 
Stoking a Revolution in Coal Combustion
In 1957, Stock Equipment Company of Cleveland
introduced the world’s first gravimetric coal feeder, a mechanical device that
revolutionized almost every coal-fired electric power plant and other facility
in the world that used coal-fired boilers. It both accurately weighed and
controlled the flow of coal into a boiler in a single unit.
Coal-fired power plants generate most of the electricity in the United States.
They use coal that is much different from the big chunks that come straight from
the mines. As demand for electricity grew in the 1920s, engineers redesigned the
boilers in electric generating stations to burn pulverized, or powdered coal.
Blown into the boiler furnace in a stream of air, powdered coal bursts into
flame instantly and burns hotter and more completely than lump coal. This means
higher efficiencies -- more
energy out of each pound of coal -- than conventional combustion provided.
During this time, a mechanical engineer named
Arthur J. Stock began inventing devices to stoke boilers, or feed coal into
them. He formed a company in Cleveland to build them.
Click here for more on Stock and
its history. In the 1930s, he introduced several new devices for the electric
power industry, and the Stock Equipment Company developed a national reputation
as a technological leader.
His gravimetric coal feeder responded to two
critical industry needs.
One was a more accurate way to control the amount of coal fed into boilers.
Popular films like Titanic may leave the impression that workers just toss
shovels of coal into the boiler furnace whenever it looks like the fire is
getting low. In reality, coal-fired boilers use precision devices to control
the amount of fuel that goes into the pulverizer, devices which grind lump coal
into powder. That is very important because boiler furnaces need the right
proportion of fuel and air for most efficient combustion. Engineers call these
devices "volumetric feeders," because they supply specific volumes or amounts of
coal.
The other need was a matter of bookkeeping.
Electric utilities wanted to keep better track of the amount of coal used in
each boiler. With that information, they could keep track of operating costs,
figure out how efficiently each boiler was operating, and know how much coal to
order to replenish their stockpiles. Many utilities began buying scales to weigh
coal, and Stock was a leading supplier.
Weighing units were placed in front of the
volumetric feeder unit. These 2-part coal feeding systems were expensive,
complicated, and became a huge headache for electric power stations. Sometimes,
for instance, they got plugged up and coal stopped flowing freely.
In the 1950s, Arthur Stock combined accurate
weighing and coal-flow control systems into a single device, which was named the
gravimetric feeder. He designed the unit to be simple and rugged, which meant
high reliability. The first unit went into operation in 1957 at Niagara Mohawk
Power Corporation’s Dunkirk (New York) Station. Design of the gravimetric
feeder, which was designated as a technological landmark by the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers, was
ingenious. Download the ASME brochure, "The
Stock Gravimetric Feeder" as a PDF file for more information.
More than
7,000 STOCK® gravimetric feeders have been installed worldwide since the initial
Niagara Mohawk project, and they are the gold standard for feeding and metering
solid fuel into boiler furnaces. Stock manufacturers the devices in the United
States, Europe, and Asia.

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