Development of a New Hot Gas Double Axial Valve and Design Concept for a Coaxial Valve

Author(s):  
J. Kruschik

The hot gas double axial valve is a newly developed shut-off valve for high temperature and high pressure helium, which can be used in the new generation of helium cooled nuclear plants, including the modular reactor. It is the safety shut-off valve in the secondary circuit after the heat-exchanger. At first it will be used in the German project PNP (nuclear process heat for the gasification of coal), but it can also be used for the other high temperature systems such as the closed cycle nuclear gas turbine, chemical plants or for industrial processes. Its state of development, test results, and the present prototype design are discussed. A further concept for a coaxial valve will be shown, which may be of interest for certain types of modular reactors and also for closed cycle nuclear gas turbines.

Author(s):  
C. Keller ◽  
D. Schmidt

Development reports on closed-cycle gas turbines (CCGT) as proposed by Ackeret and Keller (AK system) and promoted mainly by Escher Wyss Ltd., Zurich, Switzerland, and Gutenhoffnungshütte (GHH), Germany, have been presented since 1945 at ASME meetings about every five years (1). This, the sixth paper, reports on the operating experience with some newer fossil-fuel fired plants made by different manufacturers and gives the study results of European designers for nuclear gas turbines which can be built already with today’s technology for the 600 to 1000-Mw range. The special physical properties of air and helium and their influence on plant design are discussed. The combination of a CCGT and a high-temperature reactor offers many possibilities for simplifications of nuclear plants and lowering capital costs.


1978 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. F. McDonald

With soaring fuel costs and diminishing clean fuel availability, the efficiency of the industrial gas turbine must be improved by utilizing the exhaust waste heat by either incorporating a recuperator or by co-generation, or both. In the future, gas turbines for power generation should be capable of operation on fuels hitherto not exploited in this prime-mover, i.e., coal and nuclear fuel. The recuperative gas turbine can be used for open-cycle, indirect cycle, and closed-cycle applications, the latter now receiving renewed attention because of its adaptability to both fossil (coal) and nuclear (high temperature gas-cooled reactor) heat sources. All of these prime-movers require a viable high temperature heat exchanger for high plant efficiency. In this paper, emphasis is placed on the increasingly important role of the recuperator and the complete spectrum of recuperative gas turbine applications is surveyed, from lightweight propulsion engines, through vehicular and industrial prime-movers, to the large utility size nuclear closed-cycle gas turbine. For each application, the appropriate design criteria, types of recuperator construction (plate-fin or tubular etc.), and heat exchanger material (metal or ceramic) are briefly discussed.


Author(s):  
Neil Goldstein ◽  
Carlos A. Arana ◽  
Fritz Bien ◽  
Jamine Lee ◽  
John Gruninger ◽  
...  

The feasibility of an innovative minimally intrusive sensor for monitoring the hot gas stream at the turbine inlet in high performance aircraft gas turbine engines was demonstrated. The sensor uses passive fiber-optical probes and a remote readout device to collect and analyze the spatially resolved spectral signature of the hot gas in the combustor/turbine flowpaths. Advanced information processing techniques are used to extract the average temperature, temperature pattern factor, and chemical composition on a sub-second time scale. Temperatures and flame composition were measured in a variety of combustion systems including a high pressure, high temperature combustion cell. Algorithms for real-time temperature measurements were developed and demonstrated. This approach should provide a real-time temperature profile, temperature pattern factor, and chemical species sensing capability for multi-point monitoring of high temperature and high pressure flow at the combustor exit with application as an engine development diagnostic tool, and ultimately, as a real-time active control component for high performance gas turbines.


Author(s):  
Alexander Stankowski

Hot gas path components of modern Industrial Gas Turbines (IGT) are exposed to extreme thermal, mechanical and chemical loading that ultimately leads to their deterioration. Modern GT designs provide for safe operation for a certain operation period. Higher firing temperatures and changing machine loads as a result of the deregulated markets call for highly sophisticated part designs and the use of cost-intensive superalloys. As the lifetime of critical parts is not infinite, they are reconditioned periodically or replaced to regain efficiency losses and to mitigate the risk of unscheduled outages due to hot gas path (HGP) failures. This paper presents advanced thermochemical preparation treatments that form the basis for the subsequent structural repairs, such as high temperature brazing. Before executing any repair step, coated components must be stripped of the consumed and degenerated coatings. Not all of the many techniques that are commonly used can guarantee reproducible and complete removal without damaging the substrate. Recently improved thermochemical techniques, such as a combination of advanced Chemical Stripping and Salt Bath Cleaning, enables the OEM to obtain clean components at low unit costs and for short processing times. In previous approaches, CrF2- and PTFE-based processes were used to clean surfaces and, principally, cracks from oxide scales before welding or brazing was carried out. These preparation techniques were indispensable for reworking superalloys, which cannot be cleaned sufficiently using conventional methods such as exposure under reducing atmospheres at high temperatures. Today, the high versatility of the “Dynamic Subatmospheric Fluoride Ion Cleaning” process (FIC) enables the OEM to run precisely tailored processes, allowing complete freedom to adjust the chemical activity of the gas phase and in so doing fulfil the specific conditions for any superalloy being reworked, even taking into account the varying grade of degradation sustained during service exposure. Weld repairs on superalloys are very sensitive to hot cracking, and high temperature brazing has established itself as a successful method for overcoming this problem. Furthermore, the intensively FIC cleaned surfaces can be regarded as the most important condition to enable a high quality bonding. Other key advantages of braze repairs are the uniform heat input that is possible, the high shape tolerance and the fact that multiple cracks can be simultaneously repaired. In addition, the brazing heat treatment allows controlled adjustment of the microstructural properties. Besides the economic benefits of the treatment, the brazed parts show excellent results in respect of their mechanical integrity. A schematic presentation of the repair sequence described in this paper is shown in the appendix (Fig. 17).


