Ger 3419a Gas Turbine Inlet Air Treatment
Ger 3419a Gas Turbine Inlet Air Treatment
Ger 3419a Gas Turbine Inlet Air Treatment
RL. Loud
and
AA Slaterpryce
Engineer, Gas Turbine
.wer, Gas Turbine
Power Plant Systems
General Elect& Compasiy
Schenectady, NY
AIRFILTRATION
CONTENTS
Page
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Air Filtration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..-..... 1
Anti-Icing Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Inlet Cooling Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
A Table Conversion Factors is included at the
end of this publication.
INTRODUCTION
Erosion
Both the axial compressor and the hot-path
parts can be affected by erosion from hard, abrasive particles, such as sand and mineral dusts.
As these particles impact upon the compressor blades, they cut away a small amount of
metal. The net rate of erosion, although not
precisely quantifiable, depends on the kinetic
energy change as the particles impinge, on the
number of particles impinging per unit time,
the angle of impingement, and on the mechanical properties of both the particles and the
material being eroded.
In general, our gas turbine experience indicates that particles below 10pm do not cause
erosion, whereas particles 20pm and above
normally cause erosion when present in sufficient quantities.
Two examples of eroded parts, a compressor
blade and a first-stage nozzle, are shown in
Figs. 1 and 2. Not only does erosion reduce
aerodynamic performance, but the reduction
in cross-sectional area of the compressor blade
could lead to serious turbine damage if,
because of increased local stresses, it should
break loose during operation. Air filtration
methods are available which can easily and very
efficiently remove airborne particles of 1Opm
and above.
1
COMPRESSOR
TC 197421
Figure 1
Figure 2
blades. One of these is the use of mild abrasive
cleaning materials such as crushed nutshells
which, when ingested at a controlled rate into
the compressor during operation, remove some
or all of these deposits (depending on their
nature). Recent experience has shown that the
use of abrasive cleaning can damage compressor
blade coatings and compressor blade surface finish. Abrasive cleaning compounds are also a
potential cause of plugged cooling passages
which will be descussed shortly. For these reasons, abrasive cleaning is generally not recommended on any size turbine, and definitely not
recommended on the advanced technology turbines. General Electric Instruction GEL41042
should be consulted for the use of any abrasive
compressor cleaning agents on GE gas turbines.
More recent work within the industry has
shown that certain ash-free detergents are very
effective in removing compressor blade deposits.
Both offline and online water wash systems are
available. Offline involves injecting the cleaning
solution into the compressor while it is turning
at cranking speed. Online is not as effective as
offline but has the advantage that it can be
Compressor Fouling
The efficiency of an axial compressor is depen-
OUTPUT
LOSS
FIRED
HOURS
GTO 415;
GTO 4151
Figure 3
Figure 4
2
Compressor Corrosion
Hot-Section Corrosion
Possibly the single most important and frequently encountered consequence of inadequate
air filtration has to do with the ingestion of certain metals which, after combining with sulfur
and/or oxygen during the combustion process,
deposit on the surfaces of the hot gas path parts.
These parts include combustion liners, transition
pieces, nozzle partitions and turbine buckets.
There are four such metals which are of primary
concern: sodium (Na), potassium (K), vanadium
(V) and lead (Pb). These metals, either as sulfates or oxides, cause the normally protective
oxide film on hotgaz+path parts to be disrupted
so that the parts oxidize several times faster than
in the presence of gases free of them.lJ They may
be found in fuels and in water or steam, as well
as in the inlet air. Allowable limits are set forth in
GEI-41047. The effects of these contaminants on
the turbine are also discussed in this reference.
The following relationship may be used to calculate the limits in the inlet air:
Environments
Ambient air can be contaminated by solids,
liquids, or gases. Of these three, contamination
by solids is the most common, and usually the
most serious situation. The quantity of solids can
be defined in many ways, such as milligrams per
cubic meter of air or grains per 1000 cubic feet.
A measure General Electric finds convenient is
parts per million (ppm), i.e., the mass of contaminants per million units mass of air. The fact
that this is a convenient measure immediately
demonstrates that the quantity of dust is generally quite small compared to the mass of air..
However, when account is taken ofthe large:
flow rates of gas turbines, it is evident that the
total quantity of dust which is ingested can be
appreciable when summed over hundreds or
thousands of fired hours.
(A)&+ 6)
(F)*+*
(F)
Equivalent contaminants in fuel alone
where
++ = Air-to-fuel massflow ratio
3
several hours, while long-term levels may average one to five ppm. When the wind blows in
these regions, the larger soil particles become
airborne first, smaller particles being more
adherent. When the large particles fall back to
earth, they disturb the surface and splash out
fine particles. By Stokes law, fine particles settle
more slowly; so they remain airborne longer.
The results are that the dust concentration is
highest close to the ground, and that the particles there tend to be coarser than at higher elevations. There is no exact relationship between
dust concentration and elevation above ground,
but available data generally tend to fall within
the range of Fig. 6. This shows that elevating a
filter compartment some 20 ft. in the air approximately halves the dust load, compared to a
ground-mounted compartment.
