Method and apparatus for optimizing the operation of a turbine system under flexible loads
10544739 ยท 2020-01-28
Assignee
Inventors
- Alston Ilford Scipio (Mableton, GA, US)
- Michael Anthony Cocca (Atlanta, GA, US)
- Thomas John Freeman (Canton, GA, US)
- Michael Wesley Yarnold (Decatur, GA, US)
- Ryan Eric Obenhoff (Marietta, GA, US)
- Sanji Ekanayake (Mableton, GA)
- Douglas Corbin Warwick (Roswell, GA, US)
- Joseph Philip Klosinski (Kennesaw, GA, US)
Cpc classification
F02C3/34
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23R3/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E20/18
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
F02C3/13
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/48
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E20/16
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
F02C7/057
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01K23/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/722
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/601
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E20/14
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
F05D2270/313
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/3061
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02C6/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C3/13
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01K23/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A gas turbine system includes a compressor protection subsystem; a hibernation mode subsystem; and a control subsystem that controls the compressor subsystem and the hibernation subsystem. At partial loads on the turbine system, the compressor protection subsystem maintains an air flow through a compressor at an airflow coefficient for the partial load above a minimum flow rate coefficient where aeromechanical stresses occur in the compressor. The air fuel ratio in a combustor is maintained where exhaust gas emission components from the turbine are maintained below a predetermined component emission level while operating at partial loads.
Claims
1. A gas turbine system comprising: a compressor; a combustor; a turbine; a compressor protection subsystem; wherein the compressor protection subsystem comprises a compressor bleed line, an exhaust gas extraction line, and a blending assembly coupled to the compressor bleed line and the exhaust gas extraction line; a hibernation mode subsystem; wherein the hibernation mode subsystem comprises a compressor air overboarding line in communication with the compressor bleed line; and a control subsystem that controls the compressor protection subsystem and the hibernation mode subsystem.
2. The gas turbine system of claim 1 further comprising: a bleed control valve disposed on the compressor bleed line; and a recirculation control valve disposed on the exhaust gas extraction line.
3. The gas turbine system of claim 1 further comprising: a bleed flow sensor disposed on the compressor bleed line; a recirculation flow sensor disposed on the exhaust gas extraction line.
4. The gas turbine system of claim 1 wherein the blending assembly comprises an eductor.
5. The gas turbine system of claim 1 further comprising: an attemperation subsystem coupled to the combustor; and a heat recovery steam generator subsystem coupled to the attemperation subsystem.
6. The gas turbine system of claim 5 wherein the attemperation subsystem comprises: a working fluid source; a shaped baffle assembly; and a plurality of fogger injection nozzles coupled to the working fluid source and disposed in the shaped baffle assembly.
7. The gas turbine system of claim 6 wherein the shaped baffle assembly comprises a plurality of baffles disposed downstream from the fogger injection nozzles.
8. The gas turbine system of claim 1 further comprising: a turndown subsystem; wherein the turndown subsystem comprises a heat recovery steam generator in communication with the compressor air overboarding line; a combined cycle isotherm subsystem comprising at least a fogger nozzle; and the control subsystem that provides instructions to the turndown subsystem to maintain in airflow through the compressor an inner flow coefficient for the partial load up of a minimum flow rate coefficient where aeromechanical stresses occur in the compressor.
9. The gas turbine system of claim 8 wherein the control subsystem provides instructions to the hibernation mode subsystem to maintain an air fuel ratio in the combustor so that exhaust gas emission components from the turbine are maintained below a predetermined component emission level.
