Gas turbine efficiency and regulation speed improvements using supplementary air system continuous and storage systems and methods of using the same
09803548 · 2017-10-31
Assignee
Inventors
- Robert J. Kraft (Tequesta, FL)
- Scott Auerbach (Jupiter, FL, US)
- Peter A. Sobieski (Seabrook, TX, US)
- Sergio A. Arias-Quintero (Jupiter, FL, US)
Cpc classification
F05D2270/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P2060/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T50/60
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
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
F02C7/143
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E60/16
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
F02B29/0443
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01C13/04
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
F01K23/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B67/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C9/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/224
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2270/05
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02C6/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/224
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01K23/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01K23/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C7/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The present invention discloses a novel apparatus and methods for augmenting the power of a gas turbine engine, improving gas turbine engine operation, and reducing the response time necessary to meet changing demands of a power plant. Improvements in power augmentation and engine operation include additional heated compressed air injection, steam injection, water recovery, exhaust tempering, fuel heating, and stored heated air injection.
Claims
1. A method of operating a gas turbine engine having power augmentation and exhaust gas tempering capability comprising: operating a gas turbine engine comprising a compressor, a compressor discharge case, at least one combustor, and a turbine, fluidly connected to each other; pressurizing air using a supplemental compressor which is driven by a fueled engine; and bypassing a final stage of the supplemental compressor and directing a portion of an air supply from a non-final stage of the supplemental compressor to an exhaust region of the gas turbine engine when reduced power from the gas turbine engine is desired so as to reduce exhaust temperature from the gas turbine engine; and directing air from the final stage to the compressor discharge case for injection into the gas turbine engine upstream of the one or more combustors so as to increase power from the gas turbine engine.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the non-final stage is a first stage.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the supplemental compressor has cooling between each stage.
4. The method of claim 1 further comprising closing a valve adjacent the non-final stage.
5. The method of claim 4 further comprising opening a tempering valve to direct the air out of an intercooler and towards the exhaust region.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the exhaust region has a manifold for distributing the air from the supplemental compressor.
7. A power augmentation and exhaust cooling system for a gas turbine engine comprising: a supplemental compressor coupled to a fueled engine; a first conduit fluidly connecting a non-final stage of the supplemental compressor to an exhaust region of the gas turbine engine; a second conduit fluidly connecting a final stage of the supplemental compressor to a compressor discharge case of the gas turbine engine; one or more valves regulating flow between the supplemental compressor and the exhaust region; wherein air flowing through the first conduit bypasses the final stage.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the non-final stage is a first stage.
9. The system of claim 7, wherein the one or more valves comprises a tempering valve for regulating flow of air from the non-final stage of the supplemental compressor and to the exhaust region.
10. The system of claim 9 further comprising a valve for regulating flow to subsequent stages of the supplemental compressor.
11. The system of claim 7, wherein air from the non-final stage is routed to a manifold proximate the exhaust region to improve part load efficiency.
12. The system of claim 7, wherein air flow from the supplemental compressor to the compressor discharge case provides for power augmentation to the gas turbine engine.
13. The system of claim 7, wherein air flow to the exhaust region is utilized to cool a temperature of combustion gases passing through the exhaust region of the gas turbine engine.
14. A method of selectively operating a gas turbine engine in each of a power augmentation mode and an exhaust tempering mode, the gas turbine engine comprising a compressor fluidly coupled to a compressor discharge case, a combustor, and a turbine, the method comprising: locating a manifold in an exhaust region of the turbine; using a fueled engine to drive a supplemental compressor; the supplemental compressor having at least a first stage, an inner stage downstream from the first stage, and a last stage downstream from the inner stage; fluidly coupling the supplemental compressor to an intercooler; operating the gas turbine engine in the exhaust tempering mode by: closing a valve between the inner stage and the intercooler to preclude substantially all air compressed by the first stage and cooled by the intercooler from reaching the inner stage, and opening a gas tempering valve between the intercooler and the manifold to route air compressed by the first stage and cooled by the intercooler to the manifold; then operating the gas turbine engine in the power augmentation mode by opening the valve and closing the gas tempering valve to route air compressed by each of the first, the inner, and the last stage and cooled by the intercooler to the compressor discharge case.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the inner stage is adjacent the first stage.
