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EP2218965A1 - Low NOx burner - Google Patents

Low NOx burner Download PDF

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Publication number
EP2218965A1
EP2218965A1 EP09152909A EP09152909A EP2218965A1 EP 2218965 A1 EP2218965 A1 EP 2218965A1 EP 09152909 A EP09152909 A EP 09152909A EP 09152909 A EP09152909 A EP 09152909A EP 2218965 A1 EP2218965 A1 EP 2218965A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
ports
primary
fuel gas
combustion zone
fuel
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP09152909A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Inventor
Erwin Platvoet
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Total Petrochemicals Research Feluy SA
Original Assignee
Total Petrochemicals Research Feluy SA
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Total Petrochemicals Research Feluy SA filed Critical Total Petrochemicals Research Feluy SA
Priority to EP09152909A priority Critical patent/EP2218965A1/en
Priority to US13/148,496 priority patent/US20120037146A1/en
Priority to PCT/EP2010/051791 priority patent/WO2010092150A1/en
Priority to EP10704803A priority patent/EP2396596A1/en
Publication of EP2218965A1 publication Critical patent/EP2218965A1/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23DBURNERS
    • F23D14/00Burners for combustion of a gas, e.g. of a gas stored under pressure as a liquid
    • F23D14/02Premix gas burners, i.e. in which gaseous fuel is mixed with combustion air upstream of the combustion zone
    • F23D14/04Premix gas burners, i.e. in which gaseous fuel is mixed with combustion air upstream of the combustion zone induction type, e.g. Bunsen burner
    • F23D14/10Premix gas burners, i.e. in which gaseous fuel is mixed with combustion air upstream of the combustion zone induction type, e.g. Bunsen burner with elongated tubular burner head
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23DBURNERS
    • F23D14/00Burners for combustion of a gas, e.g. of a gas stored under pressure as a liquid
    • F23D14/46Details, e.g. noise reduction means
    • F23D14/48Nozzles
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23DBURNERS
    • F23D14/00Burners for combustion of a gas, e.g. of a gas stored under pressure as a liquid
    • F23D14/46Details, e.g. noise reduction means
    • F23D14/70Baffles or like flow-disturbing devices
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23CMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING FLUID FUEL OR SOLID FUEL SUSPENDED IN  A CARRIER GAS OR AIR 
    • F23C2201/00Staged combustion
    • F23C2201/20Burner staging