10. The gas turbine system of claim 8 wherein the control subsystem provides instructions to the combined cycle isotherm subsystem to maintain an exhaust gas temperature at an inlet of the heat recovery steam generator below a predetermined maximum inlet temperature.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood when the following detailed description is read with reference to the accompanying drawings in which like characters represent like parts throughout the drawings, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
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(15) The gas turbine 3 may include a compressor 13, a combustor 15, a turbine 17, a generator 18, an inlet guide vane (IGV) subsystem 19 and a heat recovery steam generator (heat recovery steam generator subsystem 21) subsystem 21. In operation, ambient air 20 is drawn through the IGV subsystem 19 and enters the compressor 13. The temperature, pressure and relative humidity of ambient air 20 will obviously vary. For comparative purposes, the turbine industry has established standard conditions for ambient air. The standard conditions are 59 F./15 C., 14.696 psia/1.013 bar and 60% relative humidity. The IGV subsystem 19 serves to vary the volumetric flow into the compressor 13. Compressed air from the compressor 13 enters the combustor 15 where it is mixed with fuel from fuel input 16 and combusted. Exhaust air from the combustor 15 drives the turbine 17 which in turns drives a shaft connected to the generator 18. In some systems the exhaust gases are made to flow into an heat recovery steam generator subsystem 21 which recovers heat from the exhaust gases and drives a steam turbine (not shown) to generate additional power and/or provide steam to a process such as district heating. The gas turbine system 1 also includes a compressor bleed line 25 and an exhaust gas extraction line 27 coupling the gas turbine 3 to the turndown subsystem 4. In another embodiment, an exhaust gas extraction line 28 may be provided to bypass turndown subsystem 4, and provide exhaust gasses directly to gas turbine 3. Compressor bleed line 25 and exhaust gas extraction line 27 may also be coupled to the combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 where the gasses may be blended with attemperation fluids at combined cycle input 22. The attemperation fluid may be ambient air, water, steam, any combination thereof, or any other fluid that can provide the function of regulating the temperature of gasses in the combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9.
(16) Illustrated in
(17) Illustrated in
(18) The compressor protection subsystem 5 provides the operator of the gas turbine 3 with the ability to control the performance of the system through continuous control of compressor parameters, such as the stage loading parameters and the flow coefficient of the air passing through the compressor. The stage loading parameter is a non-dimensional measure of the work extraction per stage, a high stage loading is desirable because it means fewer stages are needed to produce a required workout. The stage loading is limited by the fact that high-stage loading impacts efficiency. The stage loading parameter can be characterized on the basis of a minimum relative Cm/U (flow coefficient). The flow coefficient is the ratio of the axial velocity entering to the meaning rotor speed. It has been found that compressors and turbines work most satisfactorily if the non-dimensional axial velocity, often called flow coefficient is in a restricted range. The flow coefficient for a given stage is a characteristic of the mass flow behavior through the stage. For a given flow coefficient, the stage loading increases with an increase in blade angle of the compressor blades from the axial direction.
(19) The control of the compressor parameters enables the plant operator to run the gas turbine at lower loads in varying ambient conditions, such as cold temperatures, while avoiding the aeromechanical stresses that conventional gas turbines are subjected to at the lower temperatures. This is accomplished by controlling the inlet temperature of the air entering the compressor and the vane angle of the vanes in the IGV subsystem 19. The compressor inlet temperature is controlled using extracted exhaust gas. By controlling the temperature of the blended gasses supplied through the IGV 19 to the compressor 13 the gas turbine 3 is able to operate above the turndown restricted zone in low ambient temperatures (beyond nominal Cm/U levels) thereby protecting the compressor 13 when the gas turbine 3 is operating at low loads. Additionally, the hibernation mode subsystem seven enables the operator of a gas turbine 3 to operate in turn downloads beyond nominal CO emission limits.
(20) The customer benefits with extended turndown are increased annual production hours (availability, capacity factor) reduction in start-up shut-down cycles (reduced maintenance cost) and significant improvement in operating efficiency at this lower turndown relative to nominal under low ambient temperatures.
(21) An advantage of the compressor protection subsystem 5 described herein is that capital and maintenance costs may be reduced by reducing the overall complexity of the system used to heat the air supplied to the compressor 13. Another advantage of the compressor protection subsystem 5 described herein is that it allows the operator of a gas turbine 3 to improve the operating efficiency when using low BTU fuel gases such as in an integrated gasification combined-cycle (IGCC) operation.
(22) Illustrated in
(23) The hibernation mode subsystem 7 enables a hibernation mode by overboarding compressor discharge air to the compressor inlet and to the turbine exhaust, thereby maintaining the desired fuel air ratio (FAR) that supports emissions at a level below the maximum limits. The hibernation mode subsystem 7 may be integrated with the previously described compressor protection subsystem 5. This invention also reduces the customer's operation and maintenance costs associated with operation at very low hours/starts ratio.
