Written by Scott Schreeg | Power Plants

Power plants are crucial to the modern world. Without them, our infrastructure and our lives would be very different. There are numerous types of power plants. Some are large-scale industrial corporations, while others are smaller facilities owned by individuals. The number of power plants worldwide continues to grow, providing the massive amount of power that consumers need.

One of the biggest challenges for power plant owners is noise control. Power plants can be extremely noisy, leading to problems for workers, surrounding communities, and wildlife. Some common sources of power plant noise include turbines, motors, compressors, and steam boilers. Fortunately, innovative noise control solutions can help lower noise pollution at industrial power plants.

One of the solutions for reducing power plant noise is the use of silencers. They are an essential part of mitigating or absorbing the noise.

What Are the Types of Silencers Used in Industrial Plants?

There are numerous silencers and soundproofing devices used in power plants. Some of the most common silencers include the following:

Absorptive Silencers

An absorptive silencer attenuates noise by absorbing sound energy rather than reflecting it. They are the most common type of silencer used. Absorptive silencers work because they contain fibrous and porous packing materials that absorb sound waves to dampen volume. Sound energy is reduced to small amounts of heat as the sound waves pass through the fibrous, absorptive material. This process happens without relying on any other internal mechanisms to reduce noise, which means that this type of silencer produces a minimum amount of airflow.

Absorptive silencers are effective for higher noise frequencies (500 Hz to 8,000 Hz). Some of the standard applications for absorptive silencers include gas turbine inlets, industrial fan inlets, centrifugal compressors inlets, and other high-frequency noise applications.

Reactive Silencers

Reactive silencers are similar to the silencers that are part of a car’s exhaust system. They are also sometimes called mufflers. Like a car muffler, an industrial reactive silencer is designed with various chambers and tubes. The tubes have perforations that redirect sound waves and then reflect them to their source. That effectively reduces the amount of noise that is heard.

Reactive silencers don’t contain any fibrous material or insulation, unlike absorptive silencers, which makes them easier to clean. Additionally, they only create a negligible amount of pressure loss. This type of silencer is small in size and, as a result, best suited for exhaust systems and engines. Reactive silencers are often used for fixed-speed machines, like blowers and generators.

Vent Silencers

Vent silencers are used in systems that use pressure relief valves. They are designed to reduce noise that is caused by steam or gas. Vent silencers don’t reflect sound waves, and they may or may not utilize absorptive materials. Instead, they decrease noise by diffusing the flow of pressurized steam or gas as it leaves a pipeline to the atmosphere.

Some of the standard applications for vent silencers include gas and oil processing, chemical processing, industrial processing, steam boilers, and heat recovery steam generator systems.

Combination Silencers

Sometimes, machinery at industrial plants requires custom noise solutions. In those cases, silencers are designed using a combination of silencer types. They may employ both absorption and scattering methods to attenuate noise, reducing it to safer levels that comply with noise regulations.

Combination silencers are more effective than frequency-shifting silencers because they are created to attenuate a specific type of sound. This type of silencer is commonly used in the gas path of fans and is often used in conjunction with absorptive silencers to provide a more effective noise solution.

BAR Silencers

BAR silencers are a proprietary design developed by SVI BREMCO to meet the unique demands of modern power generation environments. Unlike conventional parallel baffle designs, BAR silencers feature a matrix of perforated, acoustically treated bars that allow for three-dimensional flow dispersion. This reduces turbulence, lowers self-generated noise, and helps prevent flow-induced side loading on structural components.

By minimizing flow resistance and managing the spacing and surface area of absorbing materials, BAR silencers provide effective noise attenuation across a broad frequency range, including low-frequency tones that are typically harder to suppress. The structural design is optimized using finite element and vortex shedding analysis to ensure long-term durability under high-temperature, high-velocity flow conditions. This makes BAR silencers especially well-suited for turbine exhaust systems where reliability and acoustic performance are critical.

 

Finding the Right Noise Control Solution

Choosing the right industrial silencer for your plant depends on multiple factors, as each type of silencer is designed to work best in specific applications. You have to consider which application you will use the silencer for and the noise regulations in your location. Then you can move on to the different types of noise control and the industrial service providers that can install them.

For more information about the silencers and applications above, or for any of your industrial plant maintenance and repair needs, contact one of the professionals at SVI BREMCO. We’re here to help.

Read More: