Thermal Power Plants: CH1002 Energy Management in Chemical Industries
Thermal Power Plants: CH1002 Energy Management in Chemical Industries
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
Rankine cycle
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
Supercritical Technology
"Supercritical" is a thermodynamic expression describing the state of a substance where there is no clear distinction between the liquid and the gaseous phase (i.e. they are a homogenous fluid). Water reaches this state at a pressure above 221 bar Up to an operating pressure of around 190 bar in the evaporator part of the boiler, the cycle is sub-critical. This means, that there is a non-homogeneous mixture of water and steam in the evaporator part of the boiler. In this case a drum-type boiler is used because the steam needs to be separated from water in the drum of the boiler before it is superheated and led into the turbine. Above an operating pressure of 221 bar in the evaporator part of the boiler, the cycle is supercritical. The cycle medium is a single phase fluid with homogeneous properties and there is no need to separate steam from water in a drum. Once-through boilers are therefore used in supercritical cycles.
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
NTPC
With 15 coal based power stations, NTPC is the largest thermal power generating company in the country. The company has a coal based installed capacity of 24,885 MW. The total installed capacity of the company is 31134 MW with 15 coal based and 7 gas based stations, located across the country. Units sizes: 200 MW, 500 MW NTPC has been operating its plants at high efficiency levels. Although the company has 18.79% of the total national capacity it contributes 28.60% of total power generation due to its focus on high efficiency.
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
Gas Turbines
Air enters the compressor at atmospheric pressure and is compressed to around 10-20 bar. It is then mixed with fuel in the combustion chamber, producing hot combustion gases that do work on the turbine. The exhaust gases are vented to the atmosphere.
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
Gas turbines
In a gas turbine, the gaseous products of combustion are typically around 1300oC. The turbine blades are covered by a ceramic coating of low thermal conductivity. Gas turbines for electricity generation originally evolved from jet turbine engines. Since the working fluid does not change phase, a condenser is not involved in the process, so the overall size and cost of a gas turbine plant is less than that of an equivalent steam plant. Gas turbines operate in a Brayton (or Joule) cycle. It is an open cycle but is equivalent to a closed cycle in the sense that the atmosphere acts as a heat exchanger that cools the air entering the combustion chamber.
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
CCGT
The overall efficiency of a gas turbine can be increased by feeding the heat of the exhaust gases into a steam power plant. The combination of Brayton cycle and a Rankine cycle is called a combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT). The net effect is equivalent to that of a single cycle operating between the upper temperature of a Brayton cycle and the lower temperature of a Rankine cycle. Efficiencies of up to 60% are typical in CCGT plants.
20-July-2010 M Subramanian
20-July-2010 M Subramanian