrazine or a suitable alternate is added to scavenge residual oxygen. Table 1 shows the recommended AVT feedwater control limits. Because all volatile treatment adds no solids to the boiler water, solids carryover is generally minimized. All volatile treatment provides no chemical control for hardness deposition and provides no buffer against caustic or acid-forming impurities. Hence, feedwater must contain no hardness minerals from condenser leakage or other sources. It must be high-purity condensate or polished condensate with mixed-bed quality demineralized makeup water. All volatile treatment can be, but rarely is, used below 1000 psig (6.9 MPa). Normally it is used only for boilers operating at or above 2000 psig (13.8 MPa) drum pressure. It is not recommended for lower pressure boilers where other options are feasible. While all volatile treatment is one of several options for drum boilers, it is the only option for once-through boilers. Oxygen treatment Even in the absence of dissolved oxygen, steel surfaces react with water to form some soluble Fe ++ ions which may deposit in the boiler, superheater, turbine, or other downstream components. However, in the absence of impurities, oxygen can form an especially protective Fe +++ iron oxide that is less soluble than that formed under oxygen-free conditions. To take advantage of this, some copper-free boiler cycles operating with ultra pure feedwater maintain a controlled concentration of oxygen in the feedwater. Most of these are high pressure once-through utility boilers, but this approach is also used successfully in some drum boilers. Oxygen treatment was developed in Europe, largely by Vereinigung der Grosskesselbetreiber (VGB),11 and there is also extensive experience in the former So42-8
Coordinated phosphate treatment Coordinated phosphate-pH treatment, introduced by Whirl and Purcell of the Duquesne Light Company,12 controls boiler water alkalinity with mixtures of disodium and trisodium phosphate added to the drum through a chemical feed pipe. The objective of this treatment is largely to keep the pH of boiler water and underdeposit boiler water concentrates within an acceptable range. Fig. 5 indicates the phosphate concentration range that is generally necessary and sufficient for this purpose. Phosphate treatment must not be used where the drum pressure exceeds 2800 psig (19.3 MPa). All volatile treatment is recommended at the higher pressures. In sodium phosphate solutions, an H+ + PO4 HPO4= balance buffers the pH (i.e., retards H+ ion concentration changes). Solution pH depends on the phosphate concentration and the molar sodium-tophosphate ratio. The relationship between pH, phosphate concentration, and molar sodium-to-phosphate ratio is shown in Fig. 6. Where solutions contain other dissolved salts (e.g., sodium and potassium chloride and sulfate), sodium phosphate can still be used to control pH, and the curves of Fig. 6 are still applicable. However, for such solutions, the sodium-to-phosphate ratio labels on these curves are only apparent values with reference to pure sodium phosphate solutions. Measured sodium concentrations can not be used in calculating sodium-to-phosphate ratios for control of
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Phosphate, ppm
10
10
1000
10000
Fig. 5 Phosphate concentrations to control boiler water chemistry (little or no residual hardness in the feedwater). Indicates phosphate range at a given dissolved solids concentration.
10 Phosphate, ppm
100
Fig. 6 Estimated pH of sodium phosphate solutions. Note: pH values can differ by up to 0.2 pH units, depending on the choice of chemical equilibrium constants used, but more often agree within 0.05 pH units.
ment regime and by experience with caustic boiler water treatment. Tables 2 and 3 show recommended boiler water chemistry limits. Customized limits for a specific boiler depend on the steam purity requirements for the boiler. Boiler and laboratory experience indicate that, under some conditions, phosphate-magnetite interactions can degrade protective oxide scale and corrode the underlying metal. To minimize these interactions, the pH must be greater than that corresponding to the 2.6 sodium-to-phosphate ratio curve of Fig. 6, and preferably greater than that corresponding to the 2.8 curve. The pH must always be above the 2.8 curve when the drum pressure is above 2600 psig (17.9 MPa). The maximum pH is that of trisodium phosphate plus 1 ppm sodium hydroxide. Additionally, the boiler water pH is not to be less than 9 nor greater than 10. As discussed below, it may be necessary to reduce the maximum boiler water phosphate concentration to avoid hideout and hideout return, and to avoid associated control and corrosion problems.
boiler water pH because measured sodium concentrations include non-phosphate sodium salts. While dissolved sodium chloride and sulfate do not alter boiler water pH, ammonia does alter the pH. Hence, the presence of ammonia must be taken into account where ammonia concentrations are significant compared to phosphate concentrations. Historically, the initial goal of coordinated pH-phosphate control was to keep the effective molar sodiumto-phosphate ratio just below 3, to prevent caustic stress corrosion cracking, acid corrosion, and hydrogen damage. This proved to be an effective method for control of deposition and corrosion in many boilers. However, caustic gouging of furnace wall tubes occurred in some boilers using coordinated pH-phosphate control, and laboratory tests indicated that solutions with molar sodium-to-phosphate ratios greater than about 2.85 can become caustic when highly concentrated. Subsequently, many boilers were operated under congruent control with a target effective sodium-to-phosphate ratio of less than 2.85, generally about 2.6, and often less than 2.6. Again, this proved to be an effective method of control for many boilers, but some of the boilers operating with low molar sodium-to-phosphate ratios experienced acid phosphate corrosion. Instances of boiler tube corrosion generally occurred in boilers that experienced substantial phosphate hideout and hideout-return when the boiler load changed. Phosphate hideout, hideout-return, and associated corrosion problems are now addressed by equilibrium phosphate treatment.13 The concentration of phosphate in the boiler water is kept low enough to avoid hideout and hideout return associated with load changes, thus it is always in equilibrium with the boiler. The effective molar sodium-to-phosphate ratio is kept above 2.8. The free hydroxide, as depicted in Fig. 6, is not to exceed the equivalent of 1 ppm sodium hydroxide. Concern about caustic gouging at the higher ratios is largely reduced by experience with this treat-
Table 2
Boiler Water Limits Pressure Range, psig (MPa) 15 to 50* (0.10 to 0.35) 15 to 50** (0.10 to 0.35) 51 to 325 (0.35 to 2.24) 326 to 450 (2.25 to 3.10) 451 to 600 (3.11 to 4.14) 601 to 750 (4.14 to 5.17) 751 to 900 (5.18 to 6.21) 901 to 1000 (6.21 to 6.90) Maximum TDS, ppm 1250 3500 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1250 Maximum Suspended Solids, ppm 15 15 10 8 6 4 2 1 Maximum Silica, ppm 30 150 150 90 40 30 20 8
* For natural separation with no diffuser baffles in the steam drum. ** Where the drum includes baffles that separate water droplets from steam. Notes: 1. Operation outside the limits defined in this table is not recommended. Within these broad limits, more restrictive limits must be imposed, consistent with the type of boiler water treatment method chosen to control deposition, corrosion, and carryover. For example, the boiler water pH range of 8.5 to 9.0 is only acceptable with all volatile treatment (AVT). 2. ppm = mg/kg
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Table 3
Boiler Water Limits for Coordinated Phosphate Boiler Water Treatment
Pressure, psig (MPa) 15 to 1000 (0.10 to 6.90) Maximum TDS, ppm Maximum sodium, ppm Maximum silica, ppm Phosphate as PO4, ppm "Effective" Na/PO4 molar ratio pH Defined by Table 2 or as necessary to attain required steam purity, whichever is less 1001 to 1500 (6.90 to 10.34) 1501 to 2600 (10.35 to 17.93) 2601 to 2800 (17.93 to 19.31) 15 ppm or as necessary to attain required steam purity, whichever is less
100 ppm or as necessary to 50 ppm or as necessary to attain required steam attain required steam purity, whichever is less purity, whichever is less
Maximum sodium concentration (if any) as necessary to attain required steam purity Defined by Table 2 or as necessary to attain required steam purity, whichever is less See Fig. 5 2 ppm or as necessary to attain required steam purity, whichever is less 0.5 ppm or as necessary to attain required steam purity, whichever is less 0.1 ppm or as necessary to attain required steam purity, whichever is less.
