Combustion Using Oxygen-Lancing in a Reheating Furnace

ACS Omega. 2021 Jun 22;6(26):16905-16912. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.1c01564. eCollection 2021 Jul 6.

Abstract

Fuel economy has been a primary issue in the steel industry because it uses large amounts of energy, such as the gaseous fuel of byproduct gas. Furthermore, reheating throughput capacity has been a key issue because it can improve furnace efficiency, leading to fuel economy. Many attempts have tried improving fuel economy using oxygen in a reheating furnace. Oxygen-lancing technology was developed to increase fuel economy and maintain the same level of NO x concentration simultaneously. Mechanisms that inject oxygen into flames locally causing flame quenching and at the same time suppressing the increase in NO x concentration due to recirculation of reheating furnace-burned gases are key to this study. Various oxygen concentrations for its lancing were used to investigate its effects on furnace temperature and NO x concentration in a test furnace. It was determined that 30% of oxygen was optimal regarding fuel economy and NO x concentrations. Oxygen was injected into the flame using two lancing pipes at 11° in a design capacity of 125 MW. The results showed a 3-5% increase in fuel economy and the same level of NO x concentration in the furnace.