16. The method of claim 14, wherein the manifold is located inside a heat recovery steam generator.
17. A method of operating a gas turbine engine having power augmentation and exhaust gas tempering capability comprising: operating a gas turbine engine comprising a compressor, a compressor discharge case, at least one combustor, and a turbine, fluidly connected to each other; pressurizing air using a supplemental compressor which is driven by a fueled engine, the supplemental compressor having a downstream stage and an upstream stage, the downstream stage being downstream of the upstream stage; bypassing the downstream stage and directing a portion of an air supply from the upstream stage of the supplemental compressor to an exhaust region of the gas turbine engine when reduced power from the gas turbine engine is desired so as to reduce exhaust temperature from the gas turbine engine; and directing air compressed by each of the upstream stage and the downstream stage to the compressor discharge case for injection into the gas turbine engine upstream of the one or more combustors so as to increase power from the gas turbine engine.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention is described in detail below with reference to the attached drawing figures, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(19) The components of one embodiment of the present invention are shown in
(20) This embodiment further includes a recuperator 30, which is a heat exchanger that receives the exhaust gas 32 from the fueled engine 20 and the compressed air 26 from the supplemental compressor 22. Flow of compressed air from the supplemental compressor 22 to the recuperator 30 is controlled by the recuperator flow control valve 44. Within the recuperator 30, the hot exhaust gas 32 heats the compressed air 26 and then exits the recuperator 30 as substantially cooler exhaust gas 34. At the same time in the recuperator 30, the compressed air 26 absorbs heat from the exhaust gas 32 and then exits the recuperator 30 as substantially hotter compressed air 36 than when it entered the recuperator 30. The substantially hotter compressed air 36 is then discharged from the recuperator 30 into the combustion case 14 of the gas turbine system 1 where it becomes an addition to the mass flow through the turbine 16.
(21) The cooler exhaust gas 34 is then discharged to atmosphere. A selective catalytic reduction (“SCR”) device (not shown) of the type known in the art, can be inserted before, in the middle of, or after the recuperator 30 to achieve the most desirable condition for the SCR function. Alternately, after the SCR device, the cooler exhaust gas 34 can be injected into the exhaust gas 38 of the turbine 16 as shown in
(22) It turns out that gasoline, diesel, natural gas, or biofuel and similar reciprocating engines are not sensitive to back pressure, so putting the recuperator 30, on the fueled engine 20 does not cause a measurable effect on the performance of the fueled engine 20. This is significant because other heat recovery systems, such as the HRSGs used in the exhaust of a typical gas turbine power plants, create a significant power loss all of the time, independent of whether a power augmentation system is in use or not.
(23) The power from the fueled engine 20 is used to drive the intercooled compressor 22. If the installation does include a HS G and a steam turbine, the auxiliary heat from the engine jacket, oil cooler and turbocharger on the fueled engine 20 can be transferred into the steam cycle of the steam turbine via the HSRG (typically the low pressure and temperature condensate line) Likewise, heat removed by the intercooler heat exchanger 28 from the air as it is compressed in the multistage supplemental compressor 22 can be transferred into the steam cycle in a similar manner, prior to the compressed air being cooled by the cooling tower, to lower the temperature of the compressed air to the desired temperature prior to entering the subsequent compression stage of the supplemental compressor 22. If an auxiliary gas turbine is used as the fueled engine 20 instead of a reciprocating engine, lower emission rates will be achievable, which will allow emission permitting even in the strictest environmental areas. Also, if the auxiliary gas turbine is used as the fueled engine 20, the exhaust gas from the auxiliary gas turbine can be piped directly to the exhaust bleed pipes of the existing gas turbine system 1 described above, thus avoiding the cost and maintenance of an additional SCR device.