Author(s):  
Colin F. McDonald

With the capability of burning a variety of fossil fuels, giving high thermal efficiency, and operating with low emissions, the gas turbine is becoming a major prime-mover for a wide spectrum of applications. Almost three decades ago two experimental projects were undertaken in which gas turbines were actually operated with heat from nuclear reactors. In retrospect, these systems were ahead of their time in terms of technology readiness, and prospects of the practical coupling of a gas turbine with a nuclear heat source towards the realization of a high efficiency, pollutant free, dry-cooled power plant has remained a long-term goal, which has been periodically studied in the last twenty years. Technology advancements in both high temperature gas-cooled reactors, and gas turbines now make the concept of a nuclear gas turbine plant realizable. Two possible plant concepts are highlighted in this paper, (1) a direct cycle system involving the integration of a closed-cycle helium gas turbine with a modular high temperature gas cooled reactor (MHTGR), and (2) the utilization of a conventional and proven combined cycle gas turbine, again with the MHTGR, but now involving the use of secondary (helium) and tertiary (air) loops. The open cycle system is more equipment intensive and places demanding requirements on the very high temperature heat exchangers, but has the merit of being able to utilize a conventional combined cycle turbo-generator set. In this paper both power plant concepts are put into perspective in terms of categorizing the most suitable applications, highlighting their major features and characteristics, and identifying the technology requirements. The author would like to dedicate this paper to the late Professor Karl Bammert who actively supported deployment of the closed-cycle gas turbine for several decades with a variety of heat sources including fossil, solar, and nuclear systems.


2019 ◽  
Vol 969 ◽  
pp. 34-40
Author(s):  
R. Ravibharath ◽  
K. Devakumaran ◽  
V. Muthupandi

Ni based super alloy 617 is widely used in transition liners in both aircraft and land-based gas turbines, power plant applications because of its high temperature strength, oxidation resistance and creep properties. Ni based alloys are highly susceptible to hot cracking like solidification and liquation racking issues. In this present work, the susceptibility of alloy 617 to solidification cracking is studied based on the varestraint test. Results of this weldability test proved that in addition to the solidification cracking susceptibility alloy 617 is prone to liquation cracking also. Keywords: Varestraint test, Alloy 617, Solidification cracking, Liquidation cracking.


1973 ◽  
Vol 95 (4) ◽  
pp. 333-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Y. Lee ◽  
W. E. Young ◽  
G. Vermes

A number of commercially available chemical additives for utilization in modern high temperature gas turbines were evaluated for their corrosion and deposit inhibiting characteristics. The evaluation was made in pressurized passages which simulate conditions of operating gas turbines. Initial screening tests of 10 hr each were made with a contaminant level of 50 ppm vanadium, and promising additives were further tested for times up to 300 hr at the more realistic contaminant level of a No. 3 GT fuel. Characteristics of the deposits were studied with x-ray diffraction and ash fusion tests. Corrosion rates for various alloys tested with treated fuel were measured and compared to test results obtained with untreated fuel. Conclusions were drawn as to the type of elements most effective in reducing corrosion caused by combinations of vanadium and sodium. The role of elements in preventing deposit buildup is also assessed.


2011 ◽  
Vol 275 ◽  
pp. 117-120
Author(s):  
Keun Bong Yoo ◽  
Han Sang Lee ◽  
Kyu So Song

Gas turbine components operated by hot combustion gas undergo material degradation due to the thermal cycle by daily startup and shutdown. The failure mechanism of the hot gas components is accompanied by degradation in the properties of high temperature strength and creep rupture time. Many hot gas components in gas turbines are made of Ni-based superalloy because of their high temperature performance. In this work, we survey the time and temperature dependent degradation of Ni-based superalloy. We prepared specimens from Inconel738LC that were then exposed at 871~982°C in 1,000~5,000hours. We carried out stress-rupture tests and microstructural investigation.


Author(s):  
H. Griepentrog ◽  
P. Sackarendt

This paper is a preliminary optimization study showing that fossil-fired closed-cycle gas turbines — an existing technology — can be applied to the vaporization of LNG yielding efficiency values of 58 percent and overall plant efficiencies of more than 80 percent. Here not only the high temperature potential of gas turbines is used, but also the low temperature potential.


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