黑液蒸发器升级-全生命周期成本分析

J. Cantrell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

黑液蒸发通常是纸浆和造纸设备中最耗能的单元操作。黑液蒸发器可以代表工厂总蒸汽使用量的三分之一或更多,其次是造纸机和消化器。蒸发器蒸汽经济性定义为从黑液中蒸发单位质量的水所需的单位质量的蒸汽(即lb/lb或kg/kg)。经济性是由蒸发器串中的效应数和系统配置决定的。旧的系统使用四到六种效果,其中大部分是长管垂直上升膜类型。较新的系统可以设计为七种甚至八种效果,使用降膜和强制循环结晶技术用于高产品固体。所有北美蒸发器系统的平均使用年限为44年。目前北美大约有25%的操作系统已经使用了54年或更久。旧的系统需要更多的定期维护,并且有更高的意外停机风险。此外,老旧的系统存在持续的液体和蒸汽泄漏、壳壁变薄、腐蚀和管道堵塞等长期问题。通常这些问题恶化到需要重建或更换的地步。当考虑到旧系统的年龄、技术和较低的效率时,可能需要进行重大重建或新系统。本文的目的是回顾北美黑液蒸发器系统的现状,并提出一种基本方法来确定是否需要使用全生命周期成本分析(LCCA)进行重大改造或新安装。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Black liquor evaporator upgrades— life cycle cost analysis
Black liquor evaporation is generally the most energy intensive unit operation in a pulp and paper manufacturing facility. The black liquor evaporators can represent a third or more of the total mill steam usage, followed by the paper machine and digester. Evaporator steam economy is defined as the unit mass of steam required to evaporate a unit mass of water from black liquor (i.e., lb/lb or kg/kg.) The economy is determined by the number of effects in an evaporator train and the system configuration. Older systems use four to six effects, most of which are the long tube vertical rising film type. Newer systems may be designed with seven or even eight effects using falling film and forced circulation crystallization technology for high product solids. The median age of all North American evaporator systems is 44 years. Roughly 25% of the current North American operating systems are 54 years or older. Older systems require more periodic maintenance and have a higher risk of unplanned downtime. Also, older systems have chronic issues with persistent liquor and vapor leaks, shell wall thinning, corrosion, and plugged tubes. Often these issues worsen to the point of requiring rebuild or replacement. When considering the age, technology, and lower efficiency of older systems, a major rebuild or new system may be warranted. The intent of this paper is to review the current state of black liquor evaporator systems in North America and present a basic method for determining whether a major rebuild or new installation is warranted using total life cycle cost analysis (LCCA).
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