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a low NOx burner.
  • Nitrogen oxides NO and NO2 are produced in three different ways in furnaces and boilers:
  • the burner apparatus includes a refractory burner tile having a base portion and a wall portion, the wall portion extending into the furnace, surrounding a central area of the base portion and having exterior sides which are slanted. Means are attached to the burner tile for mixing a portion of the fuel gas with the air and discharging the resulting mixture into a primary burning zone in the furnace from within the space defined by the wall portion of the burner tile. At least one secondary fuel gas nozzle means positioned for discharging the remaining portion of the fuel gas adjacent to an external slanted side of the wall portion whereby the fuel gas mixes with flue gases and air in the furnace and burns in a secondary burning zone therein.
  • US 5,275,552 is very close to US 5,195,884 .
  • a problem of these fuel tips is overheating and internal fouling/coking caused by thermal cracking of the fuel. This applies especially to the staged fuel tips. They are typically exposed to the furnace radiation because they need to entrain flue gas in order to create a fuel rich combustion zone. In order to minimize radiation exposure it is necessary to minimze the exposed surface and keep the tips short.
  • the present invention simplifies the design by combining the primary and secondary fuel stages into one single riser, without increasing the fouling tendency.
  • Basis of the design is a bluff body attached to the burner tip, located close to the ports which deliver the primary fuel gas, said bluff body is designed to produce, in the vicinity of the said ports, an air speed as low as possible, advantageously lower than the flame speed, such as the said fuel gas is given sufficient residence time to ignite.
  • the bluff body also provides near-burner recirculations, which improves ignition and flame stability.
  • Secondary ports, to deliver the secondary fuel gas are located in the flue gas zone (or outside the combustion zone) in order to create a fuel-rich zone.
  • US 4,604,048 (and also US 4,645,449 ) relates to a burner in which fuel is discharged from a nozzle disposed within a burner housing, air is introduced into the housing which is mixed with the fuel and the resulting fuel-air mixture is ignited and combusted.
  • a first portion of the fuel is discharged from the nozzle through one or more orifices therein whereby the fuel mixes with air and provides an ignition zone adjacent the nozzle.
  • a second portion of the fuel is discharged from the nozzle by way of one or more additional orifices whereby the second portion of fuel is distributed in a turbulent pattern which exposes the fuel to a quantity of air in excess of that required for the stoichiometric burning thereof and causes the fuel to burn in a primary combustion zone.
  • the present invention is a burner tip for the combustion of fuel gas in the combustion zone of a furnace, comprising a burner tube having a longitudinal axis and having a dowstream end and an upstream end for receiving the fuel gas, wherein, the furnace comprises means to introduce an effective amount of air into the combustion zone to cause the combustion of the fuel gas, the burner tube extends through an opening in the wall or floor into the combustion zone, the burner tube comprises a plurality of primary ports to deliver the primary fuel gas in the combustion zone, said primary ports are located in the combustion zone in order to create the fuel-lean combustion zone, a bluff body is attached to the tube, located close to the primary ports which deliver the primary fuel gas and between said ports and the upstream end of the burner tube, the bluff body is designed to produce, in the vicinity of the ports which deliver the primary fuel gas, an air speed as low as possible, advantageously lower than the flame speed, such as the said primary fuel gas is given sufficient residence time to ignite, the burner tube comprises a plurality of secondary ports to deliver the secondary fuel gas
  • the flame stabilization is ensured by the bluff body, for example fins or a perforated plate, which has been welded to the tip just below the primary fuel ports.
  • the flame stabilizer creates a recirculation zone for the air in which the primary fuel is given sufficient residence time to ignite.
  • the purpose of said secondary ports and optional subsequent ports to deliver the fuel gas is to stage the combustion zone into fuel-lean and fuel-rich zones. This approach reduces the NOx formation chemistry
  • the bluff body can be any shape which produce, in the vicinity of the ports which deliver the primary fuel gas, an air speed as low as possible, advantageously lower than the flame speed, such as the said primary fuel gas is given sufficient residence time to ignite.
  • the bluff body can be a plurality of fins or a cone having a symetrical axis essentially in line with the longitudinal axis of the burner tube.
  • the fins and/or the cone can be made of a solid or perforated plate.
  • the burner tip is reduced in diameter after each fuel gas injection to maintain a high velocity inside the tip.
  • a burner tip having primary ports and secondary ports has a reduced diameter between the primary ports and secondary ports as compared with the section between the upstream end and the primary ports.
  • the reduction in diameter is done gradually (e.g. over a length of about 3 to about 4 diameters) in order to prevent recirculations and dead zones.
  • the internal diameters are advantageously chosen such that a minimum fuel gas velocity of about 30 m/s, preferably about 40 m/s is achieved over the entire length of the burner tip. This means that if tertiary fuel ports are added, the tip is again reduced in diameter.
  • Figure 1 shows an example with primary and secondary fuel ports and a conical perforated plate type flame stabilizer.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Pre-Mixing And Non-Premixing Gas Burner (AREA)

Abstract

The present invention is a burner tip for the combustion of fuel gas in the combustion zone of a furnace, comprising a burner tube having a longitudinal axis and having a dowstream end and an upstream end for receiving the fuel gas, wherein,
the furnace comprises means to introduce an effective amount of air into the combustion zone to cause the combustion of the fuel gas,
the burner tube extends through an opening in the wall or floor into the combustion zone,
the burner tube comprises a plurality of primary ports to deliver the primary fuel gas in the combustion zone, said primary ports are located in the combustion zone in order to create the fuel-lean combustion zone,
a bluff body is attached to the tube, located close to the primary ports which deliver the primary fuel gas and between said ports and the upstream end of the burner tube,
the bluff body is designed to produce, in the vicinity of the ports which deliver the primary fuel gas, an air speed as low as possible, advantageously lower than the flame speed, such as the said primary fuel gas is given sufficient residence time to ignite,
the burner tube comprises a plurality of secondary ports to deliver the secondary fuel gas in the combustion zone,
said secondary ports are located in the flue gas zone (or outside the combustion zone) in order to create a fuel-rich zone,
said secondary ports are located between the primary ports and the downstream end,
optionally other ports are located after the secondary ports having regards to the fuel gas flow from the upstream end to the downstream end.
The flame stabilization is ensured by the bluff body, for example fins or a perforated plate, which has been welded to the tip just below the primary fuel ports. The flame stabilizer creates a recirculation zone for the air in which the primary fuel is given sufficient residence time to ignite.

