Common thermal units include kW/MW, kcal/h, t/h (evaporation rate), BHP, RT, etc. The following is the unit conversion relationship of these units.
I. Boiler Capacity Units
- Evaporation Capacity (Steam Boilers)
- Definition: Mass of steam produced per hour, denoted as D.
- Units: Tonnes per hour (t/h) or kilograms per hour (kg/h).
- Rated Evaporation: Design steam output under specified fuel/parameters (nameplate value).
- Heat Supply Capacity (Hot Water Boilers)
- Definition: Effective heat output per hour, denoted as Q.
- Units: Megawatts (MW), kilowatts (kW), or 10⁴ kcal/h.
II. Common Thermal Units
- Kilocalorie (kcal)
- Definition: Heat required to raise 1 kg of water by 1°C (≈ 4.18 kJ).
- Application: Widely used in China for boiler heat load (e.g., “600,000 kcal/h boiler”).
- Megawatt/Kilowatt (MW/kW)
- Definition: International standard power units (1 MW = 1,000 kW).
- Application: Rated power for hot water boilers and large power plants.
- Boiler Horsepower (BHP)
- Definition: Capacity to evaporate 34.5 lb/h (≈15.65 kg/h) of water at 212°F (100°C).
- Application: Labeling for imported boilers (often marked as at 212°F).
- British Thermal Unit (BTU)
- Definition: Heat required to raise 1 lb of water by 1°F (≈ 1,055 J).
- Application: Fuel calorific value and emissions in North American boilers.
III. Core Conversion Relationships
Key equivalents for low-pressure saturated steam boilers:
Unit | Equivalent Value (Approx.) | Conversion Formula |
---|---|---|
1 t/h | = 0.7 MW | Standard for steam boilers |
= 720 kW | ||
= 60 × 10⁴ kcal/h | 600,000 kcal/h | |
≈ 71.3 BHP | ||
1 MW | ≈ 1.43 t/h | 1 / 0.7 ≈ 1.43 |
≈ 86 × 10⁴ kcal/h | 860,000 kcal/h | |
1 BHP | = 33,479 BTU/h | |
= 9.81 kW | ≈ 9.8 kW | |
≈ 15.65 kg/h evaporation | 34.5 lb ≈ 15.65 kg | |
10⁴ kcal/h | ≈ 11.63 kW | 10,000 kcal/h ÷ 860 ≈ 11.63 |
Note: The 1 t/h = 0.7 MW benchmark may vary ±5% due to steam parameters (pressure, temperature).
IV. Boiler Horsepower (BHP) Details
Critical clarifications for imported equipment:
- vs. Mechanical Horsepower (HP):
- 1 Mechanical HP = 0.745 kW (for motors/pumps).
- 1 BHP = 9.81 kW (thermal boilers).
- BHP → Evaporation:
- 1 BHP = 0.01565 t/h (steam).
Derivation: Evaporating 34.5 lb water requires ≈ 34.5 × 970 BTU (latent heat) ≈ 33,465 BTU/h ≈ 9.81 kW.
V. Application Notes
- Unit Labeling Differences:
- Domestic Boilers (China): Directly labeled in t/h or MW.
- Imported Boilers: May use BHP or ”at 212°F”; convert via 1 BHP ≈ 15.65 kg/h.
- Efficiency and Corrections:
- Theoretical conversions assume saturated steam, low-pressure boilers. For superheated steam or higher pressures, correct outputs using enthalpy values.
- Boiler efficiency (η) affects output:
- Gas boilers: η ≈ 82–87%.
- Coal-fired boilers: η ≈ 75–80%.
- Design Recommendations:
- Prioritize SI units (MW/kW) to avoid confusion. Verify BHP meaning for imported equipment.
- Hot water boiler sizing: 1 MW ≈ 1.43 t/h steam equivalent, covering ~12,000 m² residential heating (at 60 W/m²).
Summary
Boiler units center on evaporation (t/h) and heat supply (MW), supplemented by kcal and BHP. Key conversions:
- 1 t/h = 0.7 MW = 600,000 kcal/h ≈ 71.3 BHP;
- 1 BHP = 9.81 kW ≈ 15.65 kg/h evaporation.
Always validate units against steam parameters, efficiency, and regional standards to prevent design errors.
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