2.6 to 3.0 + 1 ppm NaOH 9.4 to 10.5 and as dictated by Figs. 6 and 7
2.6 to 3.0 + 1 ppm NaOH 9.0 to 10.0 and as dictated by Figs. 6 and 7
2.8 to 3.0 + 1 ppm NaOH 9.0 to 10.0 and as dictated by Figs. 6 and 7
Maximum specific conductivity, S/cm Twice the maximum TDS (ppm). Note: ppm = mg/kg
Phosphate treatment chemicals may hide out during periods of high-load operation, then return to the boiler water when the load and pressure are reduced. This type of hideout makes control of boiler water chemistry difficult and can cause corrosion of furnace wall tubes. This hideout and return phenomena is caused by concentration of phosphate at the tube/ water interface in high heat flux areas. In these areas, phosphates accumulate in the concentrated liquid. The concentrated phosphates then precipitate, or they adsorb on or react with surface deposits and scale.13,14,15 Where excessive deposits are not present, this hideout and hideout return associated with load and pressure changes can be eliminated by decreasing the phosphate concentration in the boiler water or possibly by increasing the sodium-to-phosphate ratio. Where hideout and hideout-return are caused by excessive deposits, the boiler must be chemically cleaned. The amount of phosphate hideout or return accompanying load changes must not be more than 5 ppm. Corrective action is necessary if the amount of phosphate hideout or return accompanying load changes is more than 5 ppm and/or the boiler water pH change is more than 0.2 pH units, or where there are changes in the hideout/hideout-return behavior. This phenomenon must be distinguished from loss of phosphate to passive film formation. As the passive oxide film reforms following a chemical cleaning of the boiler, some phosphate is irreversibly lost from the boiler water. This is minimized if chemical cleaning is followed by a phosphate boilout repassivation of the boiler. Operators should not over-correct for deviations of
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pH and phosphate concentration from target values. Corrective action must be taken with an understanding of system response times, the amounts of impurities being neutralized, and the amount of treatment chemicals likely to be required. Where phosphate treatment is used, pH is an especially critical parameter, so the accuracy of pH measuring devices and temperature corrections must be assured. The boiler water pH must also be corrected to discount the pH effect of residual ammonia in the boiler water. Fig. 7 shows the estimated effect of ammonia on boiler water pH. The figure indicates the expected pH for solutions with different concentrations of sodium phosphate and 0.2 ppm ammonia. Where these species dominate the solution chemistry, such figures may be used to estimate sodium-to-phosphate molar ratios. With high purity feedwater, the recommended boiler water pH can be attained with appropriate additions of trisodium phosphate. If the recommended boiler water pH can not be maintained within the above limits using trisodium phosphate or a mixture of trisodium and disodium phosphate, this is indicative of alkaline or acid-forming impurities in the feedwater or excessive hideout, and the root cause must be addressed. An exception is low level equilibrium phosphate treatment, where the small amount of trisodium phosphate added to the boiler water may at times be insufficient to achieve the recommended pH. A small amount of sodium hydroxide may be added to attain the recommended pH, but the excess sodium hydroxide must not exceed 1.0 ppm.13 Even 1.0 ppm sodium
Steam 41 / Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
9.6
9.4
9.2
used where waterside deposits are excessively thick, where there is steam blanketing or critical heat flux (see Chapter 5), or where there is seepage (e.g., through rolled seals or cracks). Fig. 8 shows phosphate concentration limits for high-alkalinity phosphate treatment. With some feedwaters (e.g., high-magnesium low-silica), lower phosphate concentrations may be advisable. The required pH is attained by adjusting the sodium hydroxide concentration in the chemical feed solution. The total (M alkalinity in calcium carbonate equivalents) must not exceed 20% of the actual boiler water solids concentration.
pH
8.8
Phosphate, ppm
Fig. 7 Estimated pH of sodium phosphate solutions containing 0.2 ppm ammonium hydroxide. Note: pH values can differ by up to 0.2 pH units, depending on the choice of chemical equilibrium constants used, but more often agree within 0.05 pH units.
hydroxide may be excessive for some units, for example oil-fired boilers with especially high heat fluxes in some areas of the furnace. When mixing boiler water treatment chemicals, operators should verify the identity and purity of the chemicals and take into account water of hydration in the weight of the chemicals. Neither phosphoric acid nor monosodium phosphate should be used for routine boiler water treatment. If monosodium phosphate is used to counter an isolated incident of alkali contamination of the boiler water, it must be used with caution, and at reduced load.
High-alkalinity phosphate treatment (low-pressure boilers only) Minimal carryover and deposition are achieved with demineralized makeup water and minimal dissolved solids, but this is not necessarily cost-effective for all low pressure industrial boilers. Where softened water with 0.02 to 0.5 ppm residual hardness (as CaCO3) is used as makeup water for low pressure industrial boilers, high alkalinity or conventional phosphate treatment may be used to control scale formation. This high alkalinity treatment must only be used for boilers operating below 1000 psig (6.9 MPa). The pH and phosphate concentrations are attained by addition of a trisodium phosphate and (if necessary) sodium hydroxide solution through a chemical feed line into the drum. With high-alkalinity phosphate treatment, the boiler water pH is maintained in the range of 10.8 to 11.4. This high pH precipitates hardness constituents that are less adherent than those formed at lower pH. Where high alkalinity boiler water is excessively concentrated by evaporation, the concentrate can become sufficiently caustic to produce caustic gouging or stress corrosion cracking of carbon steel. Hence, high-alkalinity boiler water treatment must not be
Steam 41 / Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
Dispersants, polymers, and chelants (low pressure boilers only) Where substantial hardness (e.g., 0.1 ppm as CaCO3) is present in feedwater, chelant treatment is often used to ensure that the hardness constituents remain in solution in the boiler water, or polymer treatment is used to keep precipitates in suspension. Blowdown of the dissolved contaminants and colloids is more effective than that of noncolloidal hardness precipitates and metal oxides. While phosphate treatment precipitates residual calcium and magnesium in a less detrimental form than occurs in the absence of phosphate, chelants react with calcium and magnesium to form soluble compounds that remain in solution. Chelants commonly employed include ethylene-diaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA). Because of concern about thermal stability, the use of chelants and polymers should be limited to boilers operating at less than 1000 psi (6.9 MPa). To be most effective, chelant must mix with the feedwater and form thermally stable calcium and magnesium complexes before there is substantial residence time at high temperature, where free chelant is not thermally stable. Because the combination of free chelant and dissolved oxygen can be corrosive, chelant must be added only after completion of oxygen removal and scavenging. Also, there must be no copper-bearing components in the feedwater train beyond the chelant feed point. Control limits depend on the feedwater chemistry, specific treatment chemicals used, and other factors. However, the boiler feedwater pH is generally be70 60
Phosphate, ppm
50 40 30 20 10 0 (0) 200 (1379) 400 (2758) 600 (4137) Maximum Optimum Minimum
800 (5516)
1000 (6895)
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company tween 9.0 and 9.6 and hardness as calcium carbonate is less than 0.5 ppm. The boiler water pH is generally maintained in the range of 10.0 to 11.4. The boiler water pH is attained by a combination of alkalinity derived from the chelant feed (e.g., as Na 4 EDTA), evolution of CO2 from softened feedwater, and addition of sodium hydroxide. Polymeric dispersants are generally used to impede formation of scale by residual solids. Otherwise, over a period of years the accumulative effects will be significant. Potential effects include increased deposition, pitting, pressure drop, and fatigue cracking. Particular care is required to minimize the extent and duration of chemistry deviations for cycling units where operational transients are frequent.