(24) When peaking with this system, the gas turbine system 1 will most likely be down in power output and flow (assuming that the peaking is needed in the summer when higher ambient air temperatures reduce total mass flow through the gas turbine system 1 which in turn reduces power output of the gas turbine system 1 as a whole, and the supplemental compressor 22 will just bring the air mass flow through the gas turbine system 1 back up to where the flow would have been on a cooler day (i.e. a day on which the full rated power of the gas turbine system 1 could be achieved).
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(26) The compressed air 26 flowing from the supplemental compressor 22 is forced to flow to the mixer 58 as opposed to towards the intercooler heat exchanger 28 because the air inlet valve 56, which controls air flow exiting the intercooler heat exchanger 28, is closed. The compressed air 26 flowing from the outlet of the supplemental compressor 22 is mixed in the mixer 58 with the compressed air exiting the air storage tank 50 and introduced to the recuperator 30 where it absorbs heat from the exhaust gas of the fueled engine 20 before being introduced into the combustion case 14 using the process described below. As those skilled in the art will readily appreciate, for thermal efficiency purposes, the recuperator 30 would ideally be a counter-flow heat exchanger, since that would allow the maximum amount of heat from the exhaust 32 to be transferred to the compressed air exiting the air storage tank 50. Alternately, if the recuperator 30 is made up of one or more cross-flow heat exchangers, it can have a first stage, which is a first cross-flow heat exchanger, followed by a second stage, which is a second cross-flow heat exchanger. In this configuration, where the exhaust 32 first enters the first stage of the recuperator, is partially cooled, then flows to the second stage of the recuperator. At the same time, the compressed air exiting the air storage tank 50 first enters the second stage of the recuperator 30, where additional heat is extracted from the partially cooled exhaust 32, thereby “pre-heating” the compressed air. The compressed air then flows to the first stage of the recuperator 30 where it is heated by exhaust 32 that has not yet been partially cooled, prior to flowing to the mixer 58 to join the air flowing from the supplemental compressor 22. In this case, the “two stage” recuperator acts more like a counter-flow heat exchanger, yielding higher thermal efficiency in the heating of the compressed air.
(27) As those skilled in the art will readily appreciate, since the air being compressed in the supplemental compressor 22 is bypassing the intercooler heat exchanger 28 due to the bypass valve 48 being open, the compressed air exiting the supplemental compressor 22 retains some of the heat of compression, and when mixed with the compressed air flowing from the air storage tank 50, will increase the temperature of the mixed air so that when the mixed air enters the recuperator 30, it is hotter than it would be if only compressed air from the air storage tank 50 was being fed into the recuperator 30. Likewise, if the air exiting the air storage tank 50 is first preheated in a “second stage” of the recuperator as described above prior to entering the mixer 58, an even hotter mixture of compressed air will result, which may be desirable under some conditions.
(28) As the combustion turbine system 1 continues to be operated in this manner, the pressure of the compressed air in the air storage tank 50 decreases. If the pressure of the compressed air in the air storage tank 50 reaches the pressure of the air in the combustion case 14, compressed air will stop flowing from the air storage tank 50 into the gas turbine system 1. To prevent this from happening, as the pressure of the compressed air in the air storage tank 50 approaches the pressure of the air in the combustion case 14, the fluid control valve 60 remains closed, and the hydraulic pump 54 begins pumping a fluid, such as water, from the hydraulic fluid tank 52 into the air storage tank 50 at a pressure high enough to drive the compressed air therein out of the air storage tank 50, thus allowing essentially all of the compressed air in the air storage tank to be delivered to the combustion case 14.
(29) As those skilled in the art will readily appreciate, if additional compressor stages, or high pressure compressor stages, are added separate from the supplemental compressor 22 driven by the fueled engine 20, then, if desired, air from the gas turbine combustion case 14 can be bled and allowed to flow in reverse of the substantially hotter compressed air 36 as bleed air from the gas turbine combustion case 14 and take the place of air from the separately fueled engine 20 driven supplemental compressor 22. In this case, the bleed air could be cooled in the intercooler heat exchanger 28, or a cooling tower, and then delivered to the inlet of the high pressure stages of the supplemental compressor 22. This may be especially desirable if low turn down capability is desired, as the bleed air results in additional gas turbine power loss, and the drive system for the high pressure stages of the supplemental compressor 22 can driven by an electric motor, consuming electrical power generated by the gas turbine system 1, which also results in additional gas turbine power loss. As those skilled in the art will readily appreciate, this is not an operating mode that would be desirable during periods when supplemental power production from the gas turbine system is desired.
