Boiler Water
Treatment
Training
Handouts .
AGD
1
Boiler Water System
pre-treatment Feed
s s s
Tank
Feed pump
Condensate s Receiver
s
Water
Column
Boiler Plant Process s Sample point
s
s
Continuous Blowdown
Benefits Of Using Steam
High Heat Content.
Gives up heat at constant temperature.
Produced from water which is cheap
and readily available.
It is clean, odourless and tasteless.
Can be used to generate power.
Can be easily distributed and controlled.
3
Types 0f Boilers
Coil type
Smoke tube
Water tube
Spreader stroker
4
Major Problems
Scaling
corrosion
Priming / Foaming
Silica carryover
Caustic embrittlement / cracking
5
Problems Caused
By Impurities
Water
Impurities Problems
Dissolved Gases O2/CO2 Corrosion
Scaling
Hardness
Ca/Mg salts
Carbonates
Phosphates
Silicates
Foaming/Priming
High TDS, SS, Alkalinity and
Organic Matter Caustic embrittlement/
High OH- Alkalinity Grooving
7
EFFECT OF SCALING,
CORROSION, CARRY-OVER ON
BOILER SYSTEM
Reduction in heat transfer
Severe elevation of metal/tube temperature
Promotes under deposit corrosion - pitting
Loss of construction material
Failure of boiler tubes
Water losses
Increased maintenance cost
Unplanned shut downs
Ultimately, increased operational costs and loss of
productivity.
8
Internal Boiler
Pretreatment
Treatment Heat
Condensate return line
treatment
1.0 System: Feed
Problems Causes Treatment
Deposits Thermal decomposition and Deposit
precipitation of Alkaline Controllers
hardness
Precipitation of non-alkaline
hardness , by carbonate ,
alkali or orthophosphate
added for deposit control
Elevation of temperature
Corrosion Dissolved Oxygen Oxygen
Scavengers
Low pH Neutralising
Amines
10
2.0 System : Boiler Drum
Problems Causes Treatment
Deposits Precipitation of Deposit Controller
Hardness
Silica Keep below the limits
recommended for the
particular boiler pressures
Control pH>9.4
Metal Oxides Disperants
Corrosion Oxygen and Low Feed Treatment before
pH Entering boiler
11
2.0 System: BoilerDrum
Problems Causes Treatment
Foaming High Dissolved and Antifoams
Suspended sollids
Contamination in feed
water eg. Oil, Organics ,
Sugars etc.
Priming Mechanical faults, Poor No chemical
Operation eg. Too high a treatment
water level, High loads,
Sudden steam demand
12
3.0: System:Steam /
Condensate
Problems Causes Treatment
Deposits Carry over from Antifoam
drum
Limit SiO2 control
Silica Volatalisation pH>9.4 in the drum water
Corrosion Oxygen ingress Volatile oxygen scavenger
Low pH Volatile neutralising amines in
boiler
13
Boiler Water Treatment
No Scale: Heat transfer surfaces
. free from Scale, sludge,
. & deposits
No corrosion: Surfaces covered
. by film of magnetite
Pure steam:Elimination of
. carryover
Safe Operation: Prevention of
. sludge in the water
. level & blow down
Deposit Formation
Deposit Formation
Caused by hardness salts ppting,- Reduced
solubility with increased temp.& increased
conc. due to steam formation
Scale: occurs at the point of steam .
generation sludge:
occurs in bulk water & deposit on .
metal surfaces
Lowers thermal conductivity
Reduces boiler efficiency
Increases fuel consumption
16
Deposits - Effects on Metal
Furnace temp. over 2500 deg F
Metal deforms at 900 deg F
Water temp 338 deg F (100 psig)
. 546 deg F (1000 psig)
Deposits form insulating barrier, tolerence
depends on nature & heat tranfer of deposite
17
Thermal Conductivities
( BTU .ft / ft2.hr.deg F )
CaCO3 1.10
Ca3(PO4)2 2.20
CaSO4 0.90
Fe2O3 0.35
SiO2 (Quartz) 0.97
Carbon steel 30.0
Copper 218
18
Scale Deposition
Potential
Tonnes/Year Entering Boiler
4
3.5
3.0 10 ppm hardness
Tonnes
2.5
2.0 5 ppm hardness
1.5
1.0 2ppm hardness
0.5
Steam Production kg/hr
10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 19
SCALE / DEPOSIT CONTROL
Deposit Control
Correct Pre-Treatment of Feed Water
Hardness Precipitation.
ppted as CO3-2 or PO4-3 in presence of alkali.