Steam purity
Purity or chemistry requirements for steam can be as simple as a specified maximum moisture content, or they can include maximum concentrations for a variety of chemical species. Often, for low-pressure building or process heater steam, only a maximum moisture content is specified. This may be as high as 0.5% or as low as 0.1%. Conversely, some turbine manufacturers specify steam condensate maximum cation conductivity, pH, and maximum concentrations for total dissolved solids, sodium and potassium, silica, iron, and copper. Turbine steam must generally have total dissolved solids less than 0.050 ppm, and in some cases less than 0.030 ppm. Individual species limits may be still lower. If steam is to be superheated, a maximum steam dissolved solids limit must be imposed to avoid excessive deposition and corrosion of the superheater. This limit is generally 0.100 ppm or less. Even where steam purity requirements are not imposed by the application, steam dissolved solids concentrations less than 1.0 ppm are recommended at pressures up to 600 psig (4.1 MPa), dissolved solids concentrations less than 0.5 ppm are recommended at 600 to 1000 psig (4.1 to 6.9 MPa), and dissolved solids concentrations less than 0.1 ppm are recommended above 1000 psig (6.9 MPa). Up to 2000 psig (13.8 MPa), most non-volatile chemicals and impurities in the steam are carried by small water droplets entrained in the separated steam. Because these droplets contain dissolved solids in the same concentration as the boiler water, the amount of impurities in steam contributed by this mechanical carryover is the sum of the boiler water impurities concentration multiplied by the steam moisture content. Mechanical carryover is limited by moisture separation devices placed in the steam path, as described in Chapter 5. High water levels in the drum and boiler water chemistries that cause foaming can cause excessive moisture carryover and therefore excessive steam impurity concentrations. Foaming is the formation of foam or excessive spray above the water line in the drum. Common causes of foaming are excessive solids or alkalinity, and the presence of organic matter such as oil. To keep dissolved solids below the concentration that causes foaming requires continuous or periodic blowdown of the boiler. High boiler water alkalinity increases the potential for foaming, particularly in the presence of suspended matter. Where a chemical species is sufficiently volatile, it also carries over as a vapor in the steam. Total carryover is the sum of the mechanical and vaporous carryover. Vaporous carryover depends on solubility in steam and is different for each chemical species. For most dissolved solids found in boiler water, it is negligible by comparison to mechanical carryover at pres-
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company sures less than 2000 psig (13.8 MPa). An exception is silica for which vaporous carryover can be substantial at lower pressures. Fig. 9 shows typical vaporous carryover fractions (distribution ratios) for common boiler water constituents under typical conditions over a wide range of boiler pressures. Fig. 10 shows expected total dissolved solids carryover for typical highpressure boilers. Vaporous carryover depends on pressure and on boiler water chemistry. It is not affected by boiler design. Hence, if vaporous carryover for a species is excessive, the carryover can only be reduced by altering the boiler water chemistry. Only mechanical carryover is affected by boiler design. Non-interactive gases such as nitrogen, argon, and oxygen carry over almost entirely with the steam, having no relationship to moisture carryover. Excessive steam impurity concentrations can also be caused by feedwater and boiler water chemistries that favor volatile species formation. Carryover of volatile silica can be problematic at pressures above 1000 psig (6.9 MPa). Fig. 11 shows boiler water silica concentration limits recommended to obtain steam silica concentrations less than 0.010 ppm at pressures up to 2900 psig (20.0 MPa) where the pH may be as low as 8.8. Vaporous silica carryover at a pH of 10.0 is 88% of that at a pH of 8.8. The vaporous silica carryover at a pH of 11.0 is 74% of that at 8.8. The only effective method for preventing excessive silica or other vaporous carryover is reduction of the boiler water concentrations. Another common source of excessive impurities in steam is inadequate attemperation spray water purity. All impurities in the spray water enter directly into the steam. Procedures for measuring steam quality and purity are discussed in Chapter 40.
Fig. 9 Impurity carryover coefficients of salts and metal oxides in boiler water (adapted from Reference 16).
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Table 4
Guidelines for Measurements on Grab Samples
Reference/ Comment (Notes 1 and 2) ASTM D 1293 Method A ASTM D 1125 Methods A or B
10
Measurement pH Conductivity
Technique(s) Electrometric Dip or flow type conductivity cells energized with alternating current at a constant frequency (Wheatstone Bridge) Colorimetric or titrimetric Membrane comparison charts Photometric (bathophenanthroline) or atomic absorption (graphite furnace) Atomic absorption (graphite furnace) Atomic absorption or flame photometry Colorimetric or atomic absorption Ion chromatography or photometric Colorimetric (nesslerization) or ion-selective electrode Colorimetric Colorimetric, ion-selective electrode or ion chromatography Turbidimetric or ion chromatography Atomic absorption; gravimetric or titrimetric Ion-selective electrode or ion chromatography Colorimetric Color-change titration Titrimetric Instrumental (oxidation and infrared detection)
Dissolved oxygen
0.1
ASTM D 888 Methods A, B, C ASME PTC 31 Ion exchange equipment ASTM D 1068 Method C, D
0.01 0 (0)
500 (3447)
1000 (6895)
1500 (10,342)
2000 (13,790)
2500 (17,237)
3000 (20,684)
ASTM D 1688 Method C ASTM D 4191 or ASTM D 1428 ASTM D 859 or ASTM D 4517 ASTM D 4327 or ASTM D 515 Method A ASTM D 1426 Method A or B ASTM D 1385 ASTM D 512 or ASTM D 4327 ASTM D 516 or ASTM D 4327 ASTM D 511 or ASTM D 1126 ASTM D 1179 or ASTM D 4327 ASTM D 1942 ASTM D 1067 Method B ASTM D 514 ASTM D 4779
Fig. 11 Boiler water silica concentration limit, where maximum steam silica is 0.010 ppm and boiler water pH is greater than 8.8.
strumentation is commercially available to monitor chloride, dissolved oxygen, dissolved hydrogen, silica, phosphate, ammonia and hydrazine. Adequate water chemistry control depends on the ability of boiler operators to consistently measure the specified parameters. Hence, formal quality assurance programs should be used to quantify and track the precision and bias of measurements. Detailed procedures should be in place to cover laboratory structure, training, standardization, calibration, sample collection/storage/analysis, reporting, maintenance records, and corrective action procedures. Further discussion is provided in Reference 20.
Ammonia
Hydrazine Chloride
Sulfate
Notes: 1. ASME PTC refers to Performance Test Codes of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, New York. 2. ASTM refers to testing procedures of the American Society for Testing and Materials, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Electrical conductivity ASTM D 4519 measurement before and after hydrogen cation exchanges and at atmospheric boiling water after acidic gas removal Selective ion electrode flame photometry Instrumental (oxidation and measurement of carbon dioxide) ASTM D 2791 ASTM D 5173
the corrosion, appearance of the corrosion, and chemistry of localized deposits and corrosion products often suggest the cause. Common causes are flow accelerated corrosion, oxygen pitting, chelant corrosion, caustic corrosion, acid corrosion, organic corrosion, acid phosphate corrosion, hydrogen damage, and corrosion assisted cracking. Figs. 12 and 13 show typical locations of common fluid-side corrosion problems. Further dis-
Fig. 13 Boiler convection pass showing typical locations of various types of water-side corrosion.
Fig. 12 Typical locations of various types of water-side corrosion in a boiler furnace water circuit.
