1 / 21

Simple and Effective Work Roll Cooling Modification for Hot Mills

Simple and Effective Work Roll Cooling Modification for Hot Mills. Mark Armstrong - Lake Erie Steel GP Inc. Roland Van Rijn - Applied Fluids LLC. Agenda. Introduction The Cooling Mechanism Water Pressure Water Distribution Nozzle Selection Spray Pattern and Strategy

Download Presentation

Simple and Effective Work Roll Cooling Modification for Hot Mills

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Simple and Effective Work Roll Cooling Modification for Hot Mills Mark Armstrong - Lake Erie Steel GP Inc. Roland Van Rijn - Applied Fluids LLC.

  2. Agenda • Introduction • The Cooling Mechanism • Water Pressure • Water Distribution • Nozzle Selection • Spray Pattern and Strategy • System Balancing and Set-Up

  3. The Cooling Mechanism • Discrepancies between the theoretical aspects and practical application • Roll area coverage • Changed angles and distances to the roll to cover more of the roll barrel – no improvement • Water temperature • The thermal gradient at the roll water interface • Noticeable improvements not expected with cooler water

  4. Water Pressure • Yamaguchi et. al found no relationship between water pressure and cooling efficacy • Van Steden and Tellman found that the rate of energy transfer between roll and water increased for spray pressures up to 300 psi • Lake Erie Steel’s average roll temperatures decreased by 6°C to 10°C when the pressure was increased from 35 to 185 psi

  5. Water Pressure • Effects of pooling • Removal of spent water • Ability to cut through the boundary layer

  6. Water DistributionEntry to Delivery • Most opportunity for eat extraction on the delivery side as close to the roll bite as possible • Experiences at LES • Original configuration 40-45% entry, 55-60% delivery • Nozzles only modified to make the distribution 25% entry and 75% delivery yielded a 3°C to 5°C improvement in centerline roll temperatures • Addition of auxiliary headers on top and bottom on the delivery side closer to the roll bite • No noticeable change – notice the pooling

  7. Water Distribution • Optimization of header placement • Circumferential balancing of spray locations and volumes applied from the roll bite • Stand geometry and its affects • Roll sizes and their effect on spray coverage and overlaps • Uniformity of perpendicular distances

  8. Water DistributionTop to Bottom • The amount of water applied to the top and the bottom work rolls should be roughly the same • Small modifications to header positioning or water volumes to account for top to bottom variations in strip surface temperature should be done carefully

  9. Nozzle Selection • KSAM – filtered nozzle with locating key • Thickening flat type • Straightening filter advantages • 100% of rated flow even when 80% blocked • Improved impingement and more organized flow • More efficient use of available water

  10. Nozzle Selection effective spray area wasted water KSAM Nozzle with adapter base and attached filter Spray Pattern from a Typical Flat Fan Nozzle effective spray area wasted water Spray Pattern from a Filtered KSAM

  11. Spray Pattern and Strategy • Cross width flow density strategies (volume of water applied per unit width of roll barrel) – Blazevic’s findings • Uniform strategy was selected by LES for simplicity and rolling schedules • Importance of flow density analysis • Calculation of flow density variation

  12. Spray Pattern and Strategy • Spray patterns should be designed to achieve a flow density variation that does not exceed 5% • Mill geometry and the range of roll diameters used must be examined to ensure that the flow density variation is acceptable for all operating conditions

  13. System Balancing and Set-Up • Balancing the total flows, header flows and stand flows is critical to implementation • Accurate flow estimation is key • Flow estimation and balancing can be done with some work in excel • Using header pressures and flow curves for the selected nozzles will yield accurate results

  14. Summary • Ensure that the cooling water pressure is adequate. Pressures for work roll cooling systems should be in the range of 7 bar to 15 bar (100 psi to 225 psi.). • Position headers for maximum heat extraction. Headers should be positioned as close as possible to the roll bite on the delivery side and out of the pool that is developed in the delivery guide apron if at all possible. • Headers should be positioned symmetrically about the top and bottom work rolls circumferentially from the roll bite. The volume of water and the positions it is applied in should also be symmetric about the top and bottom rolls circumferentially from the roll bite. • Select nozzles that provide a concentrated spray that matches well with the effective area used in spray overlap and flow density calculations. • Ensure system filtration of the cooling water is appropriate to prevent clogged nozzles or select a nozzle with attached filter to provide this filtration. • Design the spray overlaps to provide a flow density distribution with a variation of less than 5%. • Use header pressures to examine each branch of the work roll cooling system to ensure that the flows generated are balanced.

More Related