Flame Safety
by Christopher Filoon
April 1, 2010
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| FIGURE 1 watertube boiler installation |
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Here, the manufacturer contemplates
some possible ways that traditional flame scanners can wind up
reporting a false flame status, followed by an outline of the
company’s newest improvements in advanced flame
detection.
Whether
your plant has a single burner watertube boiler (Figure 1), single
burner firetube boiler, or field-erected, multiple burner boiler or
any other type of combustor, one question remains: How well are your
investments protected?
The National Fire
Protection Association (NFPA) Standard 85 and similar international
standards partially address this concern by requiring flame scanning
on burners and start-up burners for combustors firing a wide range of
fuels to help protect plant equipment and personnel.1 Flame scanners
detect the presence or absence of a burner’s flame in order to
provide an input for a burner management system to control the state
of the burner’s fuel valve. But how safe are the flame scanners
supervising the burner’s combustion?
It is
not uncommon to hear of a plant technician or operator shaking a
flame scanner in front of a light bulb to get the flame relay to pull
in; or taking a flame scanner off the burner, laying it on a bench
only to have the sun’s rays provide enough signal to pull in the
flame relay; or even performing weld inspections on an adjacent
combustor, only to have the active combustor trip because the
scanner’s sensor is being oversaturated from the X-rays. It is also
not uncommon to hear about a flame scanner indicating a flame-on
condition when in fact the scanner is reacting to the electromagnetic
interference (EMI) generated from improper grounding, or hearing
about a flame scanner indicating a flame-on condition when the burner
is off but is seeing the signal generated from the hot refractory.
All too often, these simulated flame signals can cause your safety
system to become dangerously unsafe.
FLAME DETECTION METHODS
Currently, there are two methods of
flame detection: physical and optical. Physical flame detection
typically uses a flame rod that is biased with high voltage and is
immersed in the flame when the burner is in service. In order to
conduct a signal, the flame rod relies on a clean, large ground
surface to allow a current loop to form through the ionization of the
flame. All too often, the rod or ground surface oxidizes from
byproducts of combustion (e.g., water vapor), high temperatures cause
the rod to droop and ground out, or the insulation on the flame rod
cracks, all causing the flame rod to become inoperable. Not only is a
flame rod high maintenance, but it also requires high voltage of up
to 280Vac in order to provide enough power for the current loop to
form its way through the resistance of the flame. In an industry
where low voltage is quickly becoming the norm, having 280Vac
transmitted from the control cabinet through a cable to the flame rod
in a hazardous location can seem undesirable.
Optical
flame detection typically uses ultraviolet (UV) and infrared (IR)
sensors that react to the radiation emitted from a flame. UV tubes
have been used commonly since the 1950s and are often biased with
anywhere between 280Vac to 700Vac, depending on the manufacturer. UV
tubes are known to fail over time and can fail in an unsafe manner,
often referred to as a “runaway” tube. Electromechanical shutters
are used to block the UV radiation to the tube and allow the
amplifier to check for a runaway condition. Even with an
electromechanical shutter, X-ray testing can cause a UV tube to
saturate and trip a live burner. Self-checking UV scanners are
required on burners that continuously fire without shutdown for more
than 24 hrs. For burners that cycle at least once in 24 hrs, a UV
tube scanner without the electromechanical shutter can be used.
However, once every 24 hrs is a long time for fuel to build in the
vessel if the flame has extinguished for whatever reason.
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| FIGURE 2 solid state sensor signal
circuit |
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IR scanners typically use a
photo-resistor to generate a signal in proportion to the IR radiation
emitted from the flame (Figure 2). These photo-resistors do not fail
the way UV tubes do, but are subject to EMI and radiation from hot
refractory. EMI can generate a signal that may be processed by the
amplifier to think there is a flame present when the burner is
actually off or has been extinguished. Radio frequency interference
(RFI) can affect an IR scanner by disrupting the signal stream and
causing the flame scanner to trip. Hot refractory generates a
significant amount of IR radiation and can cause an IR scanner to
indicate a flame is present when the burner is actually off.
There are many different sources that can
simulate a flame signal, causing nuisance trips and putting equipment
and personnel at risk of being harmed or destroyed. However, one
flame scanner has been ingeniously designed to safeguard against
these simulated signals: Coen Company’s iScan® flame scanner.
ADVANCED FLAME DETECTION
Years of troubleshooting these problems
have lead engineers at Coen to design a flame scanner that actually
differentiates real flame signals from simulated flame signals.
