EMERGENCY SHUT-OFF DEVICE
20200240284 ยท 2020-07-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y10T137/8671
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F16K31/52483
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D21/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D17/145
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/091
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/021
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D21/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/31
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D21/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F01D21/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An emergency shut-off device shuts off supply of control oil to a trip-and-throttle valve of a steam turbine and closes the trip-and-throttle valve in an emergency. The emergency shut-off device includes: a cylinder; a piston that slides into the cylinder; a spring that applies a biasing force to the piston; a plurality of piston valves disposed on the piston; and a plurality of chambers that are formed by the piston valves. The control oil is supplied to and drained from the plurality of chambers, and a sliding surface of each of the piston valves has a groove to leak the control oil in a corresponding one of the chambers to another one of the chambers that is adjacent to the corresponding chamber in an axis direction.
Claims
1-5. (canceled)
6. An emergency shut-off device that shuts off supply of control oil to a trip-and-throttle valve of a steam turbine and closes the trip-and-throttle valve in an emergency, the emergency shut-off device comprising: a cylinder; a piston that slides into the cylinder; a spring that applies a biasing force to the piston; a plurality of piston valves disposed on the piston; and a plurality of chambers that are formed by the piston valves, wherein the control oil is supplied to and drained from the plurality of chambers, and a sliding surface of each of the piston valves has a groove to leak the control oil in a corresponding one of the chambers to another one of the chambers that is adjacent to the corresponding chamber in an axis direction.
7. The emergency shut-off device according to claim 6, wherein the groove is a spiral groove formed on the sliding surface of each of the piston valves.
8. The emergency shut-off device according to claim 6, wherein the groove is a linear groove formed on the sliding surface of each of the piston valves and extending along an axis direction of the piston.
9. The emergency shut-off device according to claim 6, wherein a depth of the groove is 1.0 mm or less.
10. The emergency shut-off device according to claim 1, wherein the piston includes; a first piston; and a second piston, wherein, when the first piston moves from a normal position during normal operation to an emergency position, the second piston moves from a normal position during normal operation to an emergency position in an interlocked fashion, and the plurality of chambers includes: a movement chamber that is formed by the piston valve of the first piston, and drains the control oil during the emergency to move the first piston from the normal position to the emergency position; and a trip-and-throttle valve chamber that is formed by the piston valve of the second piston, supplies the control oil to the trip-and-throttle valve when the second piston is at the normal position, and drains the control oil from the trip-and-throttle valve when the second piston is in the emergency position.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
[0046]
[0047]
[0048]
[0049]
[0050]
[0051]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0052] Hereinafter, embodiments of an emergency shut-off device according to the present invention will be described. with reference to
Example 1
[0053] A trip system having an emergency shut-off device according to this example is illustrated in
[0054] The trip system illustrated in
[0055] Note that the emergency shut-off device 10A according to this example includes as constituents a cylinder 11; a trip piston 12 (first piston) and a trip pilot valve 17 (second piston) which are pistons sliding in the cylinder 11; springs 15 and 22 applying biasing forces to the trip piston 12 and the trip pilot valve 17; piston valves 14, and 19 to 21 disposed on the trip piston 12 and the trip pilot valve 17; and chambers 24, and 26a to 26d formed by the piston valves 14, and 19 to 21, and through which control oil is supplied and drained.
[0056] When the trip piston 12 moves from a position in normal operation (normal position) to a position in an emergency (emergency position), a cam 16 turns, which disengages the end of an end rod 18d from a latch portion 16b. As a result, the biasing force of the spring 22 moves the trip pilot valve 17 from a position in normal operation to a position in an emergency in an interlocked fashion.
[0057] The chamber 24 (movement chamber) is formed by the piston valve 14 of the trip piston 12. When the control oil is drained from a port 23 in an emergency, the biasing force of the spring 15 moves the trip piston 12 from the position in normal operation to the position in an emergency.
[0058] The chamber 26b (governor valve chamber) is formed by the piston valve 19 and the piston valve 20 of the trip pilot valve 17. When the trip pilot valve 17 is at the position in normal operation, the chamber 26b connects a port 25b and a port 25c to each other to drain the control oil from the GV 32. When the trip pilot valve 17 is at the position in an emergency, the chamber 26b connects the port 25c and a port 25d to each other to supply the control oil to the GV 32 (see
[0059] The chamber 26c (trip-and-throttle valve chamber) is formed by the piston valve 20 and the piston valve 21 of the trip pilot valve 17. When the trip pilot valve 17 is at the position in normal operation, the chamber 26c connects the port 25d and a port 25e to supply the control oil to the TTV 31. When the trip pilot valve 17 is at the position in an emergency, the chamber 26c connects the port 25e and a port 25f to each other to drain the control oil from the TTV 31 (see
[0060] The control oil used in the emergency shut-off device 10A of such a trip system may stagnate or deteriorate, and cause sludge, which clogs the sliding surfaces of the piston valves 14, and 19 to 21 of the trip piston 12 and the trip pilot valve 17 and causes them to adhere to the cylinder 11, resulting in malfunctioning.
[0061] For this reason, in the emergency shut-off device 10A according to this example, as also illustrated in
[0062] Graphs illustrated in
[0063] The data indicated by Original in
[0064] In addition, in the test conditions, the temperatures T of the control oil supplied were of two kinds: T=47 to 49 C. (temperature in the normal supply range) and T=about 60 C. (temperature of use limit), and the pressures P0 of the control oil supplied were of two kinds: P0=9 kgf/cm.sup.2 and P0=14 kgf/cm.sup.2. Combining these conditions, the test was performed in four conditions in total. Note that the pressure P0 is the pressure at a pressure gauge 41 illustrated in
[0065] Then, measured as test items were the amount of oil leakage (
[0066] As illustrated in the graph of
[0067] On the other hand, as illustrated in the graphs of
[0068] As described above, if the depth R of the spiral groove 51 is about 1.0 mm or less, the pressure loss between before and after the emergency shut-off device 10A can be suppressed to be smaller than or equal to 1%. In other words, the depth R of the spiral groove 51 only needs to be 1.0 mm or less.
[0069] Note that as illustrated in
[0070] In addition, all the piston valves 14, and 19 to 21 do not have to have the same groove. The spiral groove 51 and the linear grooves 52 may be combined such that some piston valves have the spiral groove 51, and the other piston valves have the linear grooves. Further, the spiral grooves 51 and the liner grooves 52 may have different depths within the range of 1.0 mm or less.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0071] One or more embodiments of the present invention is suitable to steam turbines for driving compressors or the like.
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
[0072] 10A emergency shut-off device [0073] 12 trip piston [0074] 14 piston valve [0075] 15 spring [0076] 17 trip pilot valve [0077] 19, 20, 21 piston valve [0078] 22 spring [0079] 31 TTV [0080] 51 spiral groove [0081] 52 linear groove
Although the disclosure has been described with respect to only a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that various other embodiments may be devised without departing from the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.