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Waste heat recycled
March 1st 2008

When budgeting a project to supply steam at 15 tonnes per hour it would not be unusual to plan spending of upwards of 500k for run and standby boilers, ancillary equipment and installation costs. Additionally fuel costs to run the plant for the just the first year could be up to £1m depending on the load pattern.

Faced with a similar project, Chris Payne of Wessex Incineration Co looked for a more environmentally and financially sound solution. Its new processing plant had a steam requirement of 15 tonnes per hour at 10 bar g working pressure, but they knew existing plant was already producing heat which was dispersed to atmosphere.

Chris commissioned Byworth Boilers to design and manufacture a boiler to use this waste heat to satisfy the steam demand. As all waste heat applications are unique, this type of boiler has to be individually designed to achieve optimum performance. Byworth's chief designer John Fox, designed a two pass boiler around 3 meters in diameter and with a working weight of almost 65 tonnes.

Operating purely on the waste heat from the existing process, no fuel is consumed, running costs are minimal (routine maintenance and negligible electricity), and the carbon footprint is excellent.

Waste heat boilers can be utilised in a range of situations where heat is an end product of a process.

They are commonly used in combined heat and power projects, and are equally suitable for steam or hot water production.

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