Add sludge conditioners-polymers.
Metal Oxides
Dispersed with phosphonate + polymer.
Silica
Mainly present as Silicic acid H2SiO3
Decomposes above pH 9.4 into ions
Treatment
pH>9.4
Keep below limits specified
21
pH and PO4 Concentration
10.8
Above curve
10.6
Free caustic present
10.4
10.2 Below curve
10.0
pH all alkalinity in the form of phosphate
9.8
9.6
9.4
9.2 PO4- conc in ppm
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
22
CORROSION CONTROL
Corrosion
Presence of Oxygen, causing ferric oxide
rust ,Fe2O3
Fe +2H2O ---> Fe(OH)2 + H2
Under favourable conditions oxide reduces
to magnetite,Fe3O4,a very thin protective
adherent film/layer 3Fe(OH)2 --->
Fe3O4 + 2H2O + H2
Magnetite film is most stable between pH
10.5 - 11.5
24
Corrosion Control
Removal of oxygen
*Mechanical Deaeration
*Scavenging by chemicals
Neutralising carbon dioxide
25
Mechanical Deaeration
Steam or Vacuum is used
Design to remove gases depends on: - Solubility
of gases - Partial pressures
- Operating temperatures
Technique employed : - To
reduce partial pressure -
Continuously extract evolved gases
26
Vacuum Deaerator
Oxygen Scavenger
Reactions
Hydrazine
N2H4 + O2----------> N2 + 2H2O
Sulphite
2Na2SO3 + O2 ---------->2Na2SO4
Diethylhydroxylamine (DEHA)
C2H5
NOH + [O] --> 2CH3COOH + 2N 2 + H2O
C 2H5
28
Sulphite
Limitations:
Adds to boiler water TDS
Reaction slower at low temp
At max temp/press (5400F /950 psig)
Na2SO 4 + H2O---> NaOH + H2SO3
H2SO3-------> H2O + SO2
It can undergo auto-oxidation/reduction
4Na2SO3------>3Na2SO4 + Na2S
Both SO2 and Na2S are corrosive
29
Hydrazine
Any Excess Hydrazine breaks down to give Ammonia
3N2H4 ------> 4NH3 + N2
Small amounts < 0.5 ppm useful to neutralise CO2
Metal Passivator
6Fe2O3 + N2H4 -----> 4Fe3O4 + 2H2O + N2
Non-Volatile -----> Not available in return line
Carcinogenic
30
Di-Ethyl-Hydroxyl-Amine
DEHA
Non-Toxic
LD50 values---> 2190 mg/kg
(RATS, ORAL)
-------> 59 mg/kg for N2H4
Volatile : Available in return condensate line
Does not impart any solids to Boiler Drum Water
1.24 ppm DEHA 1 ppm O2
Forms stronger magnetite film
31
Reaction Rates Of Oxygen
Scavengers At 700F And pH 8.5
10.0
Hydrazine
8.0
Catalysed Hydrazine
D.O. 6.0 DEHA
ppm
4.0 Sulphite
Catalysed DEHA
2.0 Catalysed Sulphite
10 20
Contact Time In Minutes
Reaction rates of oxygen
scavengers at 700F& pH 11
10.0
8.0
D.O.,ppm Catalysed Hydrazine
6.0
4.0
Catalysed DEHA
2.0
Catalysed Sulphite
1.0 Time Minutes 2.0 3.0
Ammonia Generated By
DEHA and Hydrazine
1.0
0.8
ppm NH3 Hydrazine
Generated
0.6
per ppm
Product 0.4
0.2
DEHA
100 200 300 400 500
Temperature (0F)
Ability Of Catalysed Hydrazine to reduce
ferric iron to ferrous
10.0 Catalysed Hydrazine
Iron8.0
reduced
from ferric
6.0
to ferrous
Uncatalysed Hydrazine
4.0-
2.0 Catalysed Sodium Sulphite
0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6
Hydrazine Concn in Feed Water (ppm)
Tannins
Vegetable Tannins--Absorb O2 in alkaline
Condition
Tannins form metal complexes & act as
corrosion inhibitors
Decompose at high temp. Used in low
press. boilers
useful at low temp. ,for protecting feedline
36
Carbon dioxide
Corrosion
Carbon dioxide is present both in free &
combined form
CO2 + H2O <---> H2CO3 ( H2O.CO2 ) .