Description

    [Field of the invention]
  • The present invention relates to a low NOx burner. Nitrogen oxides NO and NO2 are produced in three different ways in furnaces and boilers:
    • fuel NOx: based on the nitrogen that is present in liquid and solid fuels
    • prompt NOx: produced early in the flame, but in small quantities
    • thermal NOx: produced at very high temperatures
      Thermal NOx is the dominant mode for furnaces that use gaseous fuels, for example steam cracking furnaces that use mixtures of methane with 5-30 vol% hydrogen. So in order to achieve low emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) with a gaseous fuel it is necessary to reduce the peak flame temperature in order to reduce the thermal NOx production. Research has shown that the highest formation of thermal NOx occurs around the stoichiometric ratio, which means that ratio where the oxygen requirements for complete combustion are precisely fulfilled. The NOx formation is significantly less in case the amount of oxygen is much higher than necessary for complete combustion (fuel - lean combustion) or in case the amount of oxygen is much less than necessary for complete combustion (fuel - rich combustion). Burner technology to reduce thermal NOx therefore usually consists of methods to divide the combustion zone into fuel-lean and fuel-rich zones. This can be accomplished by staging the fuel into different injection zones (fuel staging) or by staging the combustion air into different zones (air staging). The present invention relates to a fuel staging method.
    [Bacgkround of the invention]
  • Examples of fuel staging patents are :
    • US 5,195,884
    • US 5,275,552
    • US 7,198,482
    • US 6,695,609
      These burners consist of various arrangements where separate primary fuel tip (s), with or without additional flue gas recirculation methods, are combined with separate staged fuel tips which are located around the burner tile.
  • In US 5,195,884 the burner apparatus includes a refractory burner tile having a base portion and a wall portion, the wall portion extending into the furnace, surrounding a central area of the base portion and having exterior sides which are slanted. Means are attached to the burner tile for mixing a portion of the fuel gas with the air and discharging the resulting mixture into a primary burning zone in the furnace from within the space defined by the wall portion of the burner tile. At least one secondary fuel gas nozzle means positioned for discharging the remaining portion of the fuel gas adjacent to an external slanted side of the wall portion whereby the fuel gas mixes with flue gases and air in the furnace and burns in a secondary burning zone therein. US 5,275,552 is very close to US 5,195,884 .
  • In US 6,695,609 the burner apparatus is basically comprised of a housing having a burner tile attached thereto and means for introducing air therein. The burner tile has an opening therein with a wall surrounding the opening which extends into a furnace space. The exterior sides of the wall are divided into sections by radially positioned baffles with alternate sections having the same or different heights and slanting towards the opening at the same or different angles. Primary fuel gas mixed with flue gases and air is discharged through the burner tile. Secondary fuel gas is discharged adjacent to the external slanted wall sections whereby the secondary fuel gas mixes with flue gases in the furnace space. The resulting fuel gas-flue gases streams mix with the fuel gas-flue gases-air mixture discharged through the burner tile and the resulting mixture is burned in the furnace space. US 7,198,482 is very close to US 6,695,609 .
  • A problem of these fuel tips is overheating and internal fouling/coking caused by thermal cracking of the fuel. This applies especially to the staged fuel tips. They are typically exposed to the furnace radiation because they need to entrain flue gas in order to create a fuel rich combustion zone. In order to minimize radiation exposure it is necessary to minimze the exposed surface and keep the tips short.
  • The present invention simplifies the design by combining the primary and secondary fuel stages into one single riser, without increasing the fouling tendency. Basis of the design is a bluff body attached to the burner tip, located close to the ports which deliver the primary fuel gas, said bluff body is designed to produce, in the vicinity of the said ports, an air speed as low as possible, advantageously lower than the flame speed, such as the said fuel gas is given sufficient residence time to ignite. The bluff body also provides near-burner recirculations, which improves ignition and flame stability. Secondary ports, to deliver the secondary fuel gas, are located in the flue gas zone (or outside the combustion zone) in order to create a fuel-rich zone.
  • US 4,604,048 (and also US 4,645,449 ) relates to a burner in which fuel is discharged from a nozzle disposed within a burner housing, air is introduced into the housing which is mixed with the fuel and the resulting fuel-air mixture is ignited and combusted. A first portion of the fuel is discharged from the nozzle through one or more orifices therein whereby the fuel mixes with air and provides an ignition zone adjacent the nozzle. A second portion of the fuel is discharged from the nozzle by way of one or more additional orifices whereby the second portion of fuel is distributed in a turbulent pattern which exposes the fuel to a quantity of air in excess of that required for the stoichiometric burning thereof and causes the fuel to burn in a primary combustion zone. The remaining portion of the fuel is discharged from the nozzle by way of one or more additional orifices which are surrounded by one or more fuel discharge recesses whereby high velocity jets of fuel shielded by slow moving fuel are produced and the fuel is distributed within and downstream of the primary combustion zone. This portion of the fuel is mixed with excess air from the primary combustion zone and combustion products and is burned in a secondary combustion zone substantially shielded from direct contact with incoming air by the primary combustion zone. The nozzle by which fuel is ejected is surrounded by a cone including openings. Primary and secondary fuel are ejected by the same ejector (or nozzle). It has nothing to see with the present invention in which the primary ports and the secondary ports are separated.
