ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS FOR BOILER & STEAM CYCLE FAILURES
24 - 25 MAY 2017, KUALA LUMPUR
About The Course
This training course is primarily intended for experienced O&M staff working in thermal power and process plants as well engineering and management staff at the corporate level. The objective is to give attendees all the essentials for effective determination of the root cause of failures that can occur in the boiler or associated steam balance-of-plant. The principal failure modes are reviewed, with focus on those occurring in the boiler, critical piping and other key components such as pressure vessels and condensers.
Major emphasis is placed on analyzing how upstream events in the steam cycle process can lead to failures in downstream components. Several actual failure case histories treated by Tetra Engineering staff at plants around the world are presented, providing attendees with practical application of the presented concepts.
Learning Outcomes
- Gain an overview of the most common damage mechanisms, either on the waterside or fire/gas/air-side, that can affect components in the steam cycle
- Understand how to define the problem, collect the evidence and then identify the component failure mechanism, which is not the same as the failure root cause.
- Acquire insight into the various root cause analysis methods, their respective merits and how several were applied in some actual case studies
Who Should Attend
Engineers of all disciplines, managers, technicians, design, maintenance and operations personnel, and other technical individuals who need a comprehensive introduction to practical optimization, operation and design considerations of a major combined cycle power plant.
Course Faculty - James W. Malloy
James is Principal Engineer and Partner at Tetra Engineering, a leading engineering and inspection consultancy in the thermal power generation sector. Their services assist clients in assuring the performance and integrity of their steam cycle . His areas of specialization are thermal process modeling and analyzing degradation and failure modes in pressure part components. He originally trained and worked as a nuclear engineer and in the machine control sector before joining Tetra in 1991.
Learning Outcomes
Gain an overview of the most common damage mechanisms, either on the waterside or fire/gas/air-side that can affect components in the steam cycle
A summary of failure modes and mechanisms most frequently observed in various steam cycle components