Audit helps Kaiser Aluminum save energy, improve productivity

U.S. Department of Energy's Industrial Technologies Program
Tags: energy management

A U.S. Department of Energy-sponsored (DOE) Save Energy Now assessment was performed a few years ago at Kaiser Aluminum’s aluminum extrusion plant in Sherman, Texas. Using DOE’s Process Heating Assess­ment and Survey Tool (PHAST) software, DOE energy expert Richard Bennett of the Janus Technology Group worked with plant employees to analyze the plant’s process heating systems. The assessment identified opportunities that would result in significant energy savings in some of the melting furnaces. By imple­menting these opportunities, plant personnel were able to achieve significant natural gas savings.

Employees at the Sherman plant wasted no time moving forward with the opportunities that had the greatest energy savings potential. First, they adjusted burner controls on one of the main reverberatory melt­ing furnaces to lower excess oxygen levels. They also made some repairs to the furnace’s door sill and jamb to prevent cold air from seeping into it. By implement­ing these measures, the plant achieved annual energy savings of approximately 45,000 MMBtu and improved the furnace’s energy intensity by 11.1 percent. With project costs of approximately $28,000 and energy cost savings of $360,000, the simple payback was under 1 month. In addition, Kaiser Aluminum adopted the PHAST as the corporate tool for assessing process heating applications. To date, the company has used the tool to evaluate furnace efficiency at five other plants with casting operations.

The Kaiser Aluminum plant in Sherman, Texas, improved its annual furnace energy intensity by 11.1% after imple­menting recommendations from the Save Energy Now assessment

Project Drivers
At Kaiser Aluminum, energy efficiency is a high priority in keep­ing with the company’s emphasis on lean manufacturing and Six Sigma methodologies. The Save Energy Now assessment revealed ways that would enable the plant to not only save energy, but also to improve production. The possibility of productivity improvements, coupled with significant energy savings, provided a high degree of motivation for the plant’s employees to implement the most feasible recommendations from the assessment. Because these energy-efficiency opportunities were cost-effective, the plant was able to execute them quickly and easily.

Company and Plant Background
Founded in 1946, Kaiser Aluminum is a leading producer of fabricated aluminum products for aerospace and high-strength, general engineer­ing automotive and custom industrial applica­tions. The company employs 2,000 people in 11 fabrication plants in North America, and typically produces and ships more than 500 million pounds of aluminum products annually.

The Sherman, Texas, facility is a fully integrated aluminum extrusion plant manufacturing quality fabricated aluminum products, including sheet, plate, billets, redraw rods, extrusions, forgings and tube products. The plant has two main opera­tions: the cast house, where aluminum scrap and ingot are remelted and cast into direct chill billets; and the extrusion plant, where a portion of the cast house production is converted into aluminum extrusions.

The cast house has two natural gas-fired rever­beratory melting furnaces that feed one gas-fired holding furnace, from which the billets are cast, and one homogenizing furnace where the bil­lets are heated to produce a more uniform alloy structure. In the extrusion plant, three extrusion press lines are each served by a natural gas-fired tunnel-type billet heating furnace, along with three gas-fired aging ovens to heat-treat the finished ex­trusions. Natural gas consumption at the Sherman plant was more than 452,000 MMBtu in 2005.

Kaiser Aluminum’s Sherman plant operates three extrusion press lines like the one pictured above, which convert aluminum scrap and ingot into aluminum extrusions.

Assessment Overview
The assessment at the Sherman plant was con­ducted by Bennett, a DOE energy expert who is a qualified specialist on the use of PHAST, a software tool developed by DOE for analyzing process heat­ing applications. The energy expert formed an assessment team with several plant employees to analyze the plant’s furnaces using the PHAST. The team combined field test data with corporate en­ergy use and production records on three represen­tative furnaces to determine whether any improve­ments to equipment or operating conditions would improve energy efficiency.

Assessment Recommendations
After analyzing the data using the PHAST software, the assessment team came up with three energy sav­ings opportunities. They classified these projects based on expected energy savings, technical and economic feasibility, and payback periods of near- and medium-term.

Near-term opportunities

Medium-term opportunity

Kaiser Aluminum’s Sherman plant makes custom parts for end-use applications in the transportation market, including trailer components and truck parts.

Results
Eager to save energy, employees at the Sherman plant tuned the burner controls to adjust the excess oxygen levels in the reverberatory furnace. This brought the excess oxygen levels down to 2 percent and improved the furnace’s thermal efficiency. Next, they fixed the furnace’s door sill and jamb and improved the seal. They also used better design criteria to prevent the seal from cracking. As a result, the burners can bring the furnace to its required temperature in a shorter period of time. The company determined that correcting the airflow uniformity problems in the homogenizing furnace would require significant capital expendi­tures. Therefore, the project was not implemented, although it remains under serious consideration.

Despite changes to the product mix since the assessment that require additional heat treatment, the implemented measures:

Software Analyzes Process Heating Systems Company-Wide
Based on the success of the assessment and the quality of the DOE training on process heating system analysis, Kaiser Aluminum adopted the assessment methodology and the PHAST soft­ware as its main diagnostic tool for process heating applications.

The corporate energy manager visited each of the company’s North American production fa­cilities to introduce the tool and share the results from the Sherman plant.

Five other Kaiser Aluminum plants with casting operations have used the PHAST to evaluate the efficiency of their respective process heating ap­plications. As a result, significant opportunities have been identified and are going through the capital procurement process.

The company uses the software tool as a refer­ence instrument to normalize data between furnaces in different facilities.

With implementation costs of $28,000 and cost savings of $360,000, the simple payback was less than one month.

The Sherman plant manu­factures custom industrial electronic parts and water heater components

Lessons Learned
Often, industrial process heating applications can achieve significant energy savings by implement­ing measures that do not require large capital expenditures. At Kaiser Aluminum’s plant in Sherman, Texas, misadjusted burner controls, some minor furnace door damage and improper airflow characteristics reduced the efficiency of one of the plant’s furnaces, which led to excess energy consumption and slower production. A Save Energy Now assessment performed using DOE’s PHAST software was instrumental in bringing these issues to light and calculating the energy savings and production benefits that would result by taking corrective action. By implement­ing some of the assessment’s central recommenda­tions, the plant was able reduce energy usage and improve productivity.

In addition to the PHAST, other DOE software tools can similarly be used to analyze industrial systems and processes and generate significant energy savings opportunities. These include: AIRMaster+, the Fan System Assessment Tool (FSAT), MotorMaster+, the Steam System Assess­ment Tool (SSAT), the Pumping System Assess­ment Tool (PSAT) and 3E Plus.

About Save Energy Now
Through Save Energy Now, DOE’s Industrial Technolo­gies Program (ITP) helps industrial plants operate more efficiently and profitably by identifying ways to reduce energy use in key industrial process systems.
Visit www.eere.energy.gov/industry/saveenergynow for more information.

This article first appeared in Energy Matters, the Department of Energy’s ITP newsletter. To learn more about this publication, visit http://www1.eere.energy.gov/industry/bestpractices/energymatters/.