cussion of corrosion and failure mechanisms is provided in References 21, 22, 23, and 24. For EPRI members, Boiler Tube Failures: Theory and Practice25 provides an especially thorough description of utility boiler corrosion problems, causes, and remedial measures. One distinguishing feature of corrosion is its appearance. Metal loss may be uniform so the surface appears smooth. Conversely, the surface may be gouged, scalloped, or pitted. Other forms of corrosion are microscopic in breadth, and subsurface, so they are not initially discernible. Subsurface forms of corrosion include intergranular corrosion, corrosion fatigue, stress corrosion cracking, and hydrogen damage. Such corrosion can occur alone or in combination with surface wastage. In the absence of component failure, detection of subsurface corrosion often requires ultrasonic, dye penetrant, or magnetic particle inspection (Chapter 45). These forms of corrosion are best diagnosed with destructive cross-section metallography. Another distinguishing feature is the chemical composition of associated surface deposits and corrosion products. Deposits may contain residual corrosives such as caustic or acid. Magnesium hydroxide in deposits can suggest the presence of an acid-forming precipitation process. Sodium ferrate (Na2FeO4) indicates caustic conditions. Sodium iron phosphate indicates acid phosphate wastage. Organic deposits suggest corrosion by organics, and excessive amounts of ferric oxide or hydroxide with pitting suggest oxygen attack. Flow accelerated corrosion is the localized dissolution of feedwater piping in areas of flow impingement. It occurs where metal dissolution dominates over protective oxide scale formation. For example, localized
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company conditions are sufficiently oxidizing to form soluble Fe ++ ions but not sufficiently oxidizing to form Fe +++ ions needed for protective oxide formation. Conditions known to accelerate thinning include: flow impingement on pipe walls, low pH, excessive oxygen scavenger concentrations, temperatures in the range of 250 to 400F/121 to 204C (although thinning can occur at any feedwater temperature), chemicals (such as chelants) that increase iron solubility, and thermal degradation of organic chemicals. Thinned areas often have a scalloped or pitted appearance. Failures, such as that shown in Fig. 14, can occur unexpectedly and close to work areas and walkways. To assure continued integrity of boiler feedwater piping, it must be periodically inspected for internal corrosion and wall thinning. Any thinned areas must be identified and replaced before they become a safety hazard. The affected piping should be replaced with low-alloy chromium-bearing steel piping, and the water chemistry control should be appropriately altered. Oxygen pitting and corrosion during boiler operation largely occur in pre-boiler feedwater heaters and economizers where oxygen from poorly deaerated feedwater is consumed by corrosion before it reaches the boiler. A typical area of oxygen pitting is shown in Fig. 15. Oxygen pitting within boilers occurs when poorly deaerated water is used for startup or for accelerated cooling of a boiler. It also occurs in feedwater piping, drums, and downcomers in some low pressure boilers which have no feedwater heaters or economizer. Because increasing scavenger concentrations to eliminate residual traces of oxygen can aggravate flow accelerated corrosion, care must be taken to distinguish between oxygen pitting and flow accelerated corrosion which generally occurs only where all traces of oxygen have been eliminated. Chelant corrosion occurs where appropriate feedwater and boiler water chemistries for chelant treatment are not maintained. Potentially corrosive conditions include excessive concentration of free chelant and low pH. (See prior discussion of boiler water treatment with dispersants, polymers, and chelants.) Especially susceptible surfaces include flow impingement areas of feedwater piping, riser tubes, and cyclone steam/water separators. Affected areas are often dark colored and have the appearance of uniform thinning or of flow accelerated corrosion. Corrosion fatigue is cracking well below the yield strength of a material by the combined action of corrosion and alternating stresses. Cyclic stress may be of mechanical or thermal origin (Chapter 8). In boilers, corrosion fatigue is most common in water-wetted surfaces where there is a mechanical constraint on the tubing. For example, corrosion fatigue occurs in furnace wall tubes adjacent to windbox, buckstay, and other welded attachments. Failures are thick lipped. On examination of the internal tube surface, multiple initiation sites are evident. Cracking is transgranular. Environmental conditions facilitate fatigue cracking where it would not otherwise occur in a benign environment. Water chemistry factors that facilitate cracking include dissolved oxygen and low pH transients associated with, for example, cyclic operation, condenser leaks, and phosphate hideout and hideout-return. Acid phosphate corrosion occurs on the inner steamforming side of boiler tubes by reaction of the steel with phosphate to form maricite (NaFePO4 ). Fig. 16 shows ribbed tubing that has suffered this type of wastage. The affected surface has a gouged appearance with maricite and magnetite deposits. Acid phosphate corrosion occurs where the boiler water effective sodiumto-phosphate ratio is less than 2.8, although ratios as low as 2.6 may be tolerated at lower pressures. Though not always apparent, common signs of acid phosphate corrosion include difficulty maintaining target phosphate concentrations, phosphate hideout and pH increase with increasing boiler load or pressure, phosphate hideout return and decreasing pH with decreasing load or pressure, and periods of high iron concentration in boiler water. The potential for acid phosphate corrosion increases with increasing internal deposit loading, decreasing effective sodiumto-phosphate molar ratio below 2.8, increasing phosphate concentration, inclusion of acid phosphates (disodium and especially monosodium phosphate) in phosphate feed solution, and increasing boiler pressure. To avoid acid phosphate corrosion, operators should monitor boiler water conditions closely, assure accuracy of pH and phosphate measurements, assure purity and reliability of chemical feed solutions, assure that target boiler water chemistry parameters are appropriate and are attained in practice, and watch for aforementioned signs of acid phosphate corrosion. Under-deposit acid corrosion and hydrogen damage occur where boiler water acidifies as it concentrates beneath deposits on steam generating surfaces. Hydrogen from acid corrosion diffuses into the steel where
Fig. 14 Rupture of 6 in. (152 mm) feedwater pipe in an area thinned by internal corrosion.
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Fig. 17 Schematic of hydrogen attack, showing steps that occur and the final result. Hydrogen attack can occur in both carbon and low alloy steels in acidic or hydrogen environments.
it reacts with carbon to form methane as depicted in Fig. 17. The resultant decarburization and methane formation weakens the steel and creates microfissures. Thick lipped failures like that shown in Fig. 18 occur when the degraded steel no longer has sufficient strength to hold the internal tube pressure. Signs of hydrogen damage include under deposit corrosion, thick lipped failure, and steel decarburization and microfissures. The corrosion product from acid corrosion is mostly magnetite. Affected tubing, which may extend far beyond the failure, must be replaced. The boiler must be chemically cleaned to remove internal tube deposits, and boiler water chemistry must be altered or better controlled to prevent acid-formation as the water concentrates. Operators should reduce acidforming impurities by improving makeup water, reducing condenser leakage, or adding condensate polishing. For drum boilers, operators should use phosphate treatment with an effective sodium-to-phosphate molar ratio of 2.8 or greater.
Caustic corrosion, gouging and grooving occur where boiler water leaves a caustic residue as it evaporates. In vertical furnace wall tubes, this occurs beneath deposits that facilitate a high degree of concentration and the corroded surface has a gouged appearance as shown in Fig. 19. In inclined tubes where the heat flux is directed through the upper half of the tube, caustic concentrates by evaporation of boiler water in the steam space on the upper tube surface. Resulting corrosion is in the form of a wide smooth groove with the groove generally free of deposits and centered on the crown of the tube. Deposits associated with caustic gouging often include Na2FeO4. To prevent reoccurrence of caustic gouging, operators should prevent accumulation of excessive deposits and control water chemistry so boiler water does not form caustic as it concentrates. The latter can generally be achieved by assuring appropriate feedwater chemistry with coordinated phosphate boiler water treatment, taking care to control the effective sodium-to-phosphate molar ratio as appropriate for the specific boiler and the specific chemical and operating conditions. In some instances, where caustic grooving along the top of a sloped tube is associated with steam/water separation, such separation can be avoided by use of ribbed tubes which cause swirling motion that keeps water on the tube wall. Caustic cracking can occur where caustic concentrates in contact with steel that is highly stressed, to or beyond the steels yield strength. Caustic cracking is rare in boilers with all welded connections. This
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company extent that a tube no longer retains adequate strength and bulges or ruptures. Internal tube deposits generally cause moderate overheating for extended periods of time, causing long-term overheat failures. Shortterm overheat failures generally occur only when there is gross interruption of internal flow to cool the tube, or grossly excessive heat input. Out-of-service corrosion is predominantly oxygen pitting. Pitting attributed to out-of-service corrosion occurs during outages but also as aerated water is heated when boilers return to service. Especially common locations include the waterline in steam drums, areas where water stands along the bottom of horizontal pipe and tube runs, and lower bends of pendant superheaters and reheaters. Pinhole failures are more common in thinner walled reheater and economizer tubing. Such corrosion can be minimized by following appropriate layup procedures for boiler outages and by improving oxygen control during boiler startups.
Pre-operational cleaning
Fig. 19 Caustic gouging initiated along weld backing ring.
generally occurs in boilers using a high alkalinity caustic boiler water treatment, and it is normally associated with unwelded rolled joints and welds that are not stress relieved. On metallographic examination, caustic cracking is intergranular and has the branched appearance characteristic of stress corrosion cracking as illustrated in Fig. 20. It can generally be avoided by use of coordinated phosphate treatment. Where a high alkalinity caustic phosphate boiler water treatment is used for low pressure boilers, nitrate is often added to inhibit caustic cracking. Overheat failures like that shown in Fig. 21 occur where deposits impede internal heat transfer to the
In general, all new boiler systems receive an alkaline boilout, i.e. hot circulation of an alkaline mixture with intermittent blowdown and final draining of the unit. Many systems also receive a pre-operational chemical cleaning. The superheater and reheater should receive a conventional steam blow (a period of high velocity steam flow which carries debris from the system). Chemical cleaning of superheater and reheat surfaces is effective in reducing the number of steam blows to obtain clean surfaces, but is not required to obtain a clean superheater and reheater.
