Axial Shift Issue Due To Governor Value
Axial Shift Issue Due To Governor Value
SY M P O S I A : 2 4 – 2 6 M AY 2 0 2 2
SHORT CO U RS E S : 2 3 M AY 2 0 2 2
Author
Ker Pin Jun Ker Pin Jun is a Machinery Engineer in ExxonMobil Singapore. He has 14
Machinery Engineer years of rotating equipment experience in refining and petrochemical
industry. Ker Pin Jun holds a Bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering
from University of Melbourne.
Ng Wei Sing Ng Wei Sing is a Lead Machinery Engineer in ExxonMobil Singapore and
Lead Machinery has 9 years of rotating equipment experience in refining and
petrochemical industry. Ng Wei Sing has a Postgraduate Doctoral degree
Engineer in Mechanical Engineering from University of Leeds.
Abstract
The governor actuator for a steam turbine was observed to be hunting and failed to maintain stable operating speed. The steam
turbine is used to drive a centrifugal compressor for H2 service in a recycle loop. The extent of speed oscillating was exaggerating
over time and caused excessive turbine axial movement. The unit was forced to shut down to prevent secondary damage due to
turbine high axial movement.
The steam turbine was overhauled approximately 9 months prior to the incident. Oil flushing was performed, lube oil was
changed out and main oil filters were replaced as part of machinery overhaul scope. The main oil filter elements were inspected
during troubleshooting of this event and were badly fouled with blackish substance.
The governor actuators were inspected and the internal filters for the oil supply line were clogged with soft, blackish substance.
Foulant analysis was performed using Energy Dispersive X-ray (EDX) which identified the main component to be Carbon. De-
gassing tank oil was drained out and observed layer of blackish substance. EDX identified the main component to be identical to
that found in main oil filter. Water sample from de-gassing tank bottom drain was tested and the pH was 3-4 (i.e. acidic).
Further troubleshooting revealed that fine carbon particles were carried over from upstream and mixing with the process gas
prior to the unit shut down for the compressor train overhaul. The presence of carbon particles had contaminated the seal oil
and control oil circuit which then clogged up the actuator internal fine filters (~40um). This case study presents the unusual
phenomenon, troubleshooting tools, recovery process and key learnings which provide user operating with similar service a
reference.
Agenda
1 Case Study Background
2 Problem Description
3 Findings
4 Analysis
5 Key Learning
Equipment General Info
Steam Turbine Details
Type: Back pressure turbine
Frame: 1U2R
Rating: 1.2MW (3 stages)
External
40um filter
Model: TM-25LP
External filter: 40um (nominal) @ oil inlet
Internal filter: 70um (nominal) @ coil inlet
Control oil press: 552kpag
Control oil flow: 3.8L/min
Problem Description
• The steam turbine governor valve actuator had failed twice in the space of two weeks.
• First failure on 11th Dec 2019 (5 days outage):
o Turbine sudden loss of speed from 8,800 RPM to 3,800 RPM. Speed gradually picked-up to close to 1st critical speed of 5,000 RPM due to compressor
load reduction.
o Speed was considerably stable prior to the loss of control, but rapid fluctuation in axial displacement was observed 1 – 2 weeks prior to the incident
• Second failure on 24th Dec 2019 (7 days outage):
o Turbine speed started to fluctuate wildly between 8,800 RPM and 11,500 RPM (max. continuous speed)
o Axial vibration swing violently between -0.15mm to +0.10mm. Abnormal sound can be heard at site
• In both events, turbine was manually shut down to prevent any secondary mechanical damage (which can be very costly to repair with long outage)
2nd outage on
1st outage on 11th Dec 2019 24th Dec 2019
4 4
3 3
Key Findings
5 6
7
6
Degassing tank – think layer of blackish substance and acidic water sample
Why carbon dust was not fully trapped by lube oil filter (10um)?
➢ Carbon dust particle size range is between 5 – 15um
➢ Carbon dust smaller than 10um can still pass through the filter and coagulate forming
bigger particle size downstream of the filter
➢ Inspection showed potential by-pass of some of the filter elements
Action Taken & Results
• Performed oil flushing prior to restart – using mesh as well as Swagelok 7um hydraulic filter
• Replaced oil filter elements
• Full replacement of lube oil with fresh oil
• Replace the governor valve actuator with tested and calibrated spare
• Modified TM-25LP governor actuator external filter to be of duplex design with dP monitoring. Online replacement is feasible.
• Steam turbine successfully restarted and governor actuator in stable and healthy operation to date.