2008 Coking.com Safety Seminarrefiningcommunity.com/wp-content/presentations/... · Note: The first...

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2008 Coking.com Safety Seminar 29 Sep - 2 Oct, 2008 Köln, Germany Cetek Dual Emissivity Ceramic Coating System for Coker Heaters

Transcript of 2008 Coking.com Safety Seminarrefiningcommunity.com/wp-content/presentations/... · Note: The first...

  • 2008 Coking.com Safety Seminar29 Sep - 2 Oct, 2008 Köln, Germany

    Cetek Dual Emissivity Ceramic Coating System for Coker Heaters

  • Target: Fired Heaters

    • Essential – Majority of Processes are Endothermic

    • However, an Often Neglected Necessity

    • Energy Wasted

    • Capacity Limited

  • Cetek Ceramic Coating Technology

    • Fired Heater Applications

    – Refractories (high emissivity coatings)• Radiant Heat Transfer Improvement• NOx Emission Reduction (up to 35%)• Ceramic Fiber Encapsulation

    – Process Tubes• Elimination of oxidation, scaling & fouling• Conductive Heat Transfer Improvement

    – Heat Flux Manipulation (Dual Emissivity Coating System)• Applications in Coking Sensitive Units• Productivity Improvements• Conductive Heat Transfer Control• Run Length Increases

  • Cetek Dual Emissivity Coating System- Coker Heaters

    • Manipulation of heat flux distribution in single fired heaters.

    • Ceramic Coating System application based on coking pattern of the fire box.

  • Cetek Dual Emissivity Coating System (US Patent # 6,626,663B1)

    • Differential Emissivity Tube Coatings– Increase, or Decrease Absorbed Heat Flux– Protects Tubes in High Flux Zones– Reduces Maximum Skin Temperatures

    • Reduction of Peak/Average Heat Flux Ratio in Single – Fired Heaters– Use of Coatings on Both Refractory and Tubes– Reduces Heat Flux on Fired Side of Tubes– Increases Heat Flux on Back Side of Tubes– Increases Useable Tube Surface Area

    • Overall Improvement in Heat Transfer Efficiency – Productivity Improvements

  • Cetek Matrix Coating System Cetek Matrix Coating System ––Heat Flux manipulationHeat Flux manipulation

    High Emissivity CoatingHigh Emissivity CoatingOn RefractoryOn Refractory

    Matrix Coating SystemMatrix Coating SystemOn TubesOn Tubes

  • Matrix Coating System

  • IR Thermography Inspection Comparison, MiRO

    500.0

    900.0 °C

    550

    600

    650

    700

    750

    800

    850

    FLIR Systems

    600.0

    800.0 °C

    650

    700

    750

    FLIR Systems

    Before Coating After Coating

  • Tube Skin Temperatures After Coating, MiRO

    F-001: TMTs after ceramic coating was applied (adjusted for furnace duty)

    540

    550

    560

    570

    580

    590

    600

    610

    620

    630

    640

    24/3/06 13/4/06 3/5/06 23/5/06 12/6/06 2/7/06 22/7/06 11/8/06 31/8/06

    TMT Increase Rate: 0.35°C/dayTMT Increase Rate: 0.86oF/day Before CoatingTMT Increase Rate: 0.63oF/day After Coating

  • Flue Gas & Bridge Wall Temperature, MiRO

    Delayed Coker FurnaceBWT and Flue Gas Temp (adjusted to constant furnace duty)

    350

    375

    400

    425

    450

    475

    500

    3/4/2004 6/12/2004 9/20/2004 12/29/2004 4/8/2005 7/17/2005 10/25/2005 2/2/2006 5/13/2006 8/21/2006 11/29/2006

    Flue

    Gas

    Tem

    pera

    ture

    625

    650

    675

    700

    725

    750

    775

    BW

    T

    Flue-Gas-TemperatureBWTStart of Typical Run Start of Run After Ceramic Coating

  • Project, April, 2007

    Coker #2 Heater

    Type:

    Cabin, 2 Cell, 4 passesTotal 36 coils (26 radiant + 10 convection)

    Design Duty:

    77.74 MMBTU/hr

    Limitation:

    At full capacity, high BWT duringwarm-up & switch-in phases

  • Project, April, 2007

    • New process tubes installed• Preparation for coating before installation

    in heaters• Ceramic coating application in situ• Minimizes time & interference during t/a

  • Project, April, 2007

    • Process Tube Surface Preparation– Erection of 2 climate controlled enclosures– Chemical cleaning of tubes– Blasting surface to White Metal spec.– Protecting tubes with plastic wrapping– Storage in low humidity enclosure until

    required for installation in heaters

  • Blasting Tubes

  • Blasted to “White Metal” Spec.

  • Tubes Wrapped to Preserve “White Metal” Blast

  • Project, April, 2007

    • Ceramic Coating Application– Climate control in heater cells– Dual emissivity tube coating system

    application– High emissivity refractory coating system

    application– Climate control until heater start-up

  • Wrapped Tubes Installed in Heaters

  • Matrix Coating System

  • Project, April, 2007

    • Results

    400.0

    900.0 °C

    450

    500

    550

    600

    650

    700

    750

    800

    850

    FLIR Systems

    Uniform Tube Surface Temperatures

    No Oxidation

    No Scale/Fouling

    Lower Flue gas Temperature

  • Project, April, 2007

    Note: The first 30 days are not representative because capacity was limited by other refinery contingencies

    Bridgewall Temperature

    0.40

    0.45

    0.50

    0.55

    31-50 51-90 91-110

    days

    °C B

    rdgw

    ll ce

    ll A+

    B /

    Flow

    rate

    post coatpre coat

  • Project, April, 2007

    Note: The first 30 days are not representative because capacity was limited by other refinery contingencies

    Throughput

    2500

    2700

    2900

    3100

    3300

    3500

    31-50 51-90 91-110

    days

    tpd post coat

    pre coat

  • Project, April, 2007

    • Summary of Results

    – No BWT Limitation Under Higher Charge Rate– Over 6% Charge Rate Increase– Fuel Saving of 0.5%– Run Length Increase approx. 20%– Pay-back less than 3 months– Improved Heater Reliabilty

    • Accurate identification of Coking, real tube skin temperature measurement by IR