scholarly journals Residual Fuel Treating and Handling for Base Load Gas Turbines

1975 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Byam ◽  
S. S. Dreymann ◽  
A. A. Pitrolo

This paper is a discussion of the methods of heavy fuel treatment for industrial gas turbines and the effects of fuel characteristics on washability. A summary of recent experience with burning heavy fuels by a typical industrial user is presented. The paper includes a discussion of the latest design improvements in fuel treating equipment and the resulting improvements in washed fuel quality. The effect of fuel parameters on system size, cost and performance is evaluated.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa Mela ◽  
Federico Fignino ◽  
Alessio Gabrielli ◽  
Paola Guarnone ◽  
Emanuele Porro ◽  
...  

Abstract The evolution of industrial gas turbines towards increased efficiency and performance requires even higher operating temperatures for the engines. In order to remain competitive in the market, OEM companies continuously need to develop maintenance programs and repair technologies able to extend the life of these components as much as possible. The repair technology improvement is fundamental to reduce scrap rates and maintenance costs to be competitive on the market. The Ansaldo Repair Centre answers to this market demand by providing advanced and competitive repair techniques and an increasing broad repair portfolio to its customers. This paper describes the steps and approach to determine the repair process of GT26 LPT Blade 1 in order to allow the component to run another service interval. The base material status and the indication found after service was used as the foundation for a development of a dedicated repair sequence from stripping, to suitable heat treatments, to enhanced repair technique to recoating of the blade. Particular attention was paid to the most damaged area, for which a particular welding procedure including an optimized filler material has been applied for the rebuilding of the tip and platform zones as well as for the restoration of the unique tip closing features.


Author(s):  
Fred T. Willett ◽  
Rodger O. Anderson ◽  
Michael R. Pothier

The large installed base of large frame industrial gas turbines has prompted a number of replacement part offerings, in addition to the replacement parts offered by the OEM. The quality and rigor of the offerings varies considerably. The replacement parts can be broken down into three categories: replicated parts, reverse-engineered parts, and re-engineered parts. The processes of replication, reverse engineering, and re-engineering are examined in detail. Specific differences between the three approaches are identified and discussed. The economic model presented by Willett and Pothier [2003] is used to examine the potential economic benefits of replacement parts and quantify differences in potential benefits as a function of engineering approach. The benefits of each approach depend not only on the engineering process, but also on the customer (power plant operator) profile. Base load, cyclic duty, and peaking operation, along with risk tolerance, influence the predicted benefit and determine the most effective engineering approach.


Author(s):  
A. P. Rajput ◽  
P. J. Hurd ◽  
R. D. Wood

Gaseous fuels such as landfill gas contain significant quantities of inerts, typically CO2 and N2. This can lead to difficulties in predicting the emission and thermodynamic performance of industrial gas turbines. An algorithm has been developed to predict emissions of NOx for known quantities of inerts and effects on performance quantified. The effect of steam injection is compared to that of inerts and a relationship established.


Author(s):  
Iacopo Giovannetti ◽  
Manuele Bigi ◽  
Massimo Giannozzi ◽  
Dieter R. Sporer ◽  
Filippo Cappuccini ◽  
...  

An improvement in the energy efficiency of industrial gas turbines can be accomplished by developing abradable seals to reduce the stator/rotor gap to decrease the tip leakage flow of gases in the hot gas components of the turbine. “ABRANEW” is a project funded by the European Commission aimed at developing a high temperature abradable material capable of controlled abrasion and resistant to erosion and oxidation. In order to define the basic parameters such as the component shape, the existing gap, the expected gap reduction, the seal thickness and other geometric parameters, a comprehensive review of the design of the blade/shroud/casing system was performed.


Author(s):  
Jean-Pierre Stalder ◽  
Peter A. Huber

The use of “clean” fuel is a prerequisite at today’s elevated gas turbine firing temperature, modern engines are more sensitive to high temperature corrosion if there are impurities present in the fuel and/or in the combustion air. It is a common belief that distillate grade fuels are contaminant-free, which is often not true. Frequently operators burning distillates ignore the fuel quality as a possible source of difficulties. This matter being also of concern in plants mainly operated on natural gas and where distillate fuel oil is the back-up fuel. Distillates may contain water, dirt and often trace metals such as sodium, vanadium and lead which can cause severe damages to the gas turbines. Sodium being very often introduced through contamination with seawater during the fuel storage and delivery chain to the plant, and in combination, or with air borne salt ingested by the combustion air. Excursions of sodium in treated crude or heavy fuel oil can occur during unnoticed malfunctions of the fuel treatment plant, when changing the heavy fuel provenience without centrifuge adjustment, or by inadequate fuel handling. For burning heavy fuel, treatment with oil-soluble magnesium fuel additive is state of the art to inhibit hot corrosion caused by vanadium. Air borne salts, sodium, potassium and lead contaminated distillates, gaseous fuels, washed and unwashed crude and residual oil can not be handled by simple magnesium based additives. The addition of elements like silicon and/or chromium is highly effective in reducing turbine blade hot corrosion and hot section fouling. This paper describes field experience with the use of chromium containing fuel additive to reduce high temperature corrosion of hot section parts, as well as the interaction of oil-soluble chromium and magnesium-chromium additives on material behaviour of blades and vanes, and their economical and environmental aspects.


