Density

The density of saturated water, which is 958 kg/m3 (59.8 lb/m3) at 100°C, decreases with increasing pressure, as the saturation temperature increases, making the water expand. The density of steam, on the contrary, increases with increasing pressure as it is com­pressed. This density differential at any pressure is the driving force behind promoting circulation in an evaporator circuit. At a pressure of 70 bar, water is —20 times heavier than steam. At a pressure of 200 bar, the density differential narrows to —3, which is still ade­quate to have natural circulation in boilers. At the critical point the two densities become equal—315.5 kg/m3 (19.7 lb/ft3), as shown in Figure 2.2.

TABLE 2.1

Distribution of Heat in Various Parts of a Boiler at Different Pressure Levels

Heat Absorbed (%)

SOP (bar)

SOT (°C)

RHOT (°C)

FWT (°C)

Feed

Latent

SH

RH

10

Sat

100

14

86

45

400

150

20

64

16

100

470

135

32

46

22

185

540

540

250

26

23

35

16

2.2.1 Heat Distribution at Various Pressure Levels

With increasing steam pressure, the latent heat addition reduces. Consequently, the work­loads of the superheater (SH) and reheater (RH) keep increasing while that of evaporator/ boiler keeps reducing. Table 2.1 illustrates this point. Figure 2.3 illustrates this for pressures >100 bar. The heating surfaces (HSs) also maintain a similar trend as the pressures increase.

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