ASHRAE HVAC SYSTEMS AND EQUIPMENT SI CH 31-2012 AUTOMATIC FUEL-BURNING SYSTEMS.pdf
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1、31.1CHAPTER 31AUTOMATIC FUEL-BURNING SYSTEMSGeneral Considerations 31.1Gas-Burning Appliances . 31.3Oil-Burning Appliances 31.11Solid-Fuel-Burning Appliances. 31.16Controls. 31.19UEL-BURNING systems provide a means to mix fuel and airFin the proper ratio, ignite it, control the position of the flame
2、envelope within the combustion chamber, and control a fuel flowrate for safe combustion-heat energy release for space conditioning,water heating, and other processes. This chapter covers the designand use of automatic fuel-burning systems. The fuel can be gaseous(e.g., natural or liquefied petroleum
3、 gas), liquid (primarily thelighter grades of fuel oil or biodiesel), or solid (e.g., coal, or renew-able items such as wood or corn). For discussion of some of thesefuels, their combustion chemistry, and thermodynamics, see Chap-ter 28 of the 2009 ASHRAE HandbookFundamentals.GENERAL CONSIDERATIONST
4、ERMINOLOGYThe following terminology for combustion systems, equipment,and fuel-fired appliances is consistent with usage in gas-fired appli-ance standards of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI)and Canadian Standards Association, the National Fire ProtectionAssociations National Fuel Gas
5、 Code (ANSI Z223.1/NFPA 54),and the Canadian Standards Associations Natural Gas and Pro-pane Installation Code (CSA Standard B149.1).Air, circulating. Air distributed to habitable spaces for heating,cooling, or ventilation.Air, dilution. Air that enters a draft hood or draft regulator andmixes with
6、flue gas.Air, excess. Air that passes through the combustion chamber inexcess of the amount required for complete (stoichiometric) com-bustion.Air, primary. Air introduced into a burner that mixes with fuelgas before the mixture reaches the burner ports.Air, secondary. Air supplied to the combustion
7、 zone down-stream of the burner ports.Appliance. Any device that uses a gas, a liquid, or a solid as afuel or raw material to produce light, heat, power, refrigeration, orair conditioning.Draft. Negative static pressure, measured relative to atmosphericpressure; thus, positive draft is negative stat
8、ic pressure. Draft is theforce (buoyancy of hot flue gas or other form of energy) that producesflow and causes pressure drop through an appliance combustion sys-tem and/or vent system. See Chapter 34 for additional information.Equipment. Devices other than appliances, such as supply pip-ing, service
9、 regulators, sediment traps, and vents in buildings.Flue. General term for passages and conduit through which fluegases pass from the combustion chamber to the outdoors.Flue gas. Products of combustion plus excess air in applianceflues, heat exchangers, and vents.Input rate. Fuel-burning capacity of
10、 an appliance in kilowatts asspecified by the manufacturer. Appliance input ratings are markedon appliance rating plates.Vent. Passageway used to convey flue gases from appliances ortheir vent connectors to the outdoors.Vent gas. Products of combustion plus excess air and dilution airin vents.SYSTEM
11、 APPLICATIONThe following considerations are important in the design, speci-fication, and/or application of systems for combustion of fossil fuels.Safety. Safety is of prime concern in the design and operation ofautomatic fuel-burning appliances. For more information, see thesections on Safety and C
12、ontrols. Appliance standards and installa-tion codes (e.g., ANSI Standard Z21.47/CSA Standard 2.3 for gas-fired central furnaces and ANSI Z223.1/NFPA 54, National FuelGas Code, in the United States) provide minimum safety require-ments. Appliance manufacturers may include additional safetycomponents
13、 to address hazards not covered by appliance standardsand installation codes.Suitability for Application. The system must meet the require-ments of the application, not only in heating capacity, but also in itsability to handle the load profile. It must be suitable for its environ-ment and for the s
14、ubstance to be heated.Combustion System Type. System operation is very much afunction of the type of burner(s), means for moving combustionproducts through the system, proper combustion air supply, andventing of combustion gases to the outdoors.Efficiency. Efficiency can be specified in various ways
15、, depend-ing on the application. Stack loss and heat output are commonmeasures, but for some applications, transient operation must beconsidered. In very high-efficiency appliances, heat extraction fromcombustion products may cool vent gas below its dew point, so con-densation of water vapor in the
16、combustion products must be han-dled, and venting design must consider corrosion by combustionproducts, as well as their lack of buoyancy.Operating Control. Heat load or process requirements mayoccur in batches or may be transient events. The burner control sys-tem must accommodate those requirement
17、s, and the combustionsystem must be able to respond to the controls.Emissions. For safety and air quality reasons, combustion prod-ucts must not contain excessive levels of noxious materials, notablycarbon monoxide, oxides of nitrogen, unburned hydrocarbons, andparticulate material such as soot.Fuel
18、 Provision. Liquid and solid fuels, liquefied gases, and somegaseous fuels require space for storage. Gaseous and liquid fuelsrequire appropriate piping for the fuel-burning system. Fuel storageand delivery provisions must be of adequate capacity and must bedesigned to ensure safe operation.Sustaina
19、bility. Fuel-burning appliances consume fuel resourcesand produce combustion products that are emitted to the atmosphere.The effect of these inherent characteristics can be minimized byusing highly efficient systems with very low emissions of undesir-able substances. (See the section on Efficiency a
20、nd Emission Rat-ings.) Appliances using environmentally neutral (nonfossil) fuel,such as biofuels processed from vegetable oils and biomass materialThe preparation of this chapter is assigned to TC 6.10, Fuels and Com-bustion.31.2 2012 ASHRAE HandbookHVAC Systems and Equipment (SI)(e.g., forestry wa
21、ste), are available. New technologies are alsoemerging. Through photosynthesis, biomass chlorophyll capturesenergy from the sun by converting carbon dioxide from the atmo-sphere and water from the ground into carbohydrates, complex com-pounds composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. When thesecarbo
22、hydrates are burned, they are converted back into carbon diox-ide and water, and release the suns energy. In this way, biomassstores solar energy and is renewable and carbon-neutral (UCS 2007).Venting, Combustion Air Supply, and Appliance Installation.Combustion product gases must be handled properl
23、y to ensuresafety and satisfactory system operation. Adequate air supply mustbe provided for combustion and ventilation. Appliances must belocated to provide safe clearance from combustible material and forconvenient service.Standards and Codes. Building codes typically require thatfuel-burning appl
24、iances be design-certified or listed to comply withnationally recognized standards. Appliance construction, safe oper-ation, installation practices, and emissions requirements are oftenspecified. In some locations, codes require special restraint for seis-mic or high wind conditions.Cost. The choice
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