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This tutorial explains the three most commonly used boiler ratings: The 'From and at' rating for evaporation, the kW rating for heat output, and boiler
horsepower.
'From and at' rating
The ‘from and at’ rating is widely used as a datum by shell boiler manufacturers to give a boiler a rating which shows the amount of steam in kg/h which
the boiler can create ‘from and at 100°C’,at atmospheric pressure. Each kilogram of steam would then have received 2 257 kJ of heat from the boiler.
Shell boilers are often operated with feedwater temperatures lower than 100°C. Consequently the boiler is required to supply enthalpy to bring the water up
to boiling point.
Most boilers operate at pressures higher than atmospheric, because steam at an elevated pressure carries more heat energy than does steam at 100°C. This
calls for additional enthalpy of saturation of water. As the boiler pressure rises, the saturation temperature is increased, needing even more enthalpy before
the feedwater is brought up to boiling temperature.
Both these effects reduce the actual steam output of the boiler, for the same consumption of fuel.
The graph in Figure 3.5.1 shows feedwater temperatures plotted against the percentage of the ‘from and at’ figure for operation at pressures of 0, 5, 10 and
15 bar g.
The application of the ‘from and at’ rating graph (Figure 3.5.1) is shown in Example 3.5.1, as well as a demonstration of how the values are determined.
Example 3.5.1
A boiler has a ‘from and at’ rating of 2 000 kg/h and operates at 15 bar g. The feedwater temperature is 68°C.
The use of Equation 3.5.1 will determine a factor to produce the same result:
Note: These values are all from steam tables.
Using the information from Example 3.5.1 and the Equation 3.5.1 the evaporation factor can be calculated:
kW rating
Some manufacturers will give a boiler rating in kW. This is not an evaporation rate, and is subject to the same ‘from and at’ factor.
To establish the actual evaporation by mass, it is first necessary to know the temperature of the feedwater and the pressure of the steam produced, in order
to establish how much energy is added to each kg of water. Equation 3.5.2 can then be used to calculate the steam output:
Example 3.5.2
A boiler is rated at 3 000 kW (kJ/s) and operates at 10 bar g with a feedwater temperature of 50°C. How much steam can be generated?
Example 3.5.3
A boiler is rated at 500 BoHP, what is its steam output?
Important: This is essentially the same as a ‘from and at’ rating, so using feedwater at lower temperatures and steam at higher pressures will reduce the
amount of steam generated.
In practice: A BoHP figure of 28 to 30 lb / h would be a more realistic maximum continuous rating, taking into account the steam pressure and average
feedwater temperatures.
Consequently: If 17 250 lb/h of steam is required, a 500 BoHP boiler would be too small, and the user would need to specify a boiler with a rating of: