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3 Mar 04 3:26

Hi Friends,

While boiler water treatment, what do you use to as oxygen scavenger? Some
people use to HYDRAZINE,CARBOHYRAZINE,D.E.H.A., etc.

EMKWR (Chemical) 3 Mar 04 6:14


Uacar,

First thing one has to ask oneself is : do I need an oxygen scavenger? Usually
the de-aerator is good enough to get a low oxygen level. (However if I had to
choose for an oxygen scavenger I would go for carbohydrazine because of safety
reasons.)

One can even choose a further extreme if a once through boiler is used. If high
enough a water purity is used, one can switch to so-called combined treatment
(keep some oxygen in the BFW in combination with ammonium). Higher oxygen
levels lower the solubility of magnetite and even promote the formation of the
more resistant haematite. Also one saves on the condensate polisher
regenaration because less ammonium is used than in AVT.

Just curious, why this question ?

Best regards,

Edwin

Edwin Muller
KEMA Power Generation & Sustainables
Arnhem, The Netherlands
Internet: http://www.kema-water.nl
http://www.kema.com

MJCronin (Mechanical) 6 Mar 04


11:52
UACAR,

Mr. Muller is correct.....the selection of an oxygen scavenger depends on an


evaluation of the entire steam/condensate cycle.

What he did't mention is that Hydrazine(and it's near relatives) are hazardous.
Many boiler plants have discontinued use of these...

Try a "GOOGLE" serach on hydrazine and words like danger, toxic, hazard etc.....

Mt opinion only.....

MJC

rmw (Mechanical) 6 Mar 04


12:17
MJCronin says, "evaluation of the entire steam/condensate cycle", and that
includes metallurgy. Certain metallurgies don't like certain
scavengers. Ammonia is death to copper alloy tubing, for example. Please put
this as an important part of your evaluation.

I think MJCronin said that, but I wanted to be more specific.

And, EdwinKema, for those of us that are of the old school, where we were
taught, as well as, were constantly fighting the tweaking of the hotwells, and the
deaerators, so as to get them to make their minimum O2 levels, and fighting the
process of the addition of the scavengers, and the damage they wrought, the
concept of Oxygenated Treatment in the once throughs is (was initially) mind
boggling. The very idea of 'adding' oxygen to BFW, after we had worked so hard
all those years to get it out.

I will say, however, as a person who works both ends of the cycle, the top
(boiler) and the bottom (condenser, fwh's) that the jury is still out in my mind as
to what the OT, a boiler protection measure, is doing, if not controlled precisely,
and it gets past the boiler and back around to the 'pre boiler' stream, the FWH's,
BFP's, Condensate and booster pumps, etc. If the boiler doesn't turn it all into
martensite protection, and/or haemitite, where does it go??? Downstream. And,
what does it do there?? I am asking questions here, not giving answers any
more. No process that us great engineers have been able to come up with yet is
100% efficient, so some has to get by.

The process is still too new for us to have seen all the 'unintended
consequences.'

Or, said differently, NO GOOD DEAD GOES UNPUNISHED.

rmw

GBENARD (Specifier/Regul) 6 Mar 04


14:10
Hello,
I think everybody is right, depends on your plant. To avoid Hydrazine you can
also use sodium bisulfite Na2SO3 as well, up to 20-30 bars, at higher
temperature, you could see formation of H2S which could be quite detrimental
to your steam condensate system. Anyway, it is a basic solution for the food
industry (at least in europe), where hydrazine was banned a long time ago.

So at higher pressure, you can avoid Hydrazine, either by : Using nothing, that
means you control O2 preferably continuously, and that your levels are less than
20 ppb. This is EPRI recommendations, and I am used to the same from few
boiler manufacturers. My company has made extensive research on FAC, and
operates quite a lot of nuclear plants, and I can tell you that FAC almost
disappear above 10 ppb O2. That's a fact, bottomed by more than 15 years of
operation. True only for single phase FAC.
But you may have other concerns than FAC.
So you can use DEHA, Carbohydrazide, well known also as Eliminox. This is OK
as well and better operating than Hydrazine at low temperature, but : If you
have downstream a 150 MW steam turbine, the manufacturer requirement on
steam cationic conductivity will most probably something like 0,15-0,3 µS. In this
case, you will have a hard time to get the right value. This organic compounds
will produce CO2 or can even decompose in organic acid at high temperature.
They will not be detrimental to the boiler whatever process conditions but will
produce high cond. condensates and your turbine manufacturer won't like it. In
the same way, at outlet of the last stage of LP turbine, the CO2/acids will
preferently transfer to the water phase of the steam/water mixt. This will
considerably acidify the condensates in this zone.
So if you are running a 500 MW combined cycle, be prepared to discuss with the
turbine manufacturer before using something else than hydrazine.
hoping this may help
davefitz (Mechanical) 8 Mar 04
13:08
rmw:
regarding downstream implications of combined oxygenated treatment OT;

