Drum Dryer Heat Transfer Heat Recovery
Drum Dryer Heat Transfer Heat Recovery
Drum Dryer Heat Transfer Heat Recovery
Energy Recovery
Project
Rebuild of a drum dryer syphon, rotary joint, and associated steam and condensate
system used in the food industry for the manufacturing of potato flakes.
Process
The drum dryer is fed with live steam and operates at 8 barG steam pressure. Heat is
transferred from hot, condensing steam inside the drum dryer to the cooler product
passing over the rotating drum. This evaporates moisture from the incoming slurry
and drying the product for onward processing.
Steam was fed into the dryer under a two-stage pressure reduction control system.
This took the steam from high-pressure to the 8 barG drum operating pressure. The
steam condensed within the drum dryer and drained from the dryer by two simple
bent-pipe stationary syphons which entered the cylinder at either end of the drum
dryer through dual-flow rotary joints. The condensate from the drum dryer drained
via a steam trap from the dryer to a flash steam vessel and this condensate was then
drained to an atmospheric vessel.
Kadant’s Solution
The two-stage pressure reduction was modernized to a single stage pressure reduction
using a high-quality pressure control valve capable of accurately controlling with high
differential pressures. This modernized the system to reduce future maintenance.
A new flash recovery system was designed to eliminate the flash steam loss to atmosphere.
The flash steam was recovered to a low-pressure user to reduce the amount of live steam
required in the lower pressure system. This reduced total steam use and boiler make-up
water usage.
A high-capacity scoop syphon was installed to replace the two bent pipe syphons. This
high-capacity scoop rotates with the dryer drum. The four scoop buckets are installed at 90
degrees to each other, so they continuously evacuate the condensate, draining it from the
drum without the need for differential pressure. This improved drainage of the condensate
and reduced the amount of equipment installed on the drum, further reducing future
maintenance requirements.
The steam trap was removed and a new drainage system with modern, automatic air
removal control was installed in the condensate system. This automated process ensured
the correct evacuation of air from the drum on start-up, decreasing warm-up times, and
improving heat transfer through the drum.
The energy saving from the above system being implemented was over 2.9 million
kWh / year, worth approximately €86,000 per year in saved energy and a
CO2 reduction of almost 160 ton/year.
PLEASE NOTE:
The energy costs in the above benefits for conditions in the United Kingdom. The
costs in other countries may be different.
Written by:
Rob Parker
Engineering Manager, Kadant Johnson Systems UK
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