Design Challenges
Design Challenges
By
Dr. Surendra Pratap Singh
Contents
INLET FLOWS
FLOWS
Weak black liquor
OUTLET
Firing liquor at high DS and optimum
temperature for RB
Bio sludge
ClO2 plant waste
CNCG&DNCG to incineration
Warm water
CTMP filtrates
Methanol fuel
Foul condensates
Bleaching effluents
Effluent/wash waters
Cl & K purge
(ARC/ALE)
High quality secondary condensates at right
temperatures
Complex
Spent
mixture
Organic
Non-Process-Elements
Brought
No
Chemical
composition
Major role on the performance of the evaporators
Na2SO4, Na2CO3 co-precipitate at high solids
Risk of scale formation
Critical
physical properties
Boiling Point Rise (BPR)
Viscosity which impacts heat transfer
Viscosity
Viscosity is an important rheological property of black liquor. Viscosity, which changes with the
composition and temperature of black liquor as well as with pulp mill operating practices, is of
interest because of its effect on evaporation rate, heat transfer rate, and liquor spray size. In heat
exchangers and evaporators, the heat transfer coefficient decreases as viscosity increases,
according to the approximate relationship below,
Heat transfer ~
1
( vis cos ity , cp ) 0.4
This relationship shows how the capacity (evaporation rate) of an evaporator changes with liquor
viscosity with all other factors held constant. A decrease in viscosity by a factor of 10 can
increase evaporator capacity by 1.5 to 2 times. Conversely, an increase in viscosity by a factor of
10 halves the capacity. The effect of viscosity on capacity is greater at higher viscosities (more
concentrated liquors).
Most common fluids such as water have viscosities, which are not affected by the flow conditions
such as shear rate; these fluids are referred to as Newtonian fluids. Under all circumstances the
shear force for these fluids is directly proportional to the shear rate. The viscosity of black liquor
is reasonably Newtonian, or independent of shear rate at solids levels below about 50%, but
becomes non-Newtonian (thixotropic or shear-thinning) at higher solids content.
A simple curve fit of this data is shown in figure , the equation used,
bl
[ST * /T]/{67.9 - 0.656[ST * /T]}
w
log
bl
For, 333oK<T<73oK
Most common fluids such as water have viscosities, which are not affected by the flow
conditions such as shear rate. These fluids are referred to as Newtonian fluids. For these
fluids under all circumstances, the shear force is directly proportional to the shear rate
resulting in the commonly used expression for shear stress,
dv
dy
Where,
= Sear stress. Pa
= Viscosity, Pa-s
v = velocity, m/s
y= distance from surface, m
Black liquor, like many other polymer melts and solutions, is non-Newtonian under
certain conditions. At low shear rates, the viscosity is a constant and black liquor can be
treated as a Newtonian fluid. At higher shear, raise the apparent viscosity decreases. This
is referred to as shear thinning. For nearly all liquors at conditions typical of practical
mill operation, this effect is very small.
Boiling point rise (BPR) is the difference between the boiling temperature of black liquor and
that of pure water at the same pressure. This property is important to the design and performance
of evaporators.
BPR
K (S )
(100 S )
Where,
S = Black liquor dry solids content, %
K = Boiling point rise at 50% dry solids
Sustainabletechnology
Challenges
14
Viscosity
Fouling
Corrosion and material selection
Sulphur release
MeOH generation
Increased efficiency
Lower SO2 emissions
Increased power production
Increased capacity
Vapor
outlet
Vapor (steam)
inlet
Liquor product
NCG
vent
Liquor feed
Condensate outlet
Low
operating cost
Low
Low
Recirculating liquor
NCG vent
Vapor outlet
Condensate outlet
Liquor feed
Liquor product
10
Plate-type FF Evaporator
Vapour outlet
Distributor
Vapor inlet
Plate heating element
Liquor feed
NCG vent
Liquor product
Condensate
FF
heat transfer
Evaporation takes place at the heat transfer surface
supersaturation low
Minimize evaporation/tube
Low Heat Flux (BTU/Sq.ft.)