- + H2CO3 <---
>HCO3 + H (pK=4.2 ) .
-2 + HCO3 <---> CO3
+ H (pK=8.3)
Free CO2 is zero above pH 8.3 ,BFW is
therefore neutralised to pH 8.5 ~ 9.0
37
Carbon Dioxide
Corrosion
CO2 is released on heating in the drum
_ _2
2HCO3 + Heat ----> CO3 + H2O +CO2
_2 _
CO3 + H2O + Heat ----> OH + CO2
Fe + 2H2CO3 ----> Fe[HCO3]2 + H2
Soluble
Fe(HCO3)2 Can Precipitate as FeO, Fe3O4, FeCO3 in
presence of O2 in codensate line
38
Return Lines Corrosion
When steam condenses O2 & CO2 dissolve
and produce dil.carbonic acid containing O2
This codensate will corrode return system
O2 causes pitting, while CO2 will channel out
as grooving
Corrosion products will deposit in traps &
strainers, and may block narrow-bore returns
39
Return Line Corrosion
Protection
Pretreatment - De-alkalisation /
. De-mineralisation *
. Deaeration
Oxygen Scavenging (Volatile) - D.E.H.A
Use of Volatile Neutralising Amines to
keep BFW & condensate pH > 8.5
Filming Amines
*Softening Will not remove alkalinity
& should be avoided
40
Volatile Oxygen
Scavenging (V.O.S)
DiEthylHydroxylAmine (D.E.H.A)
Volatile hence passed into steam
(Distribution ratio 1.26).
Removes Oxygen directly from the
condensate
Reduces corrosion and also promotes
formation of an adherent magnetite film
which gives additional corrosion protection.
41
Volatile Oxygen
Scavenger (V.O.A)
Some pH elevation may be attributed to
DEHA
As a RLT DEHA should be dosed in
combination with neutralising Amines.
42
Neutralising Amines
Steam volatile Alkaline materials which
prevent corrosion caused by carbon dioxide
Amine reacts with carbonic acid to form
Amine Carbonates or Bicarbonates and fix
CO2. Elevation of pH to above 8.5
minimises the corrosion rate
43
Neutralising Amines
Distribution ratio
Concentration of Amine in vapour phase
Concentration of Amine in liquid phase.
High D.R= High volatility - Protects Cold End
Low D.R. = Low Volatility - Protects Hot End
Single Neutralising Amines can be used but, more often blend
of amines with differing Distribution Ratios is employed to
maximise system protection. Neutralising Amines are also
used in combination with V.O.S and with Filming Amines.
44
Neutralising Amines
Amine Distribution Protects
Ratio
CycloHexylAmine 2.60 “COLD END”
D.E.A.E 1.45 General
Morpholine 0.48 “HOT END”
A.M.P. 0.30 “HOT END”
45
Filming Amines
Filming amines contain a cationic amine group &
a long hydrocarbon chain (hydrophobic)
Form an impervious, Non-Wettable film on metal
surfaces by attracting amine groups
Steam condenses as a film & insulates heat
transfer surfaces.
With filming amines the hydrophobic film
promotes condensation as droplets & increases
heat transfer ( Very useful on a paper drying
roller )
46
Primary Amines
Primary Amines form films which
completely cover metal surface giving
excellent corrosion protection
( Octadecylamine - 0.5 ~ 2.0 ppm )
Insoluble - applied as an emulsion
Incompatible with other products -
Separate Dosing system required.
47
Secondary Amines
Secondary Amines form less efficient
films. Should be used in conjunction
with neutralising Amines (e.g. Blended
products)
Compatible with other products - can
use same Dosing system
48
Filming Amines
Filming Amines dosed to maintain Film
Integrity
Over Dosing can cause Blockages
Dosing must be carefully controlled
especially when applied to a previously
corroded system
Should be introduced on a gradual basis.
49
Silica Carryover
Silica is present as silicic acid, Si(OH)4
It dissociates in alkaline condition : .