Author(s):  
P. J. Cullen ◽  
T. A. Urbas

The resurgence of interest in the heavy duty gas turbine for marine use is due in a large part to its ability to burn residual and crude fuels. Generalities involving fuel treatment requirements have been bandied about for years and often the wrong information is used by unknowledgeable individuals when making quotations or bid evaluations. The purpose of this paper is to present firm information on the treatment of marine fuels for heavy duty gas turbines.


1978 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. K. Andrews ◽  
M. W. Smart

Requirements are defined for fuel flow control elements to be used with an electronic computer to form a flexible complete control system for a diverse range of small industrial and automotive gas turbine engines. A preferred system configuration is described, suitable for use with a variety of engine types and output powers in the 100 to 1000 kw range and for medium and high quantity production. The solution described uses a gear type fuel pump, a simple metering valve positioned by a moving coil d-c force motor, a diaphragm type pressure drop regulator, and a solenoid high pressure shut-off valve. The reasons for choice of this arrangement and its specific advantages are presented. Development and early service experience with the system are discussed and performance characteristics are presented.


Author(s):  
Frank Reiss ◽  
Sven-Hendrik Wiers ◽  
Ulrich Orth ◽  
Emil Aschenbruck ◽  
Martin Lauer ◽  
...  

This paper describes the development and test results of the low emission combustion system for the new industrial gas turbines in the 6–7 MW class from MAN Diesel & Turbo. The design of a robust combustion system and the achievement of very low emission targets were the most important design goals of the combustor development. During the design phase, the analysis of the combustor (i.e. burner design, air distribution, liner cooling design) was supported with different CFD tools. This advanced Dry Low Emission can combustion system (ACC) consists of 6 cans mounted externally on the gas turbine. The behavior and performance of a single can sector was tested over a wide load range and with different boundary conditions; first on an atmospheric test rig and later on a high pressure test rig with extensive instrumentation to ensure an efficient test campaign and accurate data. The atmospheric tests showed a very good performance for all combustor parts and promising results. The high pressure tests demonstrated very stable behavior at all operation modes and very low emissions to satisfy stringent environmental requirements. The whole operation concept of the combustion system was tested first on the single-can high pressure test bed and later on twin and single shaft gas turbines at MAN’s gas turbine test facility. During the engine tests, the can combustors demonstrated the expected combustion performance under real operation conditions. All emissions and performance targets were fully achieved. On the single shaft engine, the combustors were running with single digit ppm NOx levels between 50% and 100% load. The validation phase and further optimization of the gas turbines and the engine components are ongoing. The highlights of the development process and results of the combustor and engine tests will be presented and discussed within this paper.


Author(s):  
Jeffrey D. Willis ◽  
A. John Moran

Industrial gas turbines have universally had problems with combustion amplified pressure oscillations (combustion instability or noise) in premix lean burn combustors. Reference 1 issued by General Electric is a particularly good report. Under specific conditions a resonant frequency achieves sufficient amplitude to cause severe damage to the combustor. As the emissions are reduced to lower levels, by achieving better uniformity of fuel and air distribution and a larger percentage of the air is used in the combustion process, then these amplitudes have the potential to become greater especially at high pressure ratios. Small changes in either ambient conditions or fuel quality appear to cause noise amplitudes to become unacceptable.


2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 910-921 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. C. Gu¨len ◽  
P. R. Griffin ◽  
S. Paolucci

This paper describes the results of real-time, on-line performance monitoring of two gas turbines over a period of five months in 1997. A commercially available software system is installed to monitor, analyze and store measurements obtained from the plant’s distributed control system. The software is installed in a combined-cycle, cogeneration power plant, located in Massachusetts, USA, with two Frame 7EA gas turbines in Apr. 1997. Vendor’s information such as correction and part load performance curves are utilized to calculate expected engine performance and compare it with measurements. In addition to monitoring the general condition and performance of the gas turbines, user-specified financial data is used to determine schedules for compressor washing and inlet filter replacement by balancing the associated costs with lost revenue. All measurements and calculated information are stored in databases for real-time and historical trending and tabulating. The data is analyzed ex post facto to identify salient performance and maintenance issues.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document