Monitoring and Control of an In-House Steam Power Plant: A Support of the Idea of Distributed Power Generation

Author(s):  
Pragyaditya Das ◽  
S Kumaran
Author(s):  
Ken Van Treuren ◽  
Nicole DeJong

Power generation is increasingly important in the turbine industry. Students need exposure to the complexities of such systems as found in this design project. This project is part of the second of a two-course thermodynamic sequence designed to provide a foundation in thermodynamics and expose the students to various power generation cycles. One way to teach students the Rankine Cycle is to involve them in the various aspects of the cycle through a design project. Students, in teams of four or five, are given the task of designing a 250 MW steam power plant based on the Rankine Cycle. Calculations are made using the software of choice, usually Engineering Equation Solver (EES). Students are required to make an oral and written presentation. In addition to the presentation of calculations and graphs, an emphasis is placed on describing the general considerations of the design problem and the presentation of the unique advantages of the design. Students gain valuable experience in system optimization and better learn to justify their design decisions. Based on student evaluations the project was well received and increased student interest in the field of power generation. However, there is a need to include an economic component to the problem, and more time must be spent in class discussing typical component operating parameters.


1978 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-113
Author(s):  
John D. Aspnes ◽  
Donald A. Pierre

2021 ◽  
Vol 61 (3) ◽  
pp. 448-455
Author(s):  
Michel Sabatini ◽  
Jan Havlík ◽  
Tomáš Dlouhý

This article deals with the integration of a rotary indirect dryer, heated by low pressure extraction steam, into the Rankine cycle. The article evaluates the power generation efficiency of a steam power plant, with an integrated indirect dryer, which combusts waste biomass with a high moisture content and is further compared to the same plant without the dryer. The benefits of the dryer’s integration are analysed in respect to various moisture contents of biomass before and after the drying. The evaluation of the power generation efficiency is based on parameters evaluated from experiments carried out on the steam-heated rotary indirect dryer, such as specific energy consumption and evaporation capacity. The dryer’s integration improves the efficiency of the cycle in comparison to a cycle without a dryer, where moist biomass is directly combusted. This improvement increases along with the difference between the moisture content before and after the drying. For the reference state, a fuel with a moisture content of 50% was dried to 20% and the efficiency rised by 4.38 %. When the fuel with a moisture content of 60% is dried to 10 %, the power generation efficiency increases by a further 10.1 %. However, the required dryer surface for drying the fuel with a moisture content of 60% to 10% is 1.9 times greater as compared to the reference state. The results of the work can be used both for the prediction of the power generation efficiency in a power plant with this type of dryer based on the moisture content in the fuel and the biomass indirect dryer design.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 537-563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao Wu ◽  
Jiong Shen ◽  
Yiguo Li ◽  
Kwang Y. Lee

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document