_ _ Si(OH)4
+ OH ---> H2SiO3 + H2O
Volatile silicic acid gets converted to soluble
silicate ion above pH 9.5
As pressure increases ( B.P.Temp . Increases)
Silica becomes more volatile,Silica content is
therefore kept within limits as per boiler pressure
50
Silica in Boiler Water -
Relationship with Pressure
2.8
2.4 Maximum Silica Content in Boiler Water to
2.0 keep silica < 0.02 ppm in steam
1.6
1.2
Silica , ppm Boiler water pH > 10.3
0.8
0.4
Boiler water pH<9.0
0.0 Press.,psig
1300 1500 1700 1900 2100 2300 2500
Caustic Embrittlement
Under following conditions steel is
subjected to intercrystalline cracking :
Boiler must be subject to high stress
Boiler water must contain free NaOH
Rivetted flanges & rolled-in tube ends
are more prone
52
Inhibition Of
Cracking
For HP & MP boilers - use zero caustic /
co-ordinated phosphate treatment
(normally stress relieved tubes are used)
for LP boilers following chemicals may be
used:
*NaNO3 - keep NaNO3 / T.Alk as
CaCO3 ratio above 0.4
*Na2SO4 - keep Na2SO4 / NaOH
ratio above 2.5
53
Priming
Ejection of boiler water into the steam
take-off
Reasons: *Too
high drum water level *Operating
boiler below design pressure *Operating
at higher design capacity
Controlled by strictly adhering to
operating conditions
54
Foaming
Pure water does not foam & steam bubbles
are large & burst quickly
Following causes foaming by altering surface
tension- reduce bubble size: *High
suspended solids *High
alkalinity *High
dissolved solids
*Contamination of oils &other surfactant
0.1 - 0.5 ppm antifom(certain organic
compounds) cause bubbles to coalse
55
Recommended Water Characterstics For Water
Tube Boilers
BS 2486 : 1978
Pressure at boiler outlet 20 40 60 80 100 120 >130
(Bar)/PSIG 300 600 900 1200 1500 1800
Boiler Feed Water At Economiser inlet
TH mg/l as O2 max 10 2 0.5 ND ND ND ND
PH 8.5-9.5 8.5-9.5 8.5-9.5 8.5-9.5 8.5-9.5 8.5-9.5 8.5-9.5
Oxygen Mg/l as O2 max 0.05 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.005 0.005 0.005
Total solids , Alkalinity silica ** ** ** ** ** ** **
Oil ND ND ND ND ND ND ND
Organic Matter - - - - - - -
Fe + Cu +Ni Mg/l as Max. 0.02 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.01
Boiler Water
Na phosphate mg/l as Na2PO4 50-100 30-70 29-50 10-40 5-20 3-10 !
OH Alk. Mg/l as CaCO3 , Min. 300 150 60 30 10 5 2
Total Alk. Mg/l as CaCO3 , Max 700 500 300 200 100 40 10
Silica , mg/l as SiO2 , Max < 0.4 of Caustic 20 10 ! ! !
Alkalinity
Na Sulphite mg/l as Na2SO3 30-50 20-40 15-30 10-20 - - -
Or
Hydrazine mg/l as N2H4 0.1-1.0 0.1-0.5 0.05-0.3 0.05-0.1 ! ! !
Susp solids mg/l Max 200 50 - - - - -
TDS mg/l max. 3000 2000 1200 700 350 100 15
Chloride mg/l as Cl- . Max - - - - 10 5 !
56
Shell Boiler Operating Parameters
Type of boiler Lancashire Verticak Fire Tube Economic/Vertical Wt. Modern Packaged
Cornish
Boiler pr 350
Bar PSIG 150 150 150
Feed water
----------------
pH ---- ------- ------ 8.5-9.5
Tot Hardness Max, 200 100 40 2
Fe,Ni,Co,Max --- ---- ---- 0.2
Oxygen ----- ----- ------ -------
Oil Nil Nil Nil Nil
Boiler water
------------------
Caustic alk. Min. 200 250 250 350
Tot. alk. Max. ------------------------------------ -----------------------25% of TDS----------------------- -----------------
Phosphate asPO4 ------------------------------------ ------------30 - 60------ ------------------------------------- -------------------
Sulphite Na2SO4 50-100 50-100 50-100 30-70
Or
Hydrazine N2H4 --- ------ 0.1-1.0 0.1-1.0
Suspended solids max 2000 1000 1000 100
TDS max 8000 5000 5000/3500 3500
All reserves are as ppm. Hardness and alkalinity reserves are expressesd as CaCO 3. The operating caustic alkalinity is 57
assumed to be half the maximum total alkalinity
Boiler Water Treatment
Programming Calculations
58
Survey Data
Raw water analysis
Pretreatment
Feed water analysis
Feed water Temperature
Steam output and input pressure
water consumption
Condensate Return
Steam Applications
59
Calculation steps
!. Determine Feed water quality
2. Determine oxygen scavenger dose
3 . calculate the maximum permissible boiler
conc.
