Everything about Flue Gas Stack totally explained
A
flue gas stack is a type of
chimney, a vertical pipe, channel or similar structure through which
combustion product gases called
flue gases are exhausted to the outside air. Flue gases are produced when
coal,
oil,
natural gas,
wood or any other fuel is
combusted in an industrial
furnace, a
power plant's steam-generating
boiler, or other large combustion device. Flue gas is usually composed of
carbon dioxide (CO
2) and water vapor as well as
nitrogen and excess
oxygen remaining from the intake combustion air. It also contains a small percentage of pollutants such as
particulate matter,
carbon monoxide,
nitrogen oxides and
sulfur oxides. The flue gas stacks are often quite tall, up to 400 meters (1300 feet) or more, so as to disperse the exhaust pollutants over a greater area and thereby reduce the
concentration of the pollutants to the levels required by governmental environmental policy and environmental regulation.
When the flue gases are exhausted from stoves, ovens, fireplaces, or other small sources within residential abodes, restaurants, hotels, or other public buildings and small commercial enterprises, their flue gas stacks are referred to as chimneys.
History
The first industrial chimneys were built in the mid-17th century when it was first understood how they could improve the combustion of a
furnace by increasing the
draft (draught) of air into the combustion zone. As such, they played an important part in the development of
reverberatory furnaces and a coal-based metallurgical industry, one of the key sectors of the early
Industrial Revolution. Most 18th century industrial chimneys (now commonly referred to as
flue gas stacks) were built into the walls of the furnace much like a domestic chimney. The first free-standing industrial chimneys were probably those erected at the end of the long condensing
flues associated with smelting
lead.
The powerful association between industrial chimneys and the characteristic smoke-filled landscapes of the industrial revolution was due the universal application of the
steam engine for most manufacturing processes. The chimney is part of a steam-generating
boiler, and its evolution is closely linked to increases in the power of the steam engine. The chimneys of
Thomas Newcomen’s steam engine were incorporated into the walls of the engine house. The taller, free-standing industrial chimneys that appeared in the early 19th century were related to the changes in boiler design associated with
James Watt’s "double-powered" engines, and they continued to grow in stature throughout the Victorian period. Decorative embellishments are a feature of many industrial chimneys from the 1860s, with over-sailing caps and patterned brickwork.
The invention of fan-assisted forced draft (draught) in the early 20th century removed the industrial chimney's original function, that of drawing air into the steam-generating boilers or other furnaces. With the replacement of the steam engine as a prime mover, first by diesel engines and then by electric motors, the early industrial chimneys began to disappear from the industrial landscape. Building materials changed from stone and brick to steel and later reinforced concrete, and the height of the industrial chimney was determined by the need to disperse combustion flue gases to comply with governmental
air pollution control regulations.
Flue gas stack draft (or draught)
dense than the ambient air. That causes the bottom of the vertical column of hot flue gas to have a lower
pressure than the pressure at the bottom of a corresponding column of outside air. That higher pressure outside the chimney is the driving force that moves the required combustion air into the combustion zone and also moves the flue gas up and out of the chimney. That movement or flow of combustion air and flue gas is called "natural draft (or draught)",
"natural ventilation", "chimney effect", or "
stack effect". The taller the stack, the more draft (or draught) is created.
The equation below provides an approximation of the pressure difference, Δ
P, (between the bottom and the top of the flue gas stack) that's created by the draft:
»
where:
|
|
| Q | = flue gas flow rate, m³/s
|
| A | = cross-sectional area of chimney, m² (assuming it has a constant cross-section)
|
| C | = discharge coefficient (usually taken to be from 0.65 to 0.70)
|
| g | = gravitational acceleration at sea level, 9.807 m/s²
|
| H | = height of chimney, m
|
| Ti | = absolute average temperature of the flue gas in the stack, K
|
| To | = absolute outside air temperature, K
|
Designing chimneys and stacks to provide the correct amount of natural draft involves a great many factors such as:
- The height and diameter of the stack.
- The desired amount of excess combustion air needed to assure complete combustion.
- The temperature of the flue gases leaving the combustion zone.
- The composition of the combustion flue gas, which determines the flue gas density.
- The frictional resistance to the flow of the flue gases through the chimney or stack, which will vary with the materials used to construct the chimney or stack.
- The heat loss from the flue gases as they flow through the chimney or stack.
- The local atmospheric pressure of the ambient air, which is determined by the local elevation above sea level.
The calculation of many of the above design factors requires trial-and-error reiterative methods.
Governmental agencies in most countries have specific codes which govern how such design calculations must be performed. Many non-governmental organizations also have codes governing the design of chimneys and stacks (notably, the
ASME codes).
Other items of interest
It should be noted that not all fuel-burning industrial equipment rely upon natural draft. Many such equipment items use large fans or blowers to accomplish the same objectives, namely: the flow of combustion air into the combustion chamber and the flow of the hot flue gas out of the chimney or stack.
A great many power plants are equipped with facilities for the removal of
sulfur dioxide (for example,
flue gas desulfurization) and
nitrogen oxides (i.e,
selective catalytic reduction,
exhaust gas recirculation, thermal deNOx, or low NOx burners). At such power plants, it's possible to use a
cooling tower as a flue gas stack. Examples can be seen in Germany at the
Power Station Staudinger Grosskrotzenburg and at the
Rostock Power Station. Power plants without flue gas purification, would experience serious corrosion in such cooling towers.
In the United States and a number of other countries,
atmospheric dispersion modeling studies are required to determine the flue gas stack height needed to comply with the local
air pollution regulations. The United States also limits the maximum height of a flue gas stack to what is known as the "Good Engineering Practice (GEP)" stack height. In the case of existing flue gas stacks that exceed the GEP stack height, any air pollution dispersion modeling studies for such stacks must use the GEP stack height rather than the actual stack height.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Flue Gas Stack'.
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