Steel Plant Achieves Additional $1.65M in Daily Revenue with Automated SchuF Goggle Valve Solution

A steel plant installed two new boilers and a cogeneration facility for redundancy within its system. The boilers were designed to run on natural gas, as well as a blend of coke oven gas, blast furnace gas, and natural gas. When plant personnel needed to repair the system or run-on natural gas alone, it had to isolate the coke oven and blast furnace gas lines. This required the end-users to use a crane, unbolt the flanges, and install a large piping blind. The entire process took two days to complete, resulting in significant lost production and revenue.

Two 48” Goggle valves were engineered for the steel plant after a consultation with Armour Valve and its manufacturing partner SchuF. The solution provided a double block and bleed effect required for the blast furnace system and was designed so that it could be remotely operated from a safe distance. The first actuator unlocks the unit and the second one cycles the blanking plate. This reduced downtime from two days to just one minute of delay. Unlike traditional line blinding solutions, SchuF’s Goggle valves require no spreading of piping. One person can typically operate the Goggle valve without the need of special tools or equipment.

On a daily basis, the steel plant has to throttle down the boilers in-between heats; which requires switching to straight natural gas while the unit is throttling down. As the system is throttling up, operators need to reopen the units for full flow. Maintenance personnel can then isolate the line without having to unbolt flanges to install a large piping blind with the assistance of a crane, saving valuable time and resources.

Not only are the automated SchuF Goggle valves simple to operate; it will allow the plant to gain an extra heat per day, which increases the daily output by 500 metric tons of steel. This output equates to $1.65M in extra revenue per day based on 2022 prices of $1.50 per pound. The steel plant was able to recoup all valve and installation costs as of the first extra heat performed.

Courtesy of Armour Valve.

Previous articleSDT Announces Vigilant, A Remote Monitoring Solution of Valve Performance
Next articleReducing Fugitive Emissions from Control Valves
Shopia Ketheeswararajah
Shopia Ketheeswararajah is a feature editor contributing to Pump Engineer, Stainless steel World Americas, Hose and Coupling World, and other related print & online media.