(30) According to preferred embodiments, independent of whether or not the hydraulic system is used, when the air stops flowing from the air storage tank 50, the supplemental compressor 22 can continue to run and deliver power augmentation to the gas turbine system 1. According to other preferred embodiments, such as the one shown in
(31) The air inlet valve 56, the air outlet valve 46, the bypass valve 48, and the supplemental flow control valve 44, are operated to obtain the desired operating conditions of the gas turbine system 1. For example, if it is desired to charge the air storage tank 50 with compressed air, the air outlet valve 46, the bypass valve 48 and the supplemental flow control valve 44 are closed, the air inlet valve 56 is opened and the fueled engine 20 is used to drive the supplemental compressor 22. As air is compressed in the supplemental compressor 22, it is cooled by the intercooler heat exchanger 28 because the bypass valve 48 is closed, forcing the compressed air to flow through the intercooler heat exchanger 28. Air exiting the supplemental compressor 22 then flows through the air inlet valve 56 and into the air storage tank 50. Likewise, if it is desired to discharge compressed air from the air storage tank 50 and into the combustion case 14 the air outlet valve 46, the bypass valve 48 and the supplemental flow control valve 44 are opened, and the air inlet valve 56 can be closed, and the fueled engine 20 can be used to drive the supplemental compressor 22.
(32) As air is compressed in the supplemental compressor 22, it heats up due to the heat of compression, and it is not cooled in the intercooler heat exchanger because bypass valve 48 is open, thereby bypassing the intercooler heat exchanger. Compressed air from the air storage tank 50 then flows through the mixer 58 where it is mixed with hot air from the supplemental compressor 22 and then flows to the recuperator 30 where it absorbs heat transferred to the recuperator 30 from the exhaust gas 32 of the fueled engine 20 and then flows on to the combustion case 14. In the event that all of the airflow from the supplemental compressor 22 is not needed by the gas turbine system 1, this embodiment can be operated in a hybrid mode where the some of the air flowing from the supplemental compressor 22 flows to the mixer 58 and some of the air flow from the supplemental compressor 22 flows through the intercooler heat exchanger 28 and then through the air inlet valve 56 and into the air storage tank 50.
(33) As those skilled in the art will readily appreciate, the preheated air mixture could be introduced into the combustion turbine at other locations, depending on the desired goal. For example, the preheated air mixture could be introduced into the turbine 16 to cool components therein, thereby reducing or eliminating the need to extract bleed air from the compressor to cool these components. Of course, if this were the intended use of the preheated air mixture, the mixture's desired temperature would be lower, and the mixture ratio in the mixer 58 would need to be changed accordingly, with consideration as to how much heat, if any, is to be added to the preheated air mixture by the recuperator 30 prior to introducing the compressed air mixture into the cooling circuit(s) of the turbine 16. Note that for this intended use, the preheated air mixture could be introduced into the turbine 16 at the same temperature at which the cooling air from the compressor 10 is typically introduced into the TCLA system of the turbine 16, or at a cooler temperature to enhance overall combustion turbine efficiency (since less TCLA cooling air would be required to cool the turbine components).
(34) It is to be understood that when the air storage tank 50 has hydraulic fluid in it prior to the beginning of a charging cycle to add compressed air to the air storage tank 50, the fluid control valve 60 is opened so that as compressed air flows into the air storage tank 50 it drives the hydraulic fluid therein out of the air storage tank 50, through the fluid control valve 60, and back into the hydraulic fluid tank 52. By controlling the pressure and temperature of the air entering the turbine system 1, the gas turbine system's turbine 16 can be operated at increased power because the mass flow of the gas turbine system 1 is effectively increased, which among other things, allows for increased fuel flow into the gas turbine's combustor 12. This increase in fuel flow is similar to the increase in fuel flow associated with cold day operation of the gas turbine system 1 where an increased mass flow through the entire gas turbine system 1 occurs because the ambient air density is greater than it is on a warmer (normal) day.
