8.3 Electronic Combustion Analysis
SWS Detail: 5.3003.2 Combustion Analysis of Oil-Fired Appliances, 2.0201.2 Combustion Safety - Make-up Air, 5.3003.14 Combustion Analysis of Gas-Fired Appliances (LP and Natural Gas) |
The goal of a combustion analysis is to quickly analyze combustion safety and efficiency. When the combustion appliance reaches steady-state efficiency (SSE), you can measure its most critical combustion parameters. This information saves time and informs both service and installation adjustments.
Modern combustion analyzers measure O2, CO, and flue-gas temperature. Some models also measure draft. Combustion analyzers also calculate combustion efficiency or steady-state efficiency (SSE), which are synonymous.
8.3.1 Critical Combustion-Testing Parameters
These furnace-testing parameters tell you how efficient and safe the furnace currently is and how much you might be able to improve efficiency. Use these measurements to analyze the combustion process.
Carbon monoxide (CO) (ppm):
Poisonous gas indicates incomplete combustion. Modern combustion analyzers let you choose between an as-measured value or a calculated value that states the concentration of CO in theoretical air-free flue gases. Adjusting combustion to produce less than 100 ppm as measured or 200 ppm air-free is almost always possible with fuel-pressure adjustments, air adjustments, or burner maintenance.
Oxygen (percent):
Indicates the percent of excess air and whether fuel-air mixture is within a safe and efficient range. Efficiency increases as oxygen decreases because excess air, indicated by the O2 carries heat up the chimney. Percent O2 may also indicate the cause of CO as either too little or too much combustion air. Technicians used to measure CO2, but O2 is easier to measure, and you only need to measure one of these two gases.
Flue-gas temperature:
Flue-gas temperature is directly related to furnace efficiency. Too high flue-gas temperature wastes energy and too-low flue-gas temperature causes corrosive condensation in the venting system.
Smoke number
For oil only, this measurement compares the stain made by flue gases with a numbered stain-darkness rating called smoke number. Smoke number should be 1 or lighter on a 1-to-10 smoke scale.
Draft
The pressure in the chimney or vent connector (chimney draft or breech draft). Also the pressure in the combustion chamber (over-fire draft), used primarily with oil power burners.