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The bad news hasnt changed: Boiler tube failures are still the leading cause of forced outages
in coal-fired boilers.
Those who work in power plants understand that boiler tube leaks can ruin a weekend or holiday
for the plant staff. Your unit can be running along at full load, seemingly problem-free, and then
an operator making a round hears the telltale roaring noise, or sees water in an economizer
hopper.
Once the decision has been made to take a forced outage, the unit is taken off-line, and we wait
for the furnace to cool before workers can enter. What usually follows are workers finding the
leak(s), erecting scaffolding, making the boiler tube repair, inspecting the repair, and performing
a hydro before the unit can return to service several days later. Sometimes we piggyback a
furnace cleaning when the unit is off-line. The operation and maintenance (O&M) costs plus lost
power costs can easily reach a million dollars a day.
The bad news hasnt changed: Boiler tube failures are still the leading cause of forced outages in
coal-fired boilers. The Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) agrees with that assessment in
its Boiler Tube Failure Reduction/Cycle Chemistry improvement program description: "Boiler
tube failures have been the number one availability problem for utilities with fossil plants for as
long as reliable statistics have been kept in individual utilities and by nations."
The good news is that, despite aging boilers, boiler tube failures are not occurring more
frequently in general, and for some categories of boilers, they have actually decreased in
frequency over recent years. Lessons learned from EUCG benchmarking studies may well be
part of the reason for this improvement.
Despite the age of these units, their capacity factors remain fairly high. For smaller units, 300
MW or less (100 units), the 2008 data show that 66% of these units have 70% or higher capacity
factors. For units over 300 MW (53 units), 79% reported a 70% or higher capacity factor. In the
earlier survey, the 2003 data showed that 71% of units over 300 MW reported capacity factors
greater that 70% and only 56% of units less than 300 MW reported that their capacity factor for
the year exceeded 70%. The most recent benchmarking study seems to reflect the fact that
smaller coal-fired plants tend to operate more frequently these days and that larger plants
continue to improve their reliability, regardless of age.
One factor that doesnt seem to change over time is that the boiler design of the unit plays a
significant role in the number of tube leaks experienced (Table 1). Wall-fired units fared the best,
with an average of 7.1 tube leaks per year. Tangential design units performed slightly worse over
the studys time frame, with an average of 7.8 tube leaks per year; however, the average for this
class was 8.7, driven by 24% of the units experiencing a high number of tube leaks greater
than 10 leaks per year. Cyclone boilers had varied performance, with an average of 18.5 tube
leaks, and 24% of these units were plagued with more than 30 tube leaks per year.
Table 1.
Survey respondents average tube leaks by boiler design type. Data are
averaged over the period 2006 through 2008. Source: EUCG
1. Young and stressed. Close examination of data from the oldest and youngest units in the
survey sample reveals a perhaps surprising finding: Although older and younger units had
somewhat similar numbers of leaks when you consider low incidents of leaks (fewer than six per
year), when you look at the worst-performing unitsthose with the highest number of leaks
(more than six)older plants fared noticeably better, especially in the most recent survey year.
The total sample size was 164 units; 39 units were less than 34 years old (25th percentile) and 35
units (75th percentile) were more than 54 years old. Source: EUCG
Looking at units that fared best with four or fewer tube leaks per year over the study time
frame 83% of the oldest units met that mark, whereas only 64% of the younger units did so.
One possible explanation for this result is that the older units that are still operating may have
had tube panel or section replacements for areas of the boiler with high failure rates, whereas the
younger units are just approaching the time when those panel or section replacements may be
necessary. Perhaps the boiler design margins, predating the use of modern computerized design
tools, were more robust.
The older units also seem to be experiencing fewer leaks over time in recent years, presumably
due to improved boiler tube failure reduction (BTFR) practices. In 2006, 77% of units had four
or fewer tube leaks per year; that number jumped to 89% in 2008.
Although more units that are 300 MW and smaller reported zero leaks than did the cohort of
units larger than 300 MW, its important to understand that nearly twice as many small units
participated in the survey as did large ones (Figure 2). The lower capacity factors reported for the
smaller units may indicate that this size class of plant is cycled more often than the larger,
baseloaded plants.
and sootblower erosion are the two most likely causes for failures. Fatigue failures and welding
flaws were also significant failure modes (Figure 4).