  • [Brief summary of the invention]
  • The present invention is a burner tip for the combustion of fuel gas in the combustion zone of a furnace, comprising a burner tube having a longitudinal axis and having a dowstream end and an upstream end for receiving the fuel gas, wherein,
    the furnace comprises means to introduce an effective amount of air into the combustion zone to cause the combustion of the fuel gas,
    the burner tube extends through an opening in the wall or floor into the combustion zone,
    the burner tube comprises a plurality of primary ports to deliver the primary fuel gas in the combustion zone, said primary ports are located in the combustion zone in order to create the fuel-lean combustion zone,
    a bluff body is attached to the tube, located close to the primary ports which deliver the primary fuel gas and between said ports and the upstream end of the burner tube,
    the bluff body is designed to produce, in the vicinity of the ports which deliver the primary fuel gas, an air speed as low as possible, advantageously lower than the flame speed, such as the said primary fuel gas is given sufficient residence time to ignite,
    the burner tube comprises a plurality of secondary ports to deliver the secondary fuel gas in the combustion zone,
    said secondary ports are located in the flue gas zone (or outside the combustion zone) in order to create a fuel-rich zone,
    said secondary ports are located between the primary ports and the downstream end,
    optionally other ports are located after the secondary ports having regards to the fuel gas flow from the upstream end to the downstream end.
  • The flame stabilization is ensured by the bluff body, for example fins or a perforated plate, which has been welded to the tip just below the primary fuel ports. The flame stabilizer creates a recirculation zone for the air in which the primary fuel is given sufficient residence time to ignite.
  • The purpose of said secondary ports and optional subsequent ports to deliver the fuel gas is to stage the combustion zone into fuel-lean and fuel-rich zones. This approach reduces the NOx formation chemistry
  • Advantages of the invention :
    • All functions are combined into one tip. This makes it cheap and easy to retrofit into existing burners.
    • It is an ideal design for applications where additional gases need to be incinerated in process furnaces. These off-gas streams are not constant and are ususally injected through raw gas nozzles. These raw gas nozzles may lead to increased NOx numbers. The integral tip proposed here is a much better candidate.
    • Due to its design the tip stays very clean inside. Fouling is usually one of the main issues hampering low-NOx burners.
    • It is flexible enough to allow multiple fuel stagings and increased tip length.
    [Detailed description of the invention]
  • Fuel gas means any gas capable to burn but advantageously comprises essentially methane or mixtures of methane with hydrogen (e.g. 5 to 30 vol % in methane), or mixtures of methane with hydrogen and/or purge gas recovered in a steam cracking plant. The purge gas comprises hydrocarbons having up to 5 carbon atoms.
  • As regards the burner tube it would not depart from the scope of the invention to have a burner type having a non circular cross section area. The burner type can be horizontal or vertical. The secondary fuel ports can be circular or slotted. Circular ports are preferred as they entrain more flue gas.
  • As regards the bluff body it can be any shape which produce, in the vicinity of the ports which deliver the primary fuel gas, an air speed as low as possible, advantageously lower than the flame speed, such as the said primary fuel gas is given sufficient residence time to ignite. The bluff body can be a plurality of fins or a cone having a symetrical axis essentially in line with the longitudinal axis of the burner tube. The fins and/or the cone can be made of a solid or perforated plate.
  • In a preferred embodiment the burner tip is reduced in diameter after each fuel gas injection to maintain a high velocity inside the tip. In other words a burner tip having primary ports and secondary ports has a reduced diameter between the primary ports and secondary ports as compared with the section between the upstream end and the primary ports. The reduction in diameter is done gradually (e.g. over a length of about 3 to about 4 diameters) in order to prevent recirculations and dead zones. The internal diameters are advantageously chosen such that a minimum fuel gas velocity of about 30 m/s, preferably about 40 m/s is achieved over the entire length of the burner tip. This means that if tertiary fuel ports are added, the tip is again reduced in diameter.
  • These design features prevent overheating and cracking of the fuel inside the tip. Additional protection against overheating can be provided by covering the exterior surface in a ceramic liner. Due to burner tip design the staged fuel riser length can be varied in order to achieve the optimal NOx reduction. By increasing the length it will entrain more oxygen-depleted flue gas from the firebox and achieve better dilution of the combustion reactants.
  • Figure 1 shows an example with primary and secondary fuel ports and a conical perforated plate type flame stabilizer.

