Improvement of thermal efficiency for combined cycle power plant during load following operation

1999 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 787-794 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Matsumoto ◽  
S. Takahasi
Author(s):  
S. Can Gülen

The key product of a combined cycle power plant is electric power generated for industrial, commercial, and residential customers. In that sense, the key performance metric that establishes the pecking order among thousands of existing, new, old, and planned power plants is the thermal efficiency. This is a ratio of net electric power generated by the plant to its rate of fuel consumption in the gas turbine combustors and, if applicable, heat recovery boiler duct burners. The term in the numerator of that simple ratio is subject to myriad ambiguities and/or misunderstandings resulting primarily from the lack of a standardized definition agreed upon by all major players. More precisely, it is the lack of a standardized definition of the plant auxiliary power consumption (or load) that must be subtracted from the generator output of all turbines in the plant, which then determines the net contribution of that power plant to the electric grid. For a combined cycle power plant, the key contributor to the plant’s auxiliary power load is the heat rejection system. In particular, any statement of combined cycle power plant thermal efficiency that does not specify the steam turbine exhaust pressure and the exhaust steam cooling system to achieve that pressure at the site ambient and loading conditions is subject to conjecture. Furthermore, for an assessment of the realism associated with the two in terms of economic and mechanical design feasibility, it is necessary to know the steam turbine exhaust end size and configuration. Using fundamental design principles, this paper provides a precise definition of the plant auxiliary load and quantifies its ramification on the plant’s net thermal efficiency. In addition, four standard auxiliary load levels are quantitatively defined based on a rigorous study of heat rejection system design considerations with a second-law perspective.


Author(s):  
S. Can Gu¨len

The key product of a combined cycle power plant is electric power generated for industrial, commercial and residential customers. In that sense, the key performance metric that establishes the pecking order among thousands of existing, new, old, and planned power plants is the thermal efficiency. This is a ratio of net electric power generated by the plant to its rate of fuel consumption in the gas turbine combustors and, if applicable, heat recovery boiler duct burners. The term in the numerator of that simple ratio is subject to myriad ambiguities and/or misunderstandings, resulting primarily from the lack of a standardized definition agreed upon by all major players. More precisely, it is the lack of a standardized definition of the plant auxiliary power consumption (or load) that must be substracted from the generator output of all turbines in the plant, which then determines the net contribution of that power plant to the electric grid. For a combined cycle power plant, the key contributor to the plant’s auxiliary power load is the heat rejection system. In particular, any statement of combined cycle power plant thermal efficiency that does not specify (i) the steam turbine exhaust pressure, and (ii) the exhaust steam cooling system to achieve that pressure at the site ambient and loading conditions is subject to conjecture. Furthermore, for an assessment of the realism associated with the two in terms of economic and mechanical design feasibility, it is necessary to know the steam turbine exhaust end size and configuration. Using fundamental design principles, this paper provides a precise definition of the plant auxiliary load and quantifies its ramification on the plant’s net thermal efficiency. In addition, four standard auxiliary load levels are quantitatively defined based on a rigorous study of heat rejection system design considerations with a second-law perspective.


2021 ◽  
pp. 296-296
Author(s):  
Ting Chen ◽  
Anping Wan ◽  
Ke Li ◽  
Xingwei Xiang ◽  
Qinglong Zhou ◽  
...  

By using exhaust gas as heating source, a combined cycle power plant with inlet fuel heating is investigated experimentally. Energy analysis and exergy analysis are carried out under different power load and ambient temperature. The results reveal that the thermal efficiency of the power plant system increases as power load increases. The thermal efficiency and power output at 5?C are 54.15% and 412 MW, respectively; while when the ambient temperature is 35?C, the thermal efficiency and power output are 52.3% and 330 MW, respectively. Under the same conditions, the combustion chamber has the highest irreversibility rate, while the air compressor has the lowest. The irreversibility rate of the power plant system increases in line with power load. The second-law efficiency increases from 37.08% to 50.12% when the power load changes from 30% to 100%.


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