What Is an Oil Burner?

The oil-fired furnace is a suspended combustion furnace with heavy oil as fuel. It is generally composed of an oil burner, a vent and a furnace cavity. The main components of an oil burner are the fuel nozzle and the air conditioner.

Oil stove

Right!
The oil-fired furnace is a suspended combustion furnace with heavy oil as fuel. It is generally composed of an oil burner, a vent and a furnace cavity. The main components of an oil burner are the fuel nozzle and the air conditioner.
The combustion process of oil is actually atomized into fine oil droplets and sprayed into the furnace cavity. The oil droplets are heated and evaporated to diffuse and burn. The enhanced combustion process is achieved by enhancing the atomization, evaporation, and mixing of oil and gas with air. Oil-fired stoves produce very little soot. However, heavy hydrocarbons or carbon are solids, and they are difficult to burn. They often leave the furnace cavity before being burned, forming dense black smoke. The oil combustion temperature is generally 1300-1500 ° C, and the amount of nitrogen oxides generated is much higher than that of coal-fired furnaces. Most of the sulfur in crude oil is concentrated in heavy oil. For oil-fired furnaces that use heavy oil as fuel, attention should also be paid to the prevention of SO2 pollution.

IN OTHER LANGUAGES

Was this article helpful? Thanks for the feedback Thanks for the feedback

How can we help? How can we help?