(35) During periods of higher energy demand, the air flowing from the air storage tank 50 and supplemental compressor 22 may be introduced to the gas turbine system 1 in a manner that offsets the need to bleed cooling air from the compressor 10, thereby allowing more of the air compressed in the compressor 10 to flow through the combustor 12 and on to the turbine 16, thereby increasing the net available power of the gas turbine system 1. The output of the gas turbine 16 is very proportional to the mass flow rate through the gas turbine system 1, and the system described above, as compared to the prior art patents, delivers higher flow rate augmentation to the gas turbine 16 with the same air storage volume and the same supplemental compressor size, when the two are used simultaneously to provide compressed air, resulting in a hybrid system that costs much less than the price of prior art systems, while providing comparable levels of power augmentation.
(36) The supplemental compressor 22 increases the pressure of the ambient air 24 through at least one stage of compression, which is then cooled in the intercooler heat exchanger 28, further compressed in a subsequent stage of the supplemental compressor 22, and then after-cooled in the intercooler heat exchanger 28 (where the compressed air exiting the last stage of the supplemental compressor 22 is then after-cooled in the same intercooler heat exchanger 28), and then the cooled, compressed, high pressure air is delivered to the air storage tank 50 via the open air inlet valve 56 and the inlet manifold 62, and is stored in the air storage tank 50.
(37) As the pressurized air flowing through the intercooler heat exchanger 28 is cooled, the heat transferred therefrom can be used to heat water in the H SG to improve the efficiency of the steam turbine. An alternate method to cool the compressed air in the intercooler heat exchanger 28 is to use relatively cool water from the steam cycle (not shown) on a combined cycle plant. In this configuration, the water would flow into the intercooler heat exchanger 28 and pick up the heat that is extracted from the compressed air from the supplemental compressor 22, and the then warmer water would exit the intercooler heat exchanger 28 and flow back to the steam cycle. With this configuration, heat is captured during both the storage cycle described in this paragraph, and the power augmentation cycle described below.
(38) According to preferred embodiments, the air storage tank 50 is above-ground, preferably on a barge, skid, trailer or other mobile platform and is adapted or configured to be easily installed and transported. The additional components, excluding the gas turbine system 1, should add less than 20,000 square feet, preferably less than 15,000 square feet, and most preferably less than 10,000 square feet to the overall footprint of the power plant. A continuous augmentation system of the present invention takes up 1% of the footprint of a combined cycle plant and delivers from three to five times the power per square foot as compared to the rest of the plant, thus it is very space efficient, while a continuous augmentation system of the present invention with storage system takes up 5% of the footprint of the combined cycle plant and delivers from one to two times the power per square foot of the power plant.