a) the turbine vendors have accepted it

b) if there are no copper alloy components in the downstream equipment ( ie


heaters, condensers), there is usually no concern, however the OT method can
only be used if the component has no stagnant legs . If zero fluid velocity is
predcited to occur in the component , then one cannot use OT.

c) OT is usually provided by adding 200 ppb O2 to the feedwater downstream of


the dearator, and lowering the pH to 7.5-8.5, and only used of once thru steam
generators ( except some drum boilers in former soviet union)

Lowering the pH has the effect of extending the life of the demin resins by a
factor of 5, and provides nearly infinite life to feedwater heater tubes
( eliminates spalling of magnetite and thus eliminates erosion - corrosion of
tubes). The lack of spalling of magnettie from feedwater heater tubes nearly
eliminates transport of iron in the feedwater to the boielr, thus there is no
formation of "ripple roughness" in the furnace waterwalls and no need for
routine acid cleaing of the waterwalls. Sine the new iron particles are heamatite,
they are non-magnetic, so the iron particle filter should not be a magnetic type
filter.
rmw (Mechanical) 8 Mar 04
23:41
Davefitz,

I appreciated very much your input. I had forgotten that I knew about the
copper material limitation. Where I am familiar with its use is in supercriticals
with SS condensers, and SS and CS FWH's.

Question. Where is the ph actually lowered to the 7.5-8.5 value you state? The
demin in the cycles I am familiar with is immediately after the condenser, before
the first FWH, and there are a lot of things (FWH's, booster pumps, deaerators,
BFP's, etc.,) in between there and the oxygen injection point. Typically, the only
heater in the systems that I know that are CS are the HP's, after the BFP's. This
should be a real benefit for them, as CS FWH's are not well thought of, although
nobody seems to want to try to protect them.

Still, I wonder what happens to any O2 that is not magnetited, or


heamatited. Like as in the opposite effect of a chelant. When there is nothing
left to combine with, where does it go?

I know it certainly goes against everything I learned a long time ago, but I have
a lot of clients who have gone to it in their supercriticals, and swear by it.

I still am "getting my mind right" about it all. Thanks for your input.

rmw
EMKWR (Chemical) 9 Mar 04 4:49
rmw,
It is not necessary to abandon the ammonia dosage completely. One can for
example add ammonia up to pH 9.2 (50-100 ppb NH3)for example combined
with 50-100 ppb of oxygen (VGB calls this the combi fahrweise). It gives the best
of both worlds. It is even applied in the presence of copper.

The oxygen will probably leave the system via the steam to the condensor. As
long as no other impurities (like Cl-) are present, corrosion will be limited. One
has to notice that the oxygen not only promotes the formation of the protective
layer, but also prevents it from dissolving again.

Edwin Muller
KEMA Power Generation & Sustainables
Arnhem, The Netherlands
E-mail e.f.muller@kema.nl
Internet: http://www.kema-water.nl
http://www.kema.com

davefitz (Mechanical) 10 Mar 04


8:55
rmw:
most once thru units require 100% condensate polishers; the only exception to
this rule are the once thru HRSG's by Alstom- the use of a SS condenser and no
feedwater heaters allows use of a temporary polisher during first month
operation but no furhter polishing after system cleanup.

For all other once thru's, the polisher mixed beds need to be replenished based
on the rate at which ammonia is contaminating the beds. By reducing the
ammonia in the condensate ( which reduces the pH to 7.5-8.5) , you can extend
the life of the beds.

