Regenerative Thermal Oxidizers
- RTOs
Vapor Combustion Equipment

PROCESS DESCRIPTION
For the control of low concentration hydrocarbon contaminated air streams,
RTO’s offer unmatched fuel efficiency. The energy of the hot combustion
products is used to preheat the incoming waste gas. Unlike Recuperative Thermal
Oxidizers that perform this function using an indirect contact heat exchanger
(shell-and-tube or plate-plate type) to preheat waste gases or combustion air,
the RTO uses a direct contact heat exchanger. These direct contact heat
exchangers consist of a bed of porous ceramic packing or other structured, high
heat capacity media.
An RTO uses at least two media beds and a common flue gas furnace (residence
time chamber). Prior to receiving vapors, a small burner in the furnace section
is fired to heat the start-up air. The start-up air flows through Bed No. 1 into
the furnace and is then to discharged through Bed No. 2 and onto the atmospheric
stack. During this process, Bed No. 2 becomes hot, eventually reaching the
desired outlet temperature. The inlet side of Bed No. 2 normally reaches
temperatures in the range 1600ºF (900°C). When the desired temperature is
reached, automated valves switch, and the start-up air is replaced with the
contaminated air stream taking the reverse path through the two beds and
furnace. The automated valves direct the treated gas out of Bed No. 1 to the
common stack. As the contaminated air passes through Bed No. 2, it is heated as
it flows across the hot packing media. The furnace burner is now firing at very
low rates. The furnace burner may be unnecessary if the hydrocarbon content in
the vapor stream is sufficient to provide heat of combustion adequate to make up
for heat losses of the equipment. Once the outlet temperature of Bed No. 1
reaches a desired level, the valves will switch again and directs the
contaminated air in the original direction. Cyclical operation proceeds
automatically as long as contaminated air is present.
Valve switching may occur every few minutes, depending on the bed size, flow
rate and concentration of the contaminated air stream. With careful design, the
destruction efficiency of the hydrocarbons in the contaminated stream can be in
excess of 99%. Since the thermal efficiency of this design can easily exceed
90%, supplemental fuel consumption can be extremely low. The thermal efficiency
of the recuperative design is in the 70% range. If the hydrocarbon concentration
of the contaminated air increases, dilution air must be added to the stream
before it enters the RTO to avoid excessive temperatures in the furnace. Due to
bed volume requirements, an RTO is likely to need more plot space than a
traditional Enclosed Thermal Oxidizer.
For more information see Banks
Engineering

Manufacturers of RTOs are: