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si2016 ‘Steam Temperature Contra | Corral Notes
Steam Temperature Control
PP september 8, 2010
‘Steam temperature is one of the most challenging control loops in a power plant boiler because itis highly
nonlinear and has a long dead time and time lag. Adding to the challenge, steam temperature is affected by boiler
load, rate of change of boiler load, air flow rate, the combination of burners in service, and the amount of soot on
the boiler tubes,
After separation from the boiler water in the drum, the steam is superheated to improve the thermal efficiency of the
boiler-turbine unit, Modern boilers raise the steam temperature fo around 1000F (538C), which approaches the
creep (slow deformation) point of the steel making up the superheater tubing. Steam temperatures above this level,
even for brief periods of ime, can shorten the usable life of the boiler. Keeping steam temperature constants also
mportant for minimizing thermal stresses on the boiler and turbine.
‘Steam temperature is normally controlled by spraying water into the steam between the first and second-stage
superheater to cool it down, Water injection is done in a device called an attemperator or desuperheaier. The spray
water comes from either an intermediate stage of the boiler feedwater pump (for reheater spray) or from the pump
discharge (for superheater spray). Other methods of steam temperature control include flue gas recirculation, flue
{gas bypass, and tiling the angle at which the bumers fire into the furnace, This discussion will focus on steam
temperature control through attemperation. The designs discussed here will apply to the reheater and supetheater,
but only the superheater will be mentioned for simplicity
BASIC FEEDBACK CONTROL
‘The simplest method for controlling steam temperature is by measuring the steam temperature at the point it exits
the boiler, and changing the spray water valve position to correct deviations from the steam temperature set point.
(Figure 1). This control loop should be tuned for the fastest possible response without overshoot, but even then the
oop will respond relatively slowly due to the long dead time and time lag of the superheater.
Figuro 1. Simple Steam Temperature Control
CASCADED STEAM TEMPERATURE CONTROL
Because of the slow response of the main steam temperature control loop, improved disturbance rejection can be
achieved by implementing a secondary (inner) control loop at the desuperheater, This loop measures the
desuperheater outlet temperature and manipulates the control valve position to match the desuperheater outlet
temperature to its set point coming from the main steam temperature controller (Figure 2). This arrangement is
called cascade control,
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Figure 2. Cascaded Steam Temperature Controls
‘The spray water comes from upstream of the feedwater control valves, and changes In feedwater control valve
position will cause changes in spray water pressure, and therefore disturb the spray water flow rate. The
desuperheater outlet temperature control loop will provide a gradual recovery when this happens, Ifthe spray water
flow rate to the attemperator is measured, a flow control loop can be implemented as a tertiary inner loop to provide
very fast disturbance rejection. However, in many cases spray water flow rate is not measured at the individual
aitemperators and this flow loop cannot be implemented.
GAIN SCHEDULING
‘The process dead time of the superheater increases with a decrease in boiler load because of the slower rate of
steam flow at lower loads. This will have a negative impact on the stability of the main steam temperature control
loop unless gain scheduling is implemented. Step tests need to be done at low, medium, and high boiler loads, and
optimal controller settings calculated at each joad level. A gain scheduler should be implemented to adjust the
controller settings according to unit load, Because of the changing dead time and lag of the superheater, the
ntegral and derivative times must be scheduled in addition to the controller gain.
‘The gain of the desuperheater outlet temperature loop will be affected greatly by steam flow rate. Changes in steam
flow rate will afect the amount of cooling obtained from a given spray water flow rate. Less cooling will occur at
high steam flow rates. In addition, at high loads the pressure differential between the feedwater pump discharge
and steam pressure will be lower, reducing the spray flow rate for a given spray valve position (assuming the
absence of a flow control loop on the desuperheater spray flow). To compensate for these nonlinear behavior,
controller gain scheduling should be implemented on the desuperheater outlet temperature loop too. Fugure 3
shows the basic design of the steam temperature controller gain scheduler (cascaded controller is not shown for
larity). Similar to tuning the main steam temperature control loop, step tests must be done at low, medium, and
high boiler loads to design the gain scheduler.
FEEDFORWARD CONTROL
During boiler load ramps in turbine-following mode, the firing rate is changed first, followed by a change in steam
flow rate a while later. With the increase in steam flow rate lagging behind fuel flow rate, the additional heatin the
furnace can lead to large deviations in steam temperature. To compensate for this, a feedforward control signal
from the boiler master to the steam temperature controller can be implemented
‘The feedforward can use the rate of change in fuel flow or one of several other derived measurements to bias the
sleam temperature controller's oulput. In essence, when boiler load is increasing, the spray waler flow rate will be
ncreased to counter the excess heat being transferred to the steam, and vice versa. The feedforward can be
calibrated by measuring the extent of steam temperature deviation during load ramps,
Stay tuned!
Jacques Smuts — Author of the book Process Control for Practitioners
(@e-Posted in 7. Control Strategies.
16 Responses to “Steam Temperature Control”
Karthi:
‘May 8, 2011 at 7:46 pm
hitpatlogopicontols.comfarchives/182 26si2016
‘Steam Temperature Contra | Corral Notes
Excellent effortlucid description makes a great read. You can touch upon the integral windup problem
frequentin STC. | would lke to see you write about the boiler-turbine co-ordinated control.
Regards
Karthi
Jacques:
May 8, 2011 at 8:30 pm
Karthi
You bring up a good point. When the desuperheater outlet approaches saturation temperature, the inner
loop should be blocked from adding more spray. The outer loop’s controller should use external reset
feedback to prevent integral windup. Ithis is not possible, it integral term should be blocked under any one
of thoso conditions:
= When the inner loop’s controler outputs at 0% or 100% (this normally happens automatically)
= When the inner loops outputs blocked because of proximity to saturation, as described in Zeke's note
below,
Ihave placed boiler-turbine coordinated control on my to-do list for the blog.
Thanks for your inputs.
Stay tuned!
Jacques
Allan Zadiraka
August 3, 2011 at 9:08 pm
Jacques
In actual practice, you cannot permit the desuperheater outlet temperature reach saturation temperature
since you have no idea of the quality ofthe fluid other that it could be all saturated liquid, all saturated vapor
or some mixture of the two states, Unfortunately, turbines and supetheater tubes do not ike water. The spray
flow must be limited to a temperature above saturation temperature for the pressure, typically 20 degrees F.
‘This delta is needed to account for thermocouple accuracy and drift as well as the thermocouplethermowell
time response. In the few cases where itis necessary to spray to saturation, a simple temperature based
limit cannot be used.
zoke
Imran Ahmed:
August 10, 2011 at 11:31 om
Hi! Itis is very informative detail. lam facing a problem at 210 MW Steam Turbine with 640 thr Babcock
boiler.
Recently Emerson OVation DCS has been installed as a Retrofitjob. Main steam temperature cannot be
increased from 480 C , also Air restriction is there, Air heaters are clear, air damper ( FOF dampers open
almost 100%) but stil air deficiency is there.
Can you give any particular reason on control side for low main steam temperature,
regards,
Imran
Jacques:
August 11,2011 at 9:51 am
Imran,
From the information you gave me itis not possible to tell exactly what the problem is,
Are your measurements and controller outputs ranged exactly the same as they were before the retrofit?
Jacques
SAJEESH:
tember 18, 2014 at 11:2
hi
I didnt get the cascade control theory basics....i have to control the main steam temperature around 480
degree.Output of PID is limited to 0 to 100 corresponding to 4 to 20 mA for control valve.so ii give this
value (0 to 100) to inner loop as setpoint to de superheater how the cascade controller works.Please
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‘Steam Temperature Contra | Corral Notes
provide me more detailss,
Jacques:
tH ata:s
Sajeesh,
The temperature controller's output has to be rescaled from its standard 0-100% to match the range of the
spray flow controller's set point (or process variable).
‘Some controllers (e.g. Invensys Fox IA) allow you to rescale the output directly, while other controllers (e.g,
Honeywell Experion) do the scaling for you automatically, Yet other systems (e.g. Emerson Ovation) require
you to place a scaling block between the two controllers.
Jacques
Ravi Mishra:
January 24,2013 at 3:42. am
Dear Sir,
During the Turbine follow mode operation its seems that, the main steam temperature have large deviations
during the ramp up and ramp down, even with feed forward loop is implemented (from steam flow/BL)
because The fring rate is changes first, followed by the change in steam flow rate,
‘So how can we generate the feed forward signal (logic) from the fuel flow or boiler master demand to
compensate this deviation? Can you give the that logic which can implemented to reduce this problem?
Jacques:
January 24,2013 at 11:21 pm
Ravi, there are several designs for this feedforward of which some seem to work better than others
depending on the particular situation, boiler design, fuel type, elc. Some use fuel flow, or ils rate of change,
some use air flow, or its rate of change. Others use a combination of steam and fuel flow that alters spray
flow based on the relative difference between fuel and steam flows. | recommend that you look at Sam
Dukelow’s book, The Control of Boilers. Itis an excellent source of technical information on boller controls.
= Jacques
Siby:
March 20, 2013 at 12:23 am
This is slightly offtopic but stil relevant question for Control engineers at a time when Advanced process
control schemes are becoming more provalent. Is the use of a Model predictive controller to provide set-
points to the spray control valves for steam temperature control a cost effective approach?
| did a comprehensive study for the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) on the adoption of Advanced
Process Control / Model-Predictive Control (APC/MPC) in power plants. Compared to the refining, and
chemical indusiries, the power industry lags far behind in using APC/MPC. On the flip side, the power
industry is the forerunner with utilizing complex DCS-based control strategies. APC/MPC will do a fine job of
controlling steam temperature, especially if you contral the burners individually, instead of just one common
fuel demand, Excess air, spraywater, burner tits/recirc ait/bypass dampers should all be used
simultaneously as control elements, ABB, Neuco, Invensys, and probably others, have reported successes
with APC on boiler plants. The power industry lacks the skills to implement and maintain APC, and the cost
benefits are just not there in many cases (except perhaps for environmental controls).
- Jacques
Siby:
March 22,2013 at 3:31 am
Iread the article and found itto give an objective assessment on APC in power plants. Nicely highlights the
challenges involved in making APC’s more acceptable,
Siby
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‘Steam Temperature Contra | Corral Notes
HBR:
November 11, 2013 at 11:53 pm
Hi, Iread your article impressively.
| would like to ask you ifit's possible to control steam temperature using characteristic curve,
In the plant where I worked, the main and re-heat steam temperature control loop is cascade without
feedforward demand. At first, the main and re-heat steam temperatures swinged and itaffected MW and
stoam pressure. To avoid that, we applied charecteristic curve(o.g f(x) function in ovation) opening TCV
position more than PID manipulated position to compensate the dead-time(time delay). Actually, itwas the
idea of my boss and I'm curious ifit's proper to use a characteristic curve for steam temperature control
Jacques:
‘November 12.2013 at 6:51 am
H.BR.- Characterizers are used to compensate for some type of nonlinear process behavior, or to obtain a
nonlinear control action where one is needed. A characierizer can be used very effectively in feedforward
control where the relationship between the disturbance and the required compensating control action is
nonlinear. Itsounds like this is what your boss did, even though the design might have been different from
normal. there is a strong relationship between (e.g,) fuel input and spray valve position required to
maintain reheat steam temperature, using a feedforward with a characterizer would be appropriate,
However, you will likely also require some degree of feedback control to compensate for other variables
such as different burners in use, boller sooting, ete.
Donald:
‘September 23,2014 at 11:50 am
Dear Jacques,
Firstly, [cannot thank you enough for this incredibly educational and useful website. With regards to the
main steam temperature to desuperheater outlet temperature cascade arrangement, is the inner loop here
'ypically many times faster than the master loop? Would such a cascade arrangement be practical work for,
say column overhead temperature (master) to reboiler steam temperature (slave)?
‘September 23, 2014 at 8:36 pm
Donald — On the steam-temperature controlled boilers with that Ihave dealt with (mostly in power plants) the
inner loop was typically “not* many times faster than the outer loop, but in most cases it was stil fast enough
to make a difference, Disturbance rejection improves roughly at the ratio of outer loop / innerloop response
time, provided the disturbance is first noticeable at the inner loop. So even a 2:1 ratio may make cascade
control desirable.
Ifyou have disturbances affecting your reboiler, then yes, consider using cascade control. Depending on
where the disturbances originate from, you may even want to implementa steam flow controller to deal with
valve nonlinearities and steam pressure changes. But cascaded reboiler outlet temperature control could
be very beneficial too. Again, it depends where your disturbances or nonlinearities show up first.
hitpatlogopicontols.comfarchives/182
Steam Temperature Is One of The Most Challenging Control Loops in A Power Plant Boiler Because It Is Highly Nonlinear and Has A Long Dead Time and Time Lag