Claims (6)

  1. Burner tip for the combustion of fuel gas in the combustion zone of a furnace, comprising a burner tube having a longitudinal axis and having a dowstream end and an upstream end for receiving the fuel gas, wherein,
    • the furnace comprises means to introduce an effective amount of air into the combustion zone to cause the combustion of the fuel gas,
    • the burner tube extends through an opening in the wall or floor into the combustion zone,
    • the burner tube comprises a plurality of primary ports to deliver the primary fuel gas in the combustion zone, said primary ports are located in the combustion zone in order to create the fuel-lean combustion zone,
    • a bluff body is attached to the tube, located close to the primary ports which deliver the primary fuel gas and between said ports and the upstream end of the burner tube,
    • the bluff body is designed to produce, in the vicinity of the ports which deliver the primary fuel gas, an air speed as low as possible, advantageously lower than the flame speed, such as the said primary fuel gas is given sufficient residence time to ignite,
    • the burner tube comprises a plurality of secondary ports to deliver the secondary fuel gas in the combustion zone,
    • said secondary ports are located in the flue gas zone (or outside the combustion zone) in order to create a fuel-rich zone,
    • said secondary ports are located between the primary ports and the downstream end,
    • optionally other ports are located after the secondary ports having regards to the fuel gas flow from the upstream end to the downstream end.
  2. Burner tip according to claim 1 wherein the bluff body is a plurality of fins.
  3. Burner tip according to claim 1 wherein the bluff body is a cone having a symetrical axis essentially in line with the longitudinal axis of the burner tube.
  4. Burner tip according to claim 2 or 3 wherein the fins and/or the cone are made of a solid or perforated plate.
  5. Burner tip according to any one of the preceding claims having primary ports and secondary ports wherein the diameter between the primary ports and secondary ports is reduced as compared with the section between the upstream end and the primary ports.
  6. Burner tip according to claim 5 wherein the reduction in diameter is done gradually in order to prevent recirculations and dead zones.
EP09152909A 2009-02-16 2009-02-16 Low NOx burner Withdrawn EP2218965A1 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP09152909A EP2218965A1 (en) 2009-02-16 2009-02-16 Low NOx burner
US13/148,496 US20120037146A1 (en) 2009-02-16 2010-02-12 Low nox burner
PCT/EP2010/051791 WO2010092150A1 (en) 2009-02-16 2010-02-12 LOW NOx BURNER
EP10704803A EP2396596A1 (en) 2009-02-16 2010-02-12 LOW NOx BURNER

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP09152909A EP2218965A1 (en) 2009-02-16 2009-02-16 Low NOx burner

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP2218965A1 true EP2218965A1 (en) 2010-08-18

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EP09152909A Withdrawn EP2218965A1 (en) 2009-02-16 2009-02-16 Low NOx burner
EP10704803A Withdrawn EP2396596A1 (en) 2009-02-16 2010-02-12 LOW NOx BURNER

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EP10704803A Withdrawn EP2396596A1 (en) 2009-02-16 2010-02-12 LOW NOx BURNER

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US (1) US20120037146A1 (en)
EP (2) EP2218965A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2010092150A1 (en)

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CN112856407A (en) * 2021-01-15 2021-05-28 浙江大学 Lean-burn and rich-burn alternating catalytic combustor and operation method

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US9038576B2 (en) 2013-05-22 2015-05-26 Plum Combustion, Inc. Ultra low NOx burner using distributed direct fuel injection
CN107110493B (en) 2014-06-30 2018-11-20 土耳其科学技术研究理事会 Mix homogeneous catalysis combustion system

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ITMI20131223A1 (en) * 2013-07-22 2015-01-23 Ceba S R L RADIAL BURNER
CN112856407A (en) * 2021-01-15 2021-05-28 浙江大学 Lean-burn and rich-burn alternating catalytic combustor and operation method
CN112856407B (en) * 2021-01-15 2022-03-18 浙江大学 Lean-burn and rich-burn alternating catalytic combustor and operation method

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US20120037146A1 (en) 2012-02-16
WO2010092150A1 (en) 2010-08-19

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