(24) The hibernation mode subsystem 7 enables the operator of the gas turbine 3 to operate at an extreme low hibernation mode level of approximately 10% load with the capability to rapidly ramp load up to base load level to provide for needed spinning capacity. The hibernation mode subsystem 7 may also reduce the operation and maintenance costs associated with the operation of a gas turbine 3 at very low hours/starts ratio. The hibernation mode subsystem 7 also enables the operator of the gas turbine 3 to operate at an extreme low hibernation mode while still complying with emissions regulations. The hibernation mode subsystem 7 illustrated in this embodiment would require no design changes to the gas turbine 3 centerline or combustion systems and may be accomplished with minimal additional capital components. The hibernation mode subsystem 7 enables selectable gas turbine 3 turndown beyond nominal CO & NOx emissions limits. Additionally, the hibernation mode subsystem 7 establishes a scheme to trim air-fuel ratio and mitigate combustor lean-blow-out.
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(26) The combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 is illustrated within the double dashed outline, and the components of the combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 are illustrated as solid lines. Other components of the gas turbine system 1 are illustrated as dashed lines. In this embodiment, compressed air from the compressor 13 flows through compressor bleed line 25. As previously described, an upstream compressor bleed control valve 29 may be disposed on the compressor bleed line 25. Additionally, over boarding block valve 49, over boarding control valve 51, and over boarding flow sensor 53 may be disposed on the compressor air over boarding line 47. Additionally, Safety valve 54 may be disposed on the compressor air overboarding line 47. The compressed air may be blended with the exhaust from the turbine 17 and with attemperation fluid at combined cycle input 22. The combined compressor air, exhaust and attemperation fluid may flows through an attemperation subsystem 55, where the temperature of the combined gases may be controlled. The combined attemperated gases are made to flow into a heat recovery steam generator subsystem 21, where additional work may be extracted.
(27) Combined cycle operation requires that the exhaust gases leaving the gas turbine engine be within a specific temperature range. That is the exhaust temperature cannot be too high to avoid degrading the gas turbine exhaust duct and heat recovery steam generator 21 hardware. Further, the temperature should not fall below a certain temperature value to avoid a condition called forced cooling when thermal transients in steam turbine rotor and casing can degrade the turbine rotor. The two temperatures limits discussed above are referred to as the upper threshold isotherm and the lower threshold isotherm respectively.
(28) The attemperation subsystem 55 is an assembly that provides after-cooling with water foggers for attemperation. The attemperation subsystem 55 provides an optimized fogger arrangement in the exhaust duct of the gas turbine 3, with one or more fogger injection nozzles 57 located in the a duct. Each fogger injection nozzle 57 is provided with condensate or other working fluid from working fluid input 58 and is shielded upstream by a shaped baffle assembly 59.
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(30) The combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 provides the capability to externally manage and optimize the exhaust gas temperature entering the heat recovery steam generator 21 by means of aftercooling with attemperating water foggers.
(31) The combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 partially overcomes some of the constraints to efficiency and ability to operate at part load that is imposed by inlet gas temperature limits. These constraints can limit the output of the gas turbine 3 and overall plant efficiency at all load points. Consequently, the gas turbine 3 may be operated with exhaust gas temperature above the inlet temperature limit of the HRSG 21 during all operating modes, improving the load ramp rates and exhaust gas heat transfer to the heat recovery steam generator subsystem 21. The combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 provides a method to externally manage and optimize the temperature of the exhaust gas from the gas turbine 3 entering the heat recovery steam generator subsystem 21 by means of after-cooling with water/steam foggers for attemperation. Additionally, the combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 provides a fogger nozzle and baffle arrangement for downstream temperature uniformity and enables gas turbine customer to operate the gas turbine 3 with exhaust gas temperature above the inlet temperature limit of the heat recovery steam generator subsystem 21 during any operating mode. Use of the combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 also improves the combined cycle gas turbine plant load ramp rate and prevents a mismatch between the gas turbine 3 and the heat recovery steam generator subsystem 21 when a gas turbine 3 is uprated. Another advantage of the combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 is that it provides a means for adjusting load balance between gas turbine 3 and the combined cycle plant, with maximum steam production when power output is not required. This in turn provides the power plant operator with flexibility in some applications where additional steam is desired such as with district heating and on site cogeneration in facilities such as refineries. Other advantages are improvement of the exhaust gas heat transfer to the heat recovery steam generator subsystem 21 and the combined cycle gas turbine heat rate under part-load conditions where the gas turbine 3 is isotherm constrained. Finally, the combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9 improves emissions profile under extended turndown and the ability to uprate vintage power plants. Additional benefits include increased annual production hours (availability, capacity factor); Reduction in combined cycle gas turbine start-up shut-down cycles (reduced maintenance cost) with load balancing flexibility and improvement in part-load operating efficiency with combined cycle gas turbine uprates.