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(40) Obviously, the pressure from the 100 lb/sec compressor 66 has to be sufficient to drive the compressed air output therefrom into the combustion case 14. Fortunately, many of the smaller gas turbine engines are based on derivatives of aircraft engines and have much higher pressure ratios than the large industrial gas turbines used at most power plants. As shown in
(41) The embodiment shown in
(42) In
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(46) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 (7.0% additional Flow added to 2x1 9E combined cycle on a 59 F. day (+71 lbs/sec per GT)) Existing plant With TurboPHASE ™ Compressor pressure ratio 12.7 13.6 Compressor discharge temperature 673 F. 760 F. Compressor discharge pressure 185 psi 197 psi Turbine Firing temperature 2035 F. 2035 F. Turbine exhaust temperature 1000 F. 981 F. (−19 F.) 9E GT Output(MW each) 135 MW (base load each) +23 MW (+17% output) Increased flow N/A +20.7 Increase PR turbine output (delta) N/A +5.6 Increase PR compressor load (delta) N/A −3.3 ST output (MW) 135 MW (base load) +16 MW (+12%) Increased flow N/A +9.4 Cooler Exhaust temp N/A −2.9 Jacket heat and IC heat put into ST N/A +9.9 9E Plant Output SC (MW) 135 MW (base load) 158 MW (+23 MW or +17%) 9E Plant Output CC (MW) 405 MW (base load) 467 MW (+62 MW or +15%) Base load Fuel Burn per GT 1397 MMBTU/hr 1514 MMBTU/hr Fuelburn of aux engine delivering 71 lbs/sec N/A 96 MMBTU/hr (740 Gal/hr ~15,000 HP) Total additional fuel burn of GT N/A 11 MMBTU/hr (+1%) Increase flow N/A 98 MMBTU/hr (+7%) Increased PR/higher CDT/mixed temp N/A −77 MMBTU/hr Total Plant Fuel Burn CC 2974 MMBTU/hr 3028 MMBTU/hr Heat rate SC 10850 BTU/kWh 5582 BTU/kWh (−767 BTU/kWh or −7%) Heat rate CC 6900 BTU/kWh 6483 BTU/kWh (−416 BTU/kWh or −6%)
(47) As is clear from Table 1, the implementation increased power output from each of the gas turbines by 23 MW, and increased power output from the steam turbine by 6 MW, for a total of 52 MW (2×23 MW+6 MW=52 MW). The TurboPHASE system increases air flow to the gas turbines by 7%, is operable at any ambient temperature, and yields a 4% heat rate improvement. In doing so, the pressure ratio (“PR”) at the gas turbine outlet of each gas turbine increased by 5.6, while the PR of the compressor load exhibited a 3.3 decrease. The total fuel consumption rate for the combined cycle (“CC”) plant increased by 54 MMBTU/hr while the heat rate for the CC plant decreased by 416 BTU kWh. For informational purposes, Table 1 also shows that if the implementation had been on a simple cycle (“SC”) plant, the increased power output from each of the gas turbines by would have totaled 46 MW, while the heat rate would have decreased by 767 BTU/kWh. As an option, the intercooler heat exchanger can be eliminated and the supplemental compressor heat and engine heat added to the steam turbine cycle, which increases ST output from +6 MW to +16 MW (62 MW total) and improves heat rate by 6%.
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(50) Implementation of the embodiments of the present invention preferably provide the following benefits: (i) Installation is quick and simple, with no major electric tie-in required; (ii) No change in gas turbine firing temperature, so gas turbine maintenance costs are unchanged; (iii) It uses existing ports on gas turbine system's combustion case to inject air; (iv) High efficiency, recuperated and internal combustion engine-driven inter-cooled supplemental compressor improves both SC and CC heat rates; (v) It is compatible with water injection, fogging, inlet chilling, steam injection, and duct burners; (vi) Air is injected into gas turbine combustion case at compatible temperatures and pressures; (vii) The internal combustion, reciprocating, fueled engine can burn natural gas, low BTU biofuel or diesel (also available with small steam turbine driver and small gas turbine driver for the fueled engine); and (viii) Energy storage option also available: approximately 2 times the price and 2 times the efficiency improvement.
(51) Referring now to
(52) The present invention comprises a fueled engine 151 driving a intercooled compressor 116 which takes ambient air 115, compresses air 115, and yields a relatively cool compressed air 117 exiting the intercooled compressor 116. The compressed air 117 is later heated in a recuperator 171, resulting in heated compressed air 141, which is and then injected into the gas turbine engine 1 when the injection control valve 142 is open, where the heat transferred to the air in recuperator 171 comes from the exhaust 152 of a fueled engine 151, which is driving the compressor 116. Warm exhaust 153 exits the recuperator 171 after some of the energy is transferred to the compressed air 117.