4. calculate Alkalinity demand
5. calculate phosphate requirement
6. calculate sludge conditioner dosage
7. calculate return line treatment requirement
8. Determine blow down rate
9. convert product dosage ppm to weight
10. calculate cost of programme
60
Determine Feed Water
quality
{
Condensate Return% = 1 - Feed water Cl
Makeup Cl
.
}x 100
% Raw water usage = 100- Condensate .
Return %
Feed water Quality= Make-up Quality x .
% Make-up water used
(Assuming No Contamination of condensate has occurred)
61
Determine Oxygen
Scavenger Dose
Sulphite Requirement
[ Feed water O2(ppm) X 8 ]
+Sulphite Reserve/C
Hydrazine Requirement
[Feed water O2(ppm) X 1 ]
+Hydrazine Reserve/C
62
Feedwater Temp
Dissolved D.O.ppm
oxygen
0
C Temp. F
0
100 212 0
95 203 0.8
90 194 1.6
85 185 2.2
80 176 2.9
75 167 3.4
70 158 3.9
65 149 4.3
60 140 4.7
55 131 5.2
50 122 5.6
45 113 6.1
40 104 6.6
35 95 7.1
30 86 7.5
25 77 8.1
20 68 8.8
63
Determine Maximum Permissible
Boiler Concentrations
C Max TDS = ________TDS MAX LIMIT_________
TDS FEED + SULPHITE DOSED
C Max ALKALINITY = ALKALINITY MAXIMUM
TOTAL ALK. FEED - A
A is the Bisulphite allowance . Some Indion products are Bisulphite based, check
product application guidelines for allowance.
C Max SILICA = MAX ALLOWABLE BOILER SILICA
ACTUAL SILICA IN FEED
64
Alkalinity Demand
Alkalinity Demand =
{(FWAlk - FW TH - Bisulphite Allowance) x Cmax}-
Alk Res
Alkalinity reserve is normally taken as 850
ppm for low pressure boilers
If demand is negative then no extra alkali is
required
Dose 0.8 ppm Sodium Hydroxide per 1 ppm
of Alkalinity demand
65
Determination of Phosphate
Requirement
Assuming a product is 100% phosphate
as PO4 then dosage is given by
0.63 ppm product per 1 ppm CaH +
30/C max
66
Checking Sludge
conditioner dosage
Boiler Sludge Conditioner Dose =
Sludge Conditioner Conc ( 200ppm)
COC X Product Factor
Typical Sludge conditioner levels are
minimum 200 ppm for normal operations and
minimum 300 ppm for on-line cleans
67
Calculate Return Line
treatment requirement
Dose of RLT Products is based on
maintaining condensate pH 8.5
This in turn depends on CO2 generated
in the boiler drum.
68
Determination Of
Blowdown
%Blowdown = 100 X S .
T-S Calculated as
%of Evaporation rate
% Blowdown = 100 . .
C max Calculated
as % of Feed water
Feedwater rate.
S - Feedwater TDS
T - Boiler water Maximum TDS
69
Conversion of dose rates to kg
product per day
Say, Water Usage (Evaporation + Blow Down) = F
Tons/Day
Say, product dose = X ppm
Then, Product Required (Kg/Day) = F x X
1000
70
Water
Losses
71
Water Losses From Steam
System
Evaporation Of steam
Loss of Condensate
steam Boiler leaks
Blowdown
72
Uncontrolled water
Losses
Steam boilers
Waste water
Waste fuel
Waste chemical
Lead to poor control of inhibitor reserves
Lead to over running of pretreatment
plant, Fuel, increased chemical
consumption
73