Alkaline boilout All new boilers should be flushed and given an alkaline boilout to remove debris, oil, grease and paint. This can be accomplished with a combination of trisodium phosphate (Na3PO4) and disodium phosphate (Na2HPO4), with a small amount of surfactant added as a wetting agent. The use of caustic NaOH and/or soda ash (Na2CO3) is not recommended. If either is used, special precautions are required to protect boiler components. Chemical cleaning After boilout and flushing are completed, corrosion products may remain in the feedwater system and boiler in the form of iron oxide and mill scale. Chemical cleaning should be delayed until full load operation has carried the loose scale and oxides from the feedwater system to the boiler. Some exceptions are units that incorporate a full flow condensate polishing system and boilers whose pre-boiler system has been chemically cleaned. In general, these units can be chemically cleaned immediately following pre-operational boilout. Different solvents and cleaning processes are used for pre-operational chemical cleaning, usually determined by boiler type, metallic makeup of boiler components, and environmental concerns or restrictions. The four most frequently used are: 1) inhibited 5% hydrochloric acid with 0.25% ammonium bifluoride, 2) 2%
Steam 41 / Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
42-18
The Babcock & Wilcox Company hydroxyacetic/1% formic acids with 0.25% ammonium bifluoride and a corrosion inhibitor, 3) 3% inhibited ammonium salts of ethylene-diaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), and 4) 3% inhibited ammoniated citric acid.
Steam line blowing The steam line blow procedure depends on unit design. Temporary piping to the atmosphere is required with all procedures. This piping must be anchored to resist high nozzle reaction force. All normal startup precautions should be observed for steam line blowing. The unit should be filled with treated demineralized water. Sufficient feedwater pump capacity and condensate storage must be available to replace the water lost during the blowing period. Numerous short blows are most effective. The color of the steam discharged to the atmosphere provides an indication as to the quantity of debris being removed from the piping. Coupons (targets) of polished steel attached to the end of the exhaust piping are typically used as final indicators.
Chordal thermocouples The chordal thermocouple (see Chapter 40) can be an effective diagnostic tool for evaluating deposits on operating boilers. Properly located thermocouples can indicate a tube metal temperature increase caused by excess internal deposits, and can alert the operator to conditions that may cause tube failures. Thermocouples are often located in furnace wall tubes adjacent to the combustion zone where the heat input is highest and the external tube temperatures are also high. (See Fig. 22.) Deposition inside tubes can be detected by instrumenting key furnace tubes with chordal thermocouples. These thermocouples compare the surface temperature of the tube exposed to the combustion process with the temperature of saturated water. As deposits grow, they insulate the tube from the cooling water and cause tube metal temperature increases. Beginning with a clean, deposit-free boiler, the instrumented tubes are monitored to establish the temperature differential at two or three boiler ratings; this establishes a base curve. At maximum load, with clean tubes, the surface thermocouple typically indicates metal temperatures 25 to 40F (14 to 22C) above saturation in low duty units and 80 to 100F (44 to 56C) in high duty units as shown in Fig. 23. The temperature variation for a typical clean instrumented tube is dependent upon the tubes location in the furnace, tube thickness, inside fluid pressure, and the depth of the
Table 6
Guidelines for Chemical Cleaning Unit Operating Pressure, psig (MPa) Below 1000 (6.9) 1000 to 2000 (6.9 to 13.8) including all Kraft recovery and refuse-fired boilers Above 2000 (13.8) Water-side Deposit Weight* (g/ft2 ) 20 to 40 12 to 20 10 to 12
* Deposit removed from hot or furnace side of tube using the mechanical scraping method. (1 g/ft2 = 1.07 mg/cm2 )
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Clean Tube 500F (260C) Chemical Recovery Boiler 583F (306C) Saturation Temp 500F (260C) at 665 psi (4.6 MPa) Heat Input 120,000 Btu/h ft2 (378,550 W/m2) 510F (266C) Outer Casing Side Scaled Tube
Furnace Side
80 g/ft2
surface thermocouple. Internal scale buildup is detected by an increase in temperature differential above the base curve. Chemical cleaning should normally be considered if the temperature differential at maximum boiler load reaches 100F (56C). Initially, readings should be taken weekly, preferably using the same equipment and procedure as used for establishing the base curve. Under upset conditions, when deposits form rapidly, the checking frequency should be increased.
3. The unit is treated to neutralize and passivate the heating surfaces. This treatment produces a passive surface, i.e., it forms a very thin protective film on freshly cleaned ferrous surfaces. 4. The unit is flushed with clean water to remove any remaining loose deposits. The two generally accepted chemical cleaning methods are: 1) continuous circulation of the solvent (Fig. 24), and 2) filling the unit with solvent, allowing it to soak, then flushing the unit (Fig. 25).
Chemical cleaning procedures and methods In general, four steps are required in a complete chemical cleaning process:
1. The internal heating surfaces are washed with a solvent containing an inhibitor to dissolve or disintegrate the deposits. 2. Clean water is used to flush out loose deposits, solvent adhering to the surface, and soluble iron salts. Corrosive or explosive gases that may have formed in the unit are also displaced.
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company content of the returned solvent reach equilibrium (Fig. 26), indicating that no further reaction with the deposits is taking place. In the circulation method, additional solvent can be injected if the dissipation of the solvent concentration drops below the recommended minimum concentration. The circulation method is particularly suitable for cleaning once-through boilers, superheaters, and economizers with positive liquid flow paths to assure circulation of the solvent through all parts of the unit. Complete cleaning can not be assured by this method unless the solvent reaches and passes through every circuit of the unit.
200 With Internal Deposits After Operation Base Curve Clean Condition
150
T, F
100
50
Soaking method The soaking (static) cleaning method (Fig. 25) involves preheating the unit to a specified temperature, filling the unit with the hot solvent, then allowing the unit to soak for a period of time, depending on deposit conditions. To assure complete deposit removal, the acid strength of the solvent must be somewhat greater than that required by the actual conditions; unlike the circulation method, control testing during the course of the cleaning is not conclusive, and samples of solvent drawn from convenient locations may not truly represent conditions in all parts of the unit. The soaking method is preferable for cleaning units where definite liquid distribution to all circuits (by the circulation method) is not possible without the use of many chemical inlet connections. The soaking method is also preferred when deposits are extremely heavy, or if circulation through all circuits at an appreciable rate can not be assured without an impractically-sized circulating pump. These conditions may exist in large natural circulation units that have complex furnace wall cooling systems. Advantages of this method are simplicity of piping connections and assurance that all parts are reached by a solvent of adequate acid strength. Solvents Many acids and alkaline compounds have been evaluated for removing boiler deposits. Hydrochloric acid (HCl) is the most practical cleaning solvent when using the soaking method on natural circulation boilers. Chelates and other acids have also been used. An organic acid mixture such as hydroxyacetic-formic (HAF) is the safest chemical solvent when applying the circulation cleaning method to once-through boilers. These acids decompose into gases in the event of incomplete flushing. For certain deposits, the solvent may require additional reagents, such as ammonium bifluoride, to promote deposit penetration. Alloy steel pressure parts, particularly those high in chromium, should generally not be cleaned with certain acid solvents. A general guideline for solvent selection can be found in Table 7. Prior to chemically cleaning, it is strongly recommended that a representative tube section be removed and subjected to a laboratory cleaning test to determine and verify the proper solvent chemical, and concentrations of that solvent.
Steam 41 / Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
100
150
T, F
100
50 Base Curve Clean Condition 0 0 50 Firing Rate, % High Duty Units 100
Deposits Scale deposits formed on the internal heating surfaces of a boiler generally come from the water. Most of the constituents belong to one or more of the following groups: iron oxides, metallic copper, carbonates, phosphates, calcium and magnesium sulfates, silica, and silicates. The deposits may also contain various amounts of oil. Pre-cleaning procedures include analysis of the deposit and tests to determine solvent strength and contact time and temperature. The deposit analyses should include a deposit weight in grams per square foot (or milligrams per square centimeter) and a spectrographic analysis to detect the individual elements. X-ray diffraction identifying the major crystalline constituents is also used. If the deposit analysis indicates the presence of copper (usually from corrosion of pre-boiler equipment, such as feedwater heaters and condensers), one of three procedures is commonly used: 1) a copper complexing agent is added directly to the acid solvent, 2) a separate cleaning step, featuring a copper solvent, is used followed by an acid solvent, and 3) a chelantbased solvent at high temperature is used to remove iron, followed by addition of an oxidizing agent at re42-21
The Babcock & Wilcox Company duced temperature for copper removal. The decision to use one of these methods depends on the estimated quantity of copper present in the deposit. When deposits are dissolved and disintegrated, oil is removed simultaneously, provided it is present only in small amounts. For higher percentages of oil contamination, a wetting agent or surfactant may be added to the solvent to promote deposit penetration. If the deposit is predominantly oil or grease, boiling out with alkaline compounds must precede the acid cleaning.