(53) The compressor intercooler 205 has coolant 202 entering the coolers which is typically water or water with an additive to keep it from freezing. The coolant temperature is a main component to the efficiency of the intercooled compressor 116. The colder the coolant 202, the more efficient the compression process. A fuel regulator 125 is used to drop the pressure of the pipeline gas 126 several orders of magnitude to near ambient pressure gas 127 which is required for natural gas reciprocating engines, such as the fueled engine 151. When the pressure in the gas is dropped, the temperature is reduced significantly, typically about 10 F for every 100 psi pressure drop. In one aspect of this invention, the coolant 162 for the intercooled compression process 162 is used to heat the natural gas 127 in a fuel heater 181 positioned downstream of the fuel regulator 125. This process also reduces the temperature of coolant 202 entering the intercoolers 205 which results in another efficiency improvement to the system. In prior art systems, an electric heater is provided to heat the fuel. However, electric heaters reduce overall efficiency since they consume power in order to operate.
(54) Another aspect of the invention relates to the through cooling arrangement of the intercooled compressor. Typically reciprocating engines are cooled with air coolers (radiators), however, since the intercooled compressor requires water coolant, a complete once through package cooling system is much more cost effective and allows for optimized temperature control in the different engine coolant and compressor coolant systems. Referring to
(55) Another aspect of the present invention relates to a power augmentation and exhaust cooling system.
(56) Another aspect of the invention relates to a water recovery system from the condensate that is generated in the intercooling process. Referring to
(57) If additional steam injection is desired, a secondary water source 407 can be similarly pumped into the system 400 by a pump 408 and then sent to the secondary recuperator 404 for heating. Additionally, the inlet air 115 to the supplemental compressor 116 can be intentionally taken from a source of air that has a higher humidity level than ambient air in order to produce more water for reclamation or steam injection purposes. For example, a very common cooling system for a gas turbine energy system is an open cooling tower, where the cooling water is exposed to atmosphere intentionally to promote evaporation which produces cooler cooling water. This evaporation results in a locally higher than ambient humidity and if the supplemental compressor air was taken at this source, more water would be produced in the intercoolers compared to if the air was taken from ambient. By doing this, the power plant can recover otherwise lost water. This water can be used in the TPM as described above or routed back to the plant water make up system.
(58) In an alternate embodiment of the present invention, the water 401 generated by the condensation in the compressor intercooler 205 can be captured and used for other purposes. The water 401 is a result of condensation from the ambient air and therefore is potable drinking water. The water collected can be piped out of the power plant, collected and stored for future use, or used immediately within the power plant. The water can also be piped to an adjacent facility such as in a typical cogeneration facility. In order to facilitate the alternate use or collection of the water generated, a valve 410 is placed in the water line 411, either before or after pump 402, such that the water 401 can be selectively diverted prior to passing through the secondary recuperator 404 used to generate the steam. The water 401 can then be collected in a storage tank 412 or piped away from the power plant (not shown).
(59) Another aspect of the present invention relates to a combined continuous air injection system 710 coupled with an air storage system 706 and/or a high frequency power regulation device 701 like a battery or a super-capacitor.
(60) A storage system 706 for use in this embodiment of the present invention is described above and is also shown in
(61) A further addition to the system 700 is a battery and transformer 701, which provides two functions. First, it serves as the power source 702 for starting the air injection system 710 by energizing a starter motor on the fueled engine 151. Secondly, it provides a very high speed regulation capacity 704 to the grid node 703 which is tied to the generator output 705 from the GT 1. Each of these systems has a characteristic response time. The GT 1 responds in minutes, the air injection system 710 responds in about 30-60 seconds, the air storage system 706 responds in 1-30 seconds and the battery 701 responds is milliseconds. By combining these three systems into one system 700 that provides multiple functions, a very economic and high value system results.
(62)
(63) While the invention has been described in what is known as presently the preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiment but, on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements within the scope of the following claims. The present invention has been described in relation to particular embodiments, which are intended in all respects to be illustrative rather than restrictive.
(64) From the foregoing, it will be seen that this invention is one well adapted to attain all the ends and objects set forth above, together with other advantages which are obvious and inherent to the system and method. It will be understood that certain features and sub-combinations are of utility and may be employed without reference to other features and sub-combinations. This is contemplated by and within the scope of the claims.