Large surface area
High recirculation rate
High
High
turndown capability
Moderate
Easily
HP consumption
automated
On-line
Reynolds number in
U coefficient
Lower
tube velocities
Lower
HP
Boiling suppression
No
Liquor viscosity
Not
Can
Excellent
resistance to scaling
Very
High
High
turndown capability
Moderate
Easily
HP consumption
automated
Simple
and robust
Film
Several
High
turndown
~ 20% of design rate
Modern
Steam
flowing in
INSIDE
lamellas
Liquor film
flowing
Downwards
OUTSIDE
lamellas
Heat surface
Wide turn down ratio, 30-100 % from capacity.
Enabled by internal liquor circulation
High turbulence liquor film
Non plugging design & good self cleaning
properties compared to tubular design
Enhanced
FC
Crystallize
r
F
F
Crystallizer
S
w
i
t
c
h
i
n
g
F
F
Evaporator
wt-% BLS
General corrosion & Stress Corrosion Cranking (SCC) caused by high temperature, alkali
& tensions in steel
Liquor alkali concentration & temperature increases with dry solids
Avoid dry spots on heat surfaces, proper wetting!!
No SCC on duplex or LDX, SCC occurs 316 > 304 > duplex
General corrosion in AISI 316 5-10 times faster than in duplex & AISI 304
Challenges
Energy savings
More MeOH & TRS to
combustion
Replacement of fossil fuels
Energy efficient condensate heating
Lower water treatment costs
Closing mills water circulation
Secondar
y
Liquor out
Liquor in
Clean Condensate
Flow 89& MeOH 10%
vapor in
up by
Evaporation Technologies
Q:
A:
T:
Temperature differential
T = Sat. Vapor T In Liquor T Out
U:
heat transfer
Depends
Depends
Precipitation
of supersaturated components
Units > ~ 50%TS must be designed as crystallizers
Control the precipitation process
Crystals form and grow within the liquor
Not as scale on the heat transfer surfaces
VS
to crystal growth
storage or heat treatment needed?
Temperature
Increased
corrosion tendencies
Stress Corrosion Cracking in 300 series SS due
to
High temperatures to control viscosity
High alkalinity at high %TS
Duplex
Photographs of evaporating black liquor falling film for three different circulation flows:
2.87 105 m3/s (Re 300), 1.11 104 m3/s (Re 2400) and 3.61 104 m3/s (Re 3800) for
the left, middle, and right images, respectively. The temperature was 110 oC and the
temperature difference between the heating steam and the evaporating black liquor film
was 8 oC
S.No.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
Dry solids
(kg/kg)
0.436
0.44
0.44
0.559
0.559
0.615
0.615
0.615
0.667
0.671
0.671
0.726
0.724
0.724
0.786
0.849
Liquor
Density (kg/m3) temperature
(C)
1220
1228
1228
1280
1280
1300
1300
1320
1340
1350
1350
1370
1390
1380
1420
1460
110
100
100
110
110
130
130
110
140
130
130
160
140
140
160
175
Heat flux
(W/m2)
11100
10200
10400
9300
9500
8400
8700
8900
8300
8400
8200
7400
6700
7800
4800
3500
Mass flow
rate (kg/m s)
0.89
0.9
2
0.52
2.04
0.91
2
2.02
2
0.91
2
2
0.91
2
2.1
1.5
Dynamic
viscosity (Pa s)
0.0017
0.0022
0.0022
0.0073
0.0073
0.016
0.012
0.012
0.017
0.028
0.028
0.028
0.067
0.067
0.16
0.57
Heat transfer
coefficient
(W/m2 K)
2190
1880
1970
1450
1600
1300
1550
1500
1400
1300
1350
1100
900
1150
600
140