Inhibitors The following equations represent the reactions of hydrochloric acid with constituents of boiler deposits:
Fe3 O4 + 8HCl 2FeCl3 + FeCl 2 + 4H2O
(2) (3)
At the same time, however, the acid can also react with and thin the boiler metal, as represented by the equation:
Fe + 2HCl FeCl 2 + H2
(4)
Fig. 24 Chemical cleaning by the circulation method simplified arrangement of connections for once-through boilers.
unless means are provided to slow this reaction without affecting the deposit removal. A number of excellent commercial inhibitors are available to perform this function. The aggressiveness of acids toward boiler deposits and steel increases rapidly with temperature. However, the inhibitor effectiveness decreases as the temperature rises and, at a certain temperature, the inhibitor may decompose. Additionally, all inhibitors are not effective with all acids.
Fig. 25 Chemical cleaning by the soaking method simplified arrangement of connections for drum-type boilers.
Determination of solvent conditions Deposit samples The preferred type of deposit sample is a small section of tube with the adhering deposit, though sometimes tube samples are not easily obtained. Selection of the solvent system is made from the deposit analyses. After selection of the solvent system, it is necessary to determine the strength of the solvent, the solvent temperature, and the length of time required for the cleaning process. Solvent strength The solvent strength should be proportional to the amount of deposit. Commonly used formulations are: 1. Natural circulation boilers (soaking method) (a) pre-operational inhibited 5% hydrochloric acid + 0.25% ammonium bifluoride (b) operational inhibited 5 to 7.5% hydrochloric acid and ammonium bifluoride based on deposit analysis 2 Once-through boilers (circulation method) (a) pre-operational inhibited 2% hydroxyacetic1% formic acids + 0.25% ammonium bifluoride (b) operational inhibited 4% hydroxyacetic-2% formic acids + ammonium bifluoride based on deposit analysis Solvent temperature The temperature of the solvent should be as high as possible without seriously reducing the effectiveness of the inhibitor. An inhibitor test should be performed prior to any chemical cleaning
Steam 41 / Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company to determine the maximum permissible temperature for a given solvent. When using hydrochloric acid, commercial inhibitors generally lose their effectiveness above 170F (77C) and corrosion rate increases rapidly. Therefore, the temperature of the solvent, as fed to the unit, should be 160 to 170F (71 to 77C). In using the circulation method with a hydroxyacetic-formic acid mixture, a temperature of 200F (93C) is necessary for adequate cleaning. Chelate-based solvents are generally applied at higher temperatures (about 275F/ 135C). In these cases, the boiler is fired to a specific temperature. The chelate chemicals are introduced and the boiler temperature is cycled by alternately firing and cooling to predetermined limits. Steam must be supplied from an auxiliary source to heat the acid as it is fed to the unit. When using the circulation method, steam is also used to heat the circulating water to the predetermined and desired temperature before injecting the acid solution. Heat should be added by direct contact or closed cycle heat exchangers. The temperature of the solvent should never be raised by firing the unit when using an acid solvent. Cleaning time When cleaning by the circulation method, process completion is determined by analyzing samples of the return solvent for iron concentration and acid strength. (See Fig. 26.) However, acid circulation for a minimum of six hours is recommended. In using the soaking method, the cleaning time should be predetermined but is generally between six to eight hours in duration.
Table 7
Comparative Cleaning Effectiveness Makeup of Deposit Type of Cleaning HCl HAF EDTA Citric Bromate Iron Good Good Good Good N/A Copper Medium Poor Medium Medium Good Silica Medium Medium Poor Poor N/A Hardness (Ca/Mg) Good Medium/poor Medium/poor Poor N/A
used. Gauge and meter connections should be closed or removed. All parts not otherwise protected by blanking off or by flooding with water will be exposed to the inhibited solvent. Vents to a safe discharge should be provided wherever vapors might accumulate, because acid vapors from the cleaning solution do not retain the inhibitor. Cleaning equipment The cleaning equipment should be connected as shown in Fig. 24 if the continuous circulation method is used, or as shown in Fig. 25 if the soaking method is used. Continuous circulation requires an inlet connection to assure distribution. It also requires a return line to the chemical cleaning pump from the unit. The soaking method does not require a return line. The pump discharge should be connected to the lowermost unit inlet. The filling or circulating pump should not be fitted with bronze or brass parts; a standby pump is recommended. A filling pump should have the capacity to deliver a volume of liquid equal to that of the vessel within two hours at 100 psi (0.7 MPa). A circulating pump should have sufficient capacity to meet recommended cleaning velocities. With modern oncethrough boilers, a capacity of 3600 GPM (227 l/s) at 300 psi (2.1 MPa) is common. A solvent pump, closed mixing tank and suitable thermometers, pressure gauges, and flow meters are required. An adequate supply of clean water and steam for heating the solvent should be provided. Provision should be made for adding the inhibited solvent to the suction side of the filling or recirculating pump. Cleaning solutions Estimating the content of the vessel and adding 10% to allow for losses will determine the amount of solvent required. Sufficient commercial acid should then be obtained. An inhibitor qualified for use with the solvent also needs to be procured and added to the solvent.
Cleaning procedures The chemical cleaning of steam generating equipment consists of a series of distinct steps which may include the following:
1. 2. 3. 4.
Fig. 26 Solvent conditions during cleaning by the circulation method.
isolation of the system to be cleaned, hydrostatic testing for leaks, leak detection during each stage of the process, back flushing of the superheater and forward flushing of the economizer, 5. preheating of the system and temperature control,
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. solvent injection/circulation (if circulation is used), draining and/or displacement of the solvent, neutralization of residual solvent, passivation of cleaned surfaces, flushing and inspection of cleaned surfaces, and layup of the unit.
Every cleaning should be considered unique, and sound engineering judgment should be used throughout the process. The most important design and procedural considerations include reducing system leakage, controlling temperature, maintaining operational flexibility and redundancy, and ensuring personnel safety.
Precautions
Cleaning must not be considered a substitute for proper water treatment. Intervals between cleanings should be extended or reduced as conditions dictate. Every effort should be used to extend the time between chemical cleanings. Hazards related to chemical cleaning of power plant equipment are fairly well recognized and understood, and appropriate personnel safety steps must be instituted.27
Chemical cleaning of superheater, reheater and steam piping In the past, chemical cleaning of superheaters and reheaters was not performed because it was considered unnecessary and expensive. With the use of higher steam temperatures, cleaning procedures for superheaters, reheaters and steam piping have gained importance and acceptance. When chemically cleaning surfaces that have experienced severe high-temperature oxide exfoliation (spalling of hard oxide particles from surfaces), it is important to first remove a tube sample representing the worst condition. Oxidation progresses at about the same rate on the outside of the tubes as on the inside; exfoliation follows a similar pattern. The tube sample should be tested in a facility capable of producing a flow rate similar to that used in the actual cleaning. This allows development of an appropriate solvent mixture. To determine the circulating pump size and flows required, it is usually necessary to contact the boiler manufacturer. Figs. 27 and 28 show possible superheater/reheater chemical cleaning piping schematics for drum boiler and once-through boiler systems, respectively. If, in the case of a drum boiler, the unit is to be cleaned along with the superheater and reheater, it is usually necessary to orifice the downcomers to obtain the desired velocities through the furnace walls. A steam blow to purge all air and to completely fill the system must precede cleaning in all systems containing pendant non-drainable surfaces. Most drainable systems also benefit from such a steam blow. Presently, two solvent mixtures are available to clean superheater, reheater and steam piping. One is a combination of hydroxyacetic and formic acids containing ammonium bifluoride; the other is an EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid)-based solvent.
