International water and steam quality standards for thermal power station drum-type and waste heat recovery boilers with the treatment of boiler water with phosphates and NaOH
- Authors: Petrova T.I.1, Orlov K.A.1, Dooley R.B.2
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Affiliations:
- Moscow Power Engineering Institute, (MPEI, National Research University)
- Structural Integrity Associates
- Issue: Vol 64, No 1 (2017)
- Pages: 61-67
- Section: Water Preparation and Water Chemistry Conditions
- URL: https://bakhtiniada.ru/0040-6015/article/view/172586
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0040601516120041
- ID: 172586
Cite item
Abstract
One of the ways for improving the operational reliability and economy of thermal power station equipment, including combined-cycle equipment, is to decrease the rates of the corrosion of constructional materials and the formation of scales in the water-steam circuit. These processes can be reduced to a minimum via the use of water with a minimum content of admixtures and the correction treatment of a heat-transfer fluid. The International Association for the Properties of Water and Steam (IAPWS), which unites specialists from every country of the world, has developed water and steam quality standards for power station equipment of different types on the basis of theoretical studies and long-term experience in the operation of power plants in 21 countries. Different water chemistry regimes are currently used at conventional and combined-cycle thermal power stations. This paper describes the conditions for the implementation of water chemistry regimes with the use of sodium salts of phosphoric acid and NaOH for the quality correction of boiler water. Water and steam quality standards and some recommendations for their maintenance under different operational conditions are given for each of the considered water chemistry regimes. The standards are designed for the water-steam circuit of conventional and combined-cycle thermal power stations. It is pointed out that the quality control of a heat-transfer fluid must be especially careful at combined-cycle thermal power stations with frequent startups and shutdowns.
About the authors
T. I. Petrova
Moscow Power Engineering Institute, (MPEI, National Research University)
Email: OrlovKA@mpei.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
K. A. Orlov
Moscow Power Engineering Institute, (MPEI, National Research University)
Author for correspondence.
Email: OrlovKA@mpei.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
R. B. Dooley
Structural Integrity Associates
Email: OrlovKA@mpei.ru
United States, Vanstory Drive 11515, Suite 125, Huntersville, NC, 28078
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