Electrode boiler

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

An electrode boiler (jet type) is a type of

resistive
properties of water are employed to carry electric current.

Technical principle

The most common type of electrode boiler pumps water from the lower part of the vessel to an internal header that has nozzles that allow the water to flow to electrodes. Generally the working pressure is maintained at 10

variable frequency drive
so energy is not wasted. This control system can also control de-aerator pumps and controls.

The electrodes are connected to a medium-voltage (1–35 kV) AC source. Electrode boilers can work on both single-phase and

three-phase supplies. If DC voltage is used, electrolysis of water occurs, decomposing water into its elements H2 at the cathode (negative electrode) and O2 at the anode (positive electrode). The electrode boiler is 99.9% efficient with almost all the energy consumed producing steam.[1]
Losses are radiant heat from the vessel only.

The conductivity of the water and the voltage applied determine how much steam is generated in each stream of water.

Advantages

Drawbacks

Safety measures

When evaporated into steam, deionized or distilled water leaves little or no ions in the boiler respectively. Thus, scale formation is reduced.

References

  1. ^ "Electric Boilers - Alabama Power". Archived from the original on 2010-09-17. Retrieved 2010-03-01.
  2. ^ "C-B Package Boiler". Archived from the original on 2012-01-14. Retrieved 2011-10-03.
  3. ^ "emt-india.net". www.emt-india.net.
  4. ^ "TLC Electrical Supplies". www.tlc-direct.co.uk.