Sonic Horn Eliminates Downtime From Ash Accumulation
Product Types Used Air Cannon Solutions
Industry Grain Hauling and Food Processing
Customer Alaskan Brewing Company, Juneau, AK

Problem

The acoustic cleaner helped the brewery develop an ash handling process that meets the firm's goals.

Ash accumulation issues had been forcing Alaskan Brewery Company to shut down its equipment to cool and manually clean the swirlers and collectors of its ash handler on a weekly basis. The process required an outage of 3-4 days, including as much as twelve hours of maintenance time with bottle brushes and bead blasting.

“Unlike other fuels typically used in the brewing process, dried grain also produces an extremely fine ash that readily absorbs moisture from the atmosphere,” Maintenance Supervisor Suki Patterson continued. “It tends to develop a gummy texture, so it can collect on the interior surfaces and become difficult to remove.”

Solution

Ash accumulation issues had been forcing the company to shut down its equipment to manually clean the ash handler.

The brewery contacted Martin to discuss potential solutions. After reviewing the engineering drawings, Martin suggested a sonic horn to help improve ash flow and prevent clogging in the exhaust stream of its ingenious hybrid boiler system that uses spent grain from the brewing process as fuel.

The sonic horn is a proven technology that can raise throughput and reduce blockages in a very wide range of materials, preventing dry particulate build-up to increase system efficiency and service life, while reducing downtime and maintenance. The acoustic cleaner has been widely used in the process industries, particularly in cement manufacturing. In addition to its low cost of ownership, acoustic cleaning helps avoid structural fatigue or damage.

Results

The high-pressure firebox boiler operates at 125 PSI during the brewing process, achieving 6600 pounds of steam/hour.

Alaskan Brewery reported an immediate improvement after installation. And now, instead of shutting down the equipment after just 25 hours of operation, the system can complete an entire brewing cycle, with little or no performance loss in 94 hours of boiler run time.

Patterson stated, “Even though brewing is not an important market for Martin Engineering, they spent a lot of time to help resolve an issue that had been a nagging problem for us. It was a very small sale — just one component — but it meant a great deal to us. They have been great to work with.”

Resources

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