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(33) The control module 103 includes a central processing unit 105. Associated with the central processing unit 105 may be a memory component 107 an input component 109 and output component 111. The memory component 107 may include a flash disk card, a random access memory card (RAM), a read only memory (ROM), a dynamic random access memory (DRAM); asynchronous dynamic random access memory (SDRAM), or any other desired type of memory device and may be part of or separate from the control module 103. The input component 109 and the output component 111 may be combined as a single input output card associated with the control module 13. Although the input component 109 of the output component 111 are illustrated as being built into the control module 103, they may be provided as external input output modules attached to a computer network that plugs into the control module 103.
(34) Additionally control module 103 includes a communication component 113 and a power supply 115. The control module 103 processes multiple inputs 117 and provides multiple outputs 119. The control module 103 may also be coupled to a human machine interface (HMI) 121, such as a digital computer. The HMI, also referred to as man-machine interfaces (MMIs) and graphical user interface (GUIs) may include use buttons and lights to interact with the user, text displays, and graphical touch screens. Programming and monitoring software may be installed in a computer connected to the control module 103 via a communication interface. Programs implementing algorithms to control the various processes would typically be stored in the memory component 107.
(35) Databases may be stored in memory component 107. The databases stored in memory component 107 may include a compressor loading limit database that associates with each gas turbine 3 the compressor loading limits for different temperatures Ti at the compressor inlet, fuel air ratio (FAR) at the combustor and guide vane angle .
(36) The databases stored in memory component 107 may include emissions limit database that associates emission limits for different Ti, , and FAR for each gas turbine 3. The databases stored in memory component 107 may include a flow rate database that associates with each gas turbine 3 the various flow rates (Q1, Q2, Q3 etc) for different Ta, Ti, FAR, and . Other information in the databases may include compressor flow vs. emission schedules, compressor emission models, data indicating the flow rate coefficient at which aeromechanical stresses occur at the latter stages of the compressor for the specific gas turbine 3 at different ambient temperatures and varying IGV angles.
(37) With reference to
(38) Turbine Inputs 123 may include: turbine inlet temperatures; turbine exhaust temperature; and unit specific inlet temperature schedules. System inputs 125 may include: extended turndown unit specific compressor inlet temperature schedules; extraction flow rates; extraction temperatures; inlet temperature schedules; control valve positions; Safety/Block valve positions, among others. HMI inputs 127 may include: selection of a Normal Mode(Outputs-Control valves closed, Safety valves closed); or Turndown Mode(Outputs-Control valves open permissive, Block valves open permissive).
(39) On a high level, the program logic 129 may be represented as follows:
(40) TABLE-US-00001 Exhaust gas extraction Downstream compressor bleed HMI Setting block valve 43 positions control valve 31 position Normal Closed Closed Turndown Permitted to ramp open permitted to ramp open
System outputs 135 may include instructions to open and close the exhaust gas extraction block valve 43, the overboarding block valve 49, and the safety block valve 54. Additionally system outputs 135 may include instructions to set the positions of Upstream Compressor bleed control valve 29, Downstream compressor bleed control valve 31, Exhaust gas extraction (EGE) control valve 41 and overboarding control valve 51.
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(44) The combination of the compressor protection subsystem 5, the hibernation mode subsystem 7, and in the case of a combined cycle gas turbine system, the combined cycle isotherm subsystem 9, provide a plan operator with the flexibility to operate a gas turbine at very low load levels with higher efficiency than conventional systems. Additionally, the combination of subsystems provides the operator with multiple paths to changing the power output of the gas turbine system 1. By controlling the combination of the compressor inlet temperature, the fuel to air ratio at the combustor 15, and the temperature of gases at the inlet of the heat recovery steam generator subsystem 21, the operator is able to improve the efficiency of a gas turbine 3 and/or the combined cycle at a given partial load and for a given ambient temperature.
(45) The various embodiments of the gas turbine system 1 provide significant operating advantages to a gas turbine 3. For example, calculations for a representative gas turbine 3 indicate that the turndown limits may be decreased from a range of between approximately 45% to 60% load to a range of between approximately 10% to 36%, while still maintaining NOx and CO compliance. These load levels may be maintained with a measurable impact on the BTU/KWh required to operate at the particular load level.
(46) This written description uses examples to disclose the invention, including the best mode, and also to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the invention, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have structural elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they include equivalent structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal languages of the claims.