First, Coen’s iScan® flame scanner combines the amplifier with the
sensor. This allows Coen to eliminate the special “signal” cable
previously required to run between the scanner and amplifier. With an
independent scanner and amplifier design, the “signal” cable
acted as an antenna for electrical interference. Having the sensor
combined with the amplifier eliminates issues with EMI and RFI, and
allows for a more pure flame signal to be processed. Combining the
sensor and amplifier also allows the iScan® flame scanner to work
off of 24Vdc; this eliminates the need for high voltages to run
through cables that often jeopardized hazardous location areas and
put service technicians at risk of being severely
shocked.
Second, the iScan® flame scanner
uses a single solid-state sensor to detect both UV and IR radiation
from a flame. In the industrial and utility markets, this is an
important feature since a single scanner can be used in place of
using one IR scanner for the oil flame and one UV scanner to monitor
the gas flame. Because fuels change calorific values depending on
where they originate, having a fuel-flexible sensor monitoring the
flame is a real benefit. The use of a solid-state sensor also
eliminates the need for an electromechanical shutter, since
self-checking is done electronically and the solid-state sensor does
not over saturate in the presence of X-rays or gamma rays.
Combining the sensor and amplifier into one
housing, while using solid-state sensors, allows the iScan® flame
scanner to eliminate a large number of risks that cause conventional
flame scanners to become unsafe. However, it is the signal processing
that is truly innovative. The sun, the operator, and the hot
refractory can all still trick a flame scanner into indicating a
flame is present when it is actually not. Coen’s iScan® flame
scanner provides the market with a safety device that truly addresses
these sources of simulated flame signals through four individual
safety rules.
This flame scanner also
monitors the rate of combustion by analyzing the flicker frequency,
or the fingerprint, of the flame. Peak flame intensity occurs at
stoichiometric combustion and drops off in a bell curve as the
combustion becomes rich or lean. As the fuel and air mix and combust
under the right conditions, heat and radiation are emitted in
proportion to the fuel/air ratio. Since the premix burner flame is
always burning back to the fuel source, the flame is always in
motion. This motion allows the intensity of the flame to vary across
a flame flicker-frequency spectrum. The iScan® flame scanner
analyzes the flame flicker-frequency spectrum to determine what the
fingerprint of the flame actually is. This flame scanner then
compares the fingerprint of the flame with any other signals, whether
real or simulated, to safely determine if the flame relay contact
should be energized.
The iScan® flame
scanner’s safety aspect really comes into focus because of the four
rules that work in combination with the fingerprint of the flame. The
first one is the “mains rule,” and ensures ground loops or
improper grounding cannot simulate a flame signal since the line
voltage frequency is concentrated at either 50 Hz or 60 Hz. The
second rule is the “flame rule,” which ensures that only linear
flame signals (starting at a high intensity, low frequency and ending
at a low intensity, high frequency) are recognized as a flame signal.
The third rule is the “solar rule.” This rule ensures the
radiation from the sun will not be detected by the sensor as a flame
signal. The “rail rule” safeguards against operator error in that
a high gain setting in combination with the high intensity from the
flame, will not allow the iScan® flame scanner to indicate flame-on.
With the iScan® flame scanner incorporating these safety features,
your plant can be ensured maximum flame supervision.
CONCLUSION
Coen engineered the iScan® flame
scanner with safety in mind, and designed it to operate reliably in
harsh environments. Some of the vessels can become very hot.
Premature failure due to excessive temperatures is one of the single
largest contributors to maintenance expenditures. The iScan® flame
scanner has an internal scanner temperature sensor, allowing you to
monitor the effectiveness of the cooling air and take corrective
action before the scanner succumbs to the excessive temperatures.
Coen Company’s standard iScan® flame scanner model protects you
from nature’s elements with our NEMA4x (IP66) rating, while our
Class 1, Div 1 and 2, Groups B, C, and D (ATEX Exd IIC T5) model
gives you protection in explosion-proof environments. Remote
communications allow you to analyze the combustion and consequently
help with troubleshooting ignition problems, stuck dampers, fouled
nozzles, or other combustion related issues. The time is right to
meet 21st-century requirements with 21st-century solutions; the
iScan® flame scanner is leading the way in safety and technology.
REFERENCES
1 National Fire Protection Association,
NFPA 85: Boiler and Combustion Systems Hazards Code, 2007 Edition,
Quincy, MA, 2007. TB
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