Solvent disposal
General considerations A boiler chemical cleaning is not complete until the resultant process waste water stream is disposed of. Selection of handling and disposal methods depends on whether the wastes are classified as hazardous or non-hazardous. Boiler chemical cleaning wastes (BCCW) are different in volume and frequency of generation and have different discharge regulations from other power plant waste streams. Of all power plant discharges, BCCWs are most likely to be classified as hazardous. Depending upon the cleaning process, the resultant BCCW may become one of the driving forces in solvent selection. Under National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) requirements, boiler cleaning wastes are considered chemical metal cleaning wastes. The primary parameters of concern are iron, copper, chromium and pH. In all cases, waste management must be performed in accordance with current regulatory requirements. Waste management options Table 8 lists the handling practices for BCCW. In co-ponding, the BCCW is mixed in an ash pond with other waste streams from the power plant. Acid wastes are neutralized by the alkaline ash, and the metals are precipitated as insoluble metal oxides and hydroxides, or absorbed on ash particles. Co-ponding is the least expensive and the easiest disposal option. Incineration of organic-based cleaning wastes by direct injection into the firebox of the utility boiler is another common disposal practice. Potential emissions from the boiler must be carefully monitored to ensure regulatory compliance. Large quantities of BCCW are often disposed of in a secure landfill. Evaporation can reduce waste volume and, thereby, reduce overall landfill disposal costs. HCl cleaning wastes can be treated to NPDES standards using lime or caustic precipitation. It is more
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company Removing metal ions and reusing chemical cleaning waste are subjects receiving increased attention. As the regulatory environment continues to change, more emphasis will be placed on the treatment and reuse of BCCW.
Layup
During periods when boiler operation is interrupted, substantial pitting and general corrosion can occur within unprotected water-steam circuitry. When boilers return to operation, corrosion products migrate to high heat flux areas of the boiler or carryover to the turbine. Out-of-service corrosion can therefore impede boiler startup and lead to operational problems such as deposition, under-deposit corrosion, corrosion fatigue, and cycle efficiency loss. Preservation methods inhibit out-of-service corrosion by eliminating or controlling moisture, oxygen, and chemical contaminants that cause corrosion. Table 9 provides a brief summary and comparison of common preservation methods. These methods are designed to limit corrosion caused by the normal range of boiler and atmospheric contaminants. Gross contamination must be avoided and, if it occurs, the contaminants must be immediately neutralized and removed. Respective vendors should be contacted for specific recommendations for balance-of-plant equipment (turbine, condensate, feedwater, and atmospheric pollution control systems). Vendor procedures should also be followed for boiler auxiliary equipment such as pulverizer gearboxes, sootblowers, fans, and motors.
difficult to treat the organic cleaning agents (such as EDTA) by current techniques. Treatment methods with permanganate, ultraviolet light, and hydrogen peroxide (wet oxidation) have been used with limited success. Several vendors have proprietary processes which claim to successfully treat chelated wastes.28,29
Table 8
Boiler Chemical Cleaning Wastes Practices/Options Source Reduction Optimize cleaning frequency Reduce volume of cleaning solution Improve boiler water chemistry Alternate Solutions Change the cleaning solvent Disposal Evaporation Incineration Co-ponding Secured landfill Treatment Neutralization Physical waste treatment Chemical waste treatment Recycle and Reuse Recycle for metal recovery Reuse acid in alternate applications
Boiler shutdown for layup Appropriate shutdown procedures can facilitate preservation for subsequent idle periods. Reducing load dissipates fluid-side salts that concentrate on tube surfaces in high heat flux areas. As boiler load is reduced, feedwater and boiler water pH should be increased to the upper end of the target operating range, preferably 9.6 or higher. Where an oxygen scavenger/inhibitor is employed, concentration should increase to 0.050 ppm hydrazine* or equivalent. When boiler water is to remain in the boiler for a substantial cold layup period, the oxygen scavenger/inhibitor concentration in the water should be increased to 20 ppm hydrazine or equivalent after the boiler pressure has decayed to below 200 psig (1.4 MPa). At higher pressures and associated temperatures, the scavenger may rapidly decompose. An oxygen scavenger/inhibitor is not added to boilers that employ oxygen treatment. For boilers on oxygen treatment, the oxygen feed should be stopped at least an hour be-
*WARNING: HYDRAZINE IS A PROVEN GENERIC CHEMICAL FOR THIS APPLICATION. HOWEVER, HYDRAZINE IS A KNOWN CARCINOGEN, AND CAN BE REPLACED WITH OTHER PRODUCTS THAT HAVE EQUIVALENT ABILITY TO SCAVENGE OXYGEN AND INHIBIT CORROSION.
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Table 9
Summary and Comparison of Boiler Lay-up Methods
Lay-up Method Drained and dry for erection or maintenance Vaporous corrosion inhibitors Effectiveness Poor Costs Minimal Safety and Environmental Concerns Minimal Strengths Allows full access to internal surfaces Quick and easy Minimal maintenance requirements Weaknesses Not effective
Remaining inhibitive capacity is difficult to monitor Chemicals must be replaced periodically Difficult to distribute through components Safety concerns Nitrogen leakage Not recommended for more than 3 days Not recommended for more than 30 days Freeze damage Valve seepage and associated corrosion damage Difficult to monitor and inspect May corrode copper alloys beyond boiler Boiler must be totally drained Initial plumbing and equipment requirements
Excellent
Nitrogen distribution system Nitrogen Heat Minimal Demineralized water Chemical treatment Disposal of treated water
Nitrogen suffocation
Consistently effective Easy to monitor Fast restart Fast restart Easily applicable to non-drainable components Facilitates rapid return to service
Residual temperature and pressure Minimal Handling of chemicals Disposal of treated water
Excellent
Minimal
fore shutdown; there can be no oxygen leakage into the cycle. Where possible, as steam pressure decays to atmospheric pressure, nitrogen should be introduced through upper vents to keep the internal pressure positive and prevent air ingress. Boiler-specific operating instructions should be consulted for other important shutdown procedures and precautions.
brief as possible, preferably less than 3 weeks. Where a long maintenance outage with minimal preservation is necessary, the boiler and open sections of the pre-boiler system should generally be chemically cleaned and repassivated to reform a protective oxide film following the outage.
Draining for boiler maintenance and inspection Draining boilers without further preservation is often necessary for maintenance and inspection, and the unit should be drained and dried as thoroughly as possible. Draining the boiler hot (for example, at 20 psig/0.14 MPa) will facilitate drying, but may leave condensate in non-drainable superheater elements. Boiler components that need not be open for maintenance should, where possible, be isolated and protected. For example, while the lower furnace is open for maintenance, the superheater should, if possible, be protected with an appropriate wet or dry layup method. All openings should remain covered to prevent ingress of contaminants. The unpreserved maintenance period should be as
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Hot standby and hot layup When a boiler returns to operation while steam pressure remains above atmospheric pressure, preservation requirements are minimal. If the shutdown period is less than 72 hours and there is no air in-leakage, ammonia and oxygen scavenger/inhibitor concentrations need only be raised to the high end of the normal operating range with an oxygen scavenger/inhibitor concentration equivalent to about 0.050 ppm hydrazine. Oxygen scavengers are not used for boilers that employ oxygen treatment. However, a low oxygen concentration must be maintained by effective deaeration, and water must remain at a high level of purity with cation conductivity less than 0.15 S/cm. Extended hot standby is not recommended. Hot layup can be extended by use of auxiliary heat, but
Steam 41 / Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
The Babcock & Wilcox Company non-corrosive and non-depositing conditions can be difficult to assure, especially in economizers, superheaters, and reheaters. If temperature is maintained by injecting blowdown from an adjacent boiler, excessive blowdown solids can accumulate under low-flow conditions in the standby boiler. When steam is injected from another boiler, deposition and corrosion problems can arise from temperature and chemistry differentials. Also, care must be taken to avoid cavitation and to control the chemistry of steam condensate. Water leakage across valves can cause corrosion in seepage areas, and the corrosion is aggravated by relatively high material and water temperatures.
Cold standby for up to thirty days For short periods (not more than a week), boilers may remain on cold standby status with little or no chemical additions. Moderate ammonia and oxygen scavenger/inhibitor additions can extend this period up to thirty days. Treated demineralized water for shortterm cold standby should have a minimum concentration of 10 ppm ammonia. The concentration of oxygen scavenger/inhibitor normally used in the boiler should be increased to the equivalent of 25 ppm of hydrazine. Nitrogen blanketing (see below) is recommended. For boilers employing oxygen treatment, no scavenger should be used for short cold standby periods. However, oxygen ingress must be avoided and low oxygen concentrations must be maintained (for example, by use of nitrogen blanketing of boiler and deaeration of makeup water). Throughout the storage period, the pH must be 9.2 or higher, and cation conductivity throughout the boiler must be less than 0.15 S/cm. Boiler storage for more than seven days Any of several layup practices are acceptable for storage periods up to six months. Alternatives for fluidside layup include nitrogen blanketing, wet layup with treated demineralized water, and dry dehumidified layup. For extended outages, it is important that the pre-boiler feedwater train, balance of the water-steam cycle, auxiliary equipment, and fireside of the boiler are adequately preserved. For idle periods longer than six months, dry (dehumidified) storage is recommended. For boilers with non-drainable components, water removal issues must be weighed against the advantages of dry layup. Reheaters all periods Reheaters are generally stored dry because they can not easily be isolated from the turbine. Wet storage requires installation of blanks or special valves in the connecting lines. Drying can be performed by exposing reheaters to condenser vacuum after the fires have been removed, the unit tripped, and the turbine seals maintained. With approximately 20 in. (5 kPa) of vacuum on the condenser, vents or drains on the reheater inlet should be opened to allow air to pass through and remove all moisture. Dehumidified dry storage is recommended where the storage period exceeds 30 days. Alternatively, the evacuated reheater may be isolated and nitrogen blanketed, or it may be nitrogen blanketed in conjunction with the turbine.