Ammonia was originally added to a pH of 9.2 in conventional AVT alkaline


systems, which also used hydrazine to scavenge oxygen, because those systems
generated magnetite and the high pH is needed to reduce corrosion of CS
feedwater heaters if magnetite is the primary protective layer. Once you switch
to a heamatite protective layer ( as with OT), the need for a high pH dissappears
( as long as the fluid is flowing and not stagnant legs exist)

As EdwinKema says, the noncondensibles ( O2, CO2) are vented in the


condenser dearation zone or when you occasionally burp open the dearator
vent. The O2 is added at the dearator outlet using either bottled welder's O2 or
hydrogen peroxide.
rmw (Mechanical) 10 Mar 04
11:59
I guess I was driving at getting someone to admit just what EdwinKema stated,
and that any uncombined O2 would end up in the condenser, (I worry about the
"burping" process, and have seen some even quit venting the DA, to up the O2
levels) and knowing that condenser air off take systems have their own
particular limiting issues, (a site search will show posts I have made on such
issues) to address the question, 'what is this O2 doing to the condenser itself,
and what is any dissolved O2 in the condensate, there due to subcooling, liquid
ring derates at high CW temperatures, etc., etc.. doing to downstream
equipment??'

The dissolved O2, while quite benificial past the deaerator, and the last heater,
might not be such a good actor in the low end of the cycle, in the, let's say
'between condenser, to deaerator' part of the chain.

That is where I have concerns. I have seen plenty of condensers that struggle
just to get the rated air inleakage back out to the atmosphere, before it does it's
incipient damage, much less throwing some elemental O2 into the mix. Hello
carbonic acid.

Can you allay my concerns?? I am in a learning mode here.

And by the way, just to add a comment to a fact that you presented, I have seen
condensers in the summertime, with high temp CW, operating at turbine back
pressure upper limitation, that were sending condensate to the polishers at
137F, while the temperature limit on the particular resin used was 140F. The
plant operators at this point were less worried about the back pressure limit, and
very worried about the potential destruction of the polisher resins. So what does
a little ammonia, or O2 add to this nasty picture?

I guess I am saying, that I don't think we haven shaken out all the issues that
might come to bear with this new OT process.

rmw
davefitz (Mechanical) 10 Mar 04
12:10
rmw:

Well, maybe you can't teach an old dog new tricks, but it is a fact that nearly
every base loaded once thru steam generator on the planet earth (which does
not have copper alloy components) has converted over to the OT method, and
they all sing praises.
rmw (Mechanical) 10 Mar 04
23:30
Oh, I hear the praises, and have even had the fun of enlightening some industry
"old dogs" who weren't up to speed yet on the new technology, but I have also
seen some MTBF on IP FWH's in particular shorten, (304SS heater ready for its
third retube in 28 years, and its second in 9 years) and I wonder if there is a
connection, since there is known cl from road salt in the river water (river drains
2/3 of my country, which enters the system through the leaky old condenser,
which is also near the end of its useful life.

I know of one two unit, both supercritical station, where one condenser is brass
tubing, and they are sick that they can't get the benefits that they get on the
other unit with the SS condenser.

And, I guess, part of my problem is, that in our area, these are gas and oil fired
supercriticals, and the words base loaded and supercritical no longer fit in the
same sentence. The original designers would roll over in their graves if they
knew how low on load these things get at night, and on weekends. Hence, my
problem, because, with high river CW temperatures, and LR vacuum pumps,
using CW as the cooling medium for the seal water loop, the derate on the
LRVP's is horrenduous, like up to 75%, so venting at low loads is almost non
existant because the condenser operating pressure at those loads drops off to a
point where it is lower than the operating point on the curve of the LRVP, which
is dictated by the CW temp, which does not drop off at night, so the LRVP's
essentially quit evacuating any air, and any potential O2 that might have gotten
by the process in the boiler, blanketing the condenser with a pretty corrosive
element. Hence, I say again, my reservation.
I'm open, but I'm from Missouri, figuratively speaking, or course. Time will tell.

rmw
sistizol (Electrical) 10 Jul 04
10:44
Don’t wase your time friends. Try Helamin. www.helamin-usa.com. I’m trying
hard to find something against their product. I have a book about corrosion
inhibitors edited in 1982. In all parts of water-steam cycle, polyamines are
mentioned. The Swiss Filtro seems to find the complete product a few years
later.
Yordif (Chemical) 12 Jul 04
17:23
Also, be aware of the uses of your steam. In a syngas plant where the steam
would be introduced into the process, it is not advisable to use sulfur based
oxygen scavengers. In the event of any mal operation / carry over the sulfur
would poison the down stream catalysts.

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