3. Location,
location, location. Survey respondents reported the locations where most of their
boiler tube leaks occurred. The data show the number of units for which a particular
problem was rated either the first-, second-, third-, or fourth-leading cause of leaks.
For example, for more than 70 units, waterwall leaks were the most frequent source
of leaks, and for just under 40 units, waterwall leaks were the second-most-frequent
source of leaks. Source: EUCG
4. Why tubes leak. This chart reflects data reported from 164 units. The survey
asked respondents to identify the top four failure mechanisms for each unit, with 1st
representing the failure mechanism with the greatest number of incidents. On the
chart, the bars indicate the number of units that identified that failure mechanism
as first through fourth in tube leak frequency. For example, 22 units indicated that
the most tube leaks occurred due to fly ash erosion; 20 units said that fly ash
erosion caused the second-highest number of leaks; and so on. Source: EUCG
areas, welders have to cut through nonfailed tubes to get to the failed ones and then weld repair
both the failed and cut tubes.
Even if the area can be accessed, welding often must be done in awkward spots, requiring great
skill and concentration to make a successful weld. Window welds sometimes allow a tube leak to
be accessed from the exterior of the boiler, minimizing scaffolding time and cost, but they are a
more technically difficult weld to perform and are more prone to failure. For those reasons,
utilities responding to the survey are almost evenly split on whether they allow window welds as
an accepted repair practice: 51% do; 49% do not.
Pad welds, on the other hand, are usually a faster repair than either dutchman or window welds,
but they are prone to future failure and are often considered a temporary repair until they are
replaced during a future outage. Ninety percent of the survey respondents allow pad welds as
part of their repair programs, while 10% do not.
Outage Planning
Perhaps the most difficult decision of all is selecting the best time to make boiler tube repairs.
The decision must balance the importance of making expeditious repairs with the costs of
bringing a unit off-line for several days.
As shown in Figure 5, in the majority of cases, plant leaders will wait until the following
weekend to take a unit with a boiler tube leak off for repair, because weekend power prices are
generally lower than weekday prices. Although this strategy minimizes replacement power costs,
waiting can increase the probability of secondary tube damage, so some utilities take a unit offline when a tube leak increases in flow rate; others prefer to take an affected unit off-line
immediately.
Survey respondents favor waiting for the next weekend to remove a boiler from service to repair
a boiler tube leak. Source: EUCG
Finally, the survey looked at the frequency and duration of planned boiler outages. The survey
data were parsed into major boiler outages and short boiler outages. For major outages, the most
frequently selected interval was every two years (37% of respondents), followed by every three
years (24%) and intervals of four or more years (21%). For short boiler outages, the majority
(59%) perform outages every year (Figure 6).
6. Down for repairs. Survey respondents indicated the frequency with which their units dealt
with longer and shorter planned outages. Source: EUCG
The duration of an outage is often determined by a number of factors, including the scope of
repairs, and the scope is sometimes influenced by the interval between outages. When major
boiler outages are performed every two to three years, the predominant duration for the outage is
30 to 39 days.
Well-planned and -executed outages are just one contributor to reducing the number of
unplanned outages caused by boiler tube leaks. Other factors noted by this study include
organized BTFR programs, cycle chemistry improvement programs, and attention to weld-repair
quality.
Daryl Von Behren of Kansas City Power & Light, one of the authors of the EUCG BTFR study,
noted that best-practice companies strictly adhere to their BTFR programs. Two common
components of a successful program are the identification and elimination of root causes and the
replacement of damaged tubing through an aggressive boiler pressure part replacement strategy.
By adopting these programs and methods, some utilities have reduced the frequency of those
dreaded phone calls from plant operating personnel reporting tube leaks, as well as the cost of
maintaining boilers.
Special thanks to Jim Patrick, former EUCG Fossil Productivity Committee president.
Sharon Pfeuffer (pfeuffers@dteenergy.com) is plant director for DTE Energy's River Rouge,
Trenton Channel, and Conners Creek Power Plants, Peakers Fleet, and Shops as well as a
participant in and contributor to EUCG Fossil Productivity Committee workshops.