Steam 41 / Water and Steam Chemistry, Deposits and Corrosion
Nitrogen blanketing Even where water is present, corrosion can be prevented by eliminating oxygen from the environment. Oxygen can be eliminated by sealing and pressurizing the entire boiler, or the space above water level, with nitrogen to prevent air in-leakage. In the absence of acids and other oxidants, eliminating air stops corrosion. Nitrogen blanketing is a highly effective method for preventing corrosion. It is easy to monitor and alarm, so effective preservation can be assured. However, the boiler must be well sealed to prevent excessive leakage. It is absolutely imperative that working spaces around nitrogen blanketed equipment be well ventilated. Venting of nitrogen during purging or water filling operations can release large amounts of nitrogen into surrounding areas. Also, before entry, areas that have been nitrogen blanketed must be well ventilated and the air tested to confirm that all parts have adequate oxygen concentrations. Wet (water-filled) layup Wet layup in combination with nitrogen blanketing is often the most practical method of protection, especially for boilers that are not fully or easily drainable. However, for longer storage periods, advantages of wet layup are offset by accumulative corrosion in areas of valve seepage and by accumulative cost of replacement water, chemicals, treated water disposal, nitrogen cover gas, and heat in cold climates. Consequently, dry layup is generally recommended for storage periods longer than six months. Before a boiler is flooded with layup water, provision must be made to support the additional weight when drum (if present), superheater, and steam piping are filled. If the boiler is to be completely filled with layup water, an expansion tank or surge tank above the highest vent is necessary to accommodate volume changes that are caused by normal temperature fluctuations. The expansion space at the top of the boiler (whether in a drum or in a surge tank) should be nitrogen blanketed to assure that there is no air ingress. Where freezing conditions are expected or possible, provision must be made for heating water-filled components. Wet layup generally requires demineralized water having a specific conductivity less than 1.0 S/cm before treatment chemicals are added. Use of demineralized water and all volatile treatment chemicals is essential where boilers include non-drainable or stainless steel components. Use ammonium hydroxide to raise water pH into the range of 10.0 to 10.4. Use an oxygen scavenger/inhibitor to further retard corrosion. Dry (dehumidified) layup Dry layup requires the removal of all water and the dehumidification of air to maintain a relative humidity less than 50%, and preferably less than 40%. This prevents corrosion by hygroscopic salts. Dry-air (dehumidified) storage is highly effective, and its continued effectiveness is easy to monitor. Dry layup allows easy and safe access for maintenance, with no potential for suffocation and no exposure to toxic chemicals.
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The Babcock & Wilcox Company It also eliminates the potential for biological activity, damage from freezing water, and corrosion by leaking water. However, implementation requires that the boiler be completely drained and dried, and this is a major problem for boilers with non-drainable superheaters or other non-drainable circuits. Also, mechanical circulation and dehumidification equipment and piping installation can be costly. In preparation for dry storage, water must be drained completely from all boiler circuits, including feedwater piping, economizer, superheater, and reheater. All non-drainable boiler tubes and superheater tubes should be blown with pressurized air. Auxiliary sources of heat are used to dry fluid-side surfaces. Deposits of sufficient thickness to retain moisture must also be removed. The preferred dry layup method is continuous recirculation of dehumidified air. Fans force air through the dehumidifier, boiler fluid-side circuitry, and back to the dehumidifier. The system must include instrumentation for measuring relative humidity. Recirculating dehumidification also requires external (usually flexible plastic) piping to complete the path. The system must be sized to handle the residual moisture and moist air in-leakage, and must be monitored to assure that relative humidity remains less than 50%. An alternative, but inferior, dry layup method is the use of static desiccant to absorb moisture with no forced air circulation. This method is effective for boiler components and small (package) boilers, but not generally adequate for large complex boiler circuitry. Termination of the storage period requires removal of the recirculation, dehumidification, and monitoring materials and equipment. Any loose desiccant particles or dust (which generally contain silica or sulfite chemicals) must be cleaned from the boiler.
Vaporous corrosion inhibitors (VCI) Vaporous corrosion inhibitors retard corrosion by forming a thin protective film over metal surfaces. Where such chemicals are sealed into a closed space, they can retard corrosion even in the presence of both water and oxygen. These inhibitors are not generally used for completed boilers, where the size and complexity of boiler circuits precludes effective distribution of dry powders. However, they are often used to inhibit internal corrosion of boiler components, as supplements to dry storage for small boilers, and as an alternative treatment for hydrotest water.
References
1. Klein, H.A., and Rice, J.K., A research study on internal corrosion in high pressure boilers, Journal of Engineering for Power, Vol. 88, No. 3, pp. 232-242, July, 1966. 2. Cohen, P., Ed., The ASME Handbook on Water Technology in Thermal Power Systems, The American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, New York, 1989. 3. Consensus on Operating Practices for the Control of Feedwater and Boiler Water Quality in Modern Industrial Boilers, The American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, New York, 1994. 4. Interim consensus guidelines on fossil plant cycle chemistry, Report CS-4629, Electric Power Research Institute, Palo Alto, California, June, 1986. 5. Guideline for Boiler Feedwater, Boiler Water, and Steam of Steam Generators with a Permissible Operating Pressure > 68 bar, VGB PowerTech e.V., Essen, Germany, VGB-R 450 Le, (in German), 1988. 6. Betz Handbook of Industrial Water Conditioning, Ninth Ed., Betz Laboratories, Trevose, Pennsylvania, September, 1991. 7. Drew Principles of Industrial Water Treatment, 11th Ed., Drew Industrial Division, Ashland Chemical Co., Boonton, New Jersey, 1994. 8. Kemmer, F.N., Ed., The Nalco Water Handbook, Second Ed., McGraw-Hill, New York, New York, 1988. 9. Macbeth, R.V., et al., UKAEA Report No. AAEW-R711, Winfrith, Dorchester, United Kingdom, 1971. 10. Goldstein, P., and Burton, C.L., A research study on internal corrosion of high-pressure boilers final report, Journal of Engineering for Power, Vol. 91, pp. 75-101, April, 1969. 11. Freier, R.K., Cover layer formation on steel by oxygen in neutral salt free water, VGB Speiserwassertagung 1969 Sunderheft, pp. 11-17 (in German), 1969. 12. Whirl, S.F., and Purcell, T.E., Protection against caustic embrittlement by coordinated pH control, Third Annual Meeting of the Water Conference of the Engineers Society of Western Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1942. 13. Stodola, J., Review of boiler water alkalinity control, Proceedings of the 47th Annual Meeting of The International Water Conference, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, pp. 235-242, October 27-29, 1986. 14. Economy, G., et al., Sodium phosphate solutions at boiler conditions: solubility, phase equilibrium and interactions with magnetite, Proceedings of the International Water Technology Conference, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, pp. 161-173, 1975. 15. Tremaine, P., et al., Interactions of sodium phosphate salts with transitional metal oxides at 360C, Proceedings of the International Conference on Interaction of Iron Based Materials with Water and Steam, Heidelberg, Germany, June 3-5, 1992. 16. Martynova, O.I., Transport and concentration processes of steam and water impurities in steam generating systems, Water and Steam: Their Properties and Current Industrial Applications, J. Staub and K. Scheffler, Eds., Pergamon Press, Oxford, United Kingdom, pp. 547562, 1980. 17. Nagda, N.L. and Harper, J.P., Monitoring Water in the 1990s: Meeting New Challenges, STPl102, American Society for Testing and Materials, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1991.
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