The size distributions of airborne dusts are
variable with respect to time and place. In general, high values of dust concentration tend to
be associated with coarse dust and low values
with fine dust. Large dust particles tend to fall
out quickly, while smaller particles are more
likely to stay airborne. Consequently, dust samples taken near the source of contamination
tend to be coarser than those samples taken at
a distance.
Some idea of the size distributions experienced in practice can be had by reference to the
standardized dusts, Arizona Coarse and Arizona
Fine, which are widely used in the testing of air
filtration devices. Table 1 shows their mass distribution as a function of particle size. Since the
Table 1
Components of Arizona Road Dust
0.1lho
0.1
1.0
0.01
DUST LOAD. PPM
TO 767W
Particle Size
=%e
(mkrons)
Figure 5
TYPICAL VARIATION OF DUST
CONCENTRATION WITH ELEVATION
Nominal Percentage of
Total Mass of Particles
Course
Dust
Fine
Dust
O-5
12
39
5-10
12
18
lo-20
14
16
20-40
23
18
40-80
30
80-200
RELATIVE
OUST
COI(CENTRAlION
Figure 6
4
High-Efficiency Filters
Highefficiency filters use a special filter medium of fiberglass or treated paper to achieve good
collection efficiency for all particles, including
those as smaller than lpm. Figure 7 shows typical
efficiency as a function of particle size. Because
the collectiori efficiency is very high, the air quality downstream is also high, even when the ambient air is badly contaminated,
High efficiency filters generally take the form
of either a rectangular panel filter or a cylindrical cartridge filter. Other than their shape, the
two major difference2 are in the type of media
used and the design of the seal where the element is attached.
The panel filters typically contain a depth
loading media. Particles are actually trapped
within the body of the media itself. Depth loading media has a billowy texture which allows the
particles to penetrate. Cylindrical cartridge filters contain a surface loading media. This traps
the particles on the outside face where they
form a dust layer. This dust layer actually
enhances the collection efficiency of the filter
causing it to become more efficient with time. It
is the surface loading characteristic that allows
the dust to be dislodged during cleaning.
The seal on the filter element is another area
of prime importance. There is no point in providing filters of such high efficiency if contaminated
air is continually leaking past them. It is here that
the cylindrical cartridge has a distinct advantage
over the rectangular panel. Cylindrical cartridges
have a continuous, circular, neoprene gasket permanently affixed to each element. This gasket is
capable of making up for variations in the mating
surface. Panel filters have various types of sealing
mechanisms available, but none have shown to be
.as reliable as the cylindrical cartridge seal.
Rectangular panel filters are available as a
replaceable element which is held in shape by a
Equipment Description
Equipment designed. by General Electric to filter the inlet air can be divided into two classes,
conventional and self cleaning. Conventional filters include inertial separators and media-type filters; the latter are normally replaced when they
become dirty. Selfcleaning filters, introduced in
the 197Os, have become well accepted and now
account for 80 to 90% of the new systems sold by
General Electric. These are media-type filters
which have the ability to renew themselves by
automatically shedding accumulated dust
An important characteristic of an air filter is
its collection efficiency, calculated from the
weight of dust entering and leaving:
TYPICAL
FILTRATION
EFFICIENCY
EFFICIEKY
W entering -Wleaving
Efficiency =
W entering
x 100 (percent)
Collection efficiency varies with particle
size, typically being lower for small particles
than for large.
Figure 7
5
HIGH-EFFICIENCY FILTER
HIGHEFFICIENCY
FILTERS
G T O 7680
Figure 8
Figure 9
since it depends upon the particle size distribution of the incident dust. For a given pressure
drop, a filter can hold a greater mass of large
particles than of small particles. Therefore, a filter will load up more quickly with fine dust
than with the same amount of sand. Filter manufacturers commonly use Arizona Fine test dust
to rate high-efficiency filters. This is reasonable,
since it provides a conservative rating which is
valid even in environments where larger particles may not be present in the ambient air.
Self-Cleaning Filters
Self-cleaning inlet filtration, developed in the
197Os, combines the effectiveness of the highefficiency filter with low maintenance. This combination of characteristics is realized by using a
barrier-type filter element which accumulates
dust on the surface which is exposed to the
ambient air. The collection efficiency is typical
of high-efficiency filters. When pressure drop
builds up to a predetermined level, the filter is
cleaned by a brief back-pulse of air, either
extracted from the gas turbine compressor, or
C R O S S - S E C T I O N QU,CX.NUT
EXPANDED METAL
INNER LINER
CYLINDRICAL
CARTRIDGE
PERFORPlTED METAL
OUTER LINER
SEALING
WASHER
GTZI 131
Figure 10
GT?114
Figure 11
derived from an auxiliary source. A filter compartment includes many filter elements, only a
few of which are cleaned at any given time; so
the airflow to the gas turbine is not disturbed by
the cleaning process.
The action of a selfcleaning filter is illustrated
in Fig. 11. Air flows through the filter elements
into a clean-air plenum. Dust in the air is trapped
on the surface of the lilter media, which is formed
from specially treated cellulose, synthetic, or combination cellulose/synthetic lilter paper. The filter
elements are typically in the form of cylindrical
cartridges. The paper is pleated in order to
increase the available sutice area. Many filter elements are used so that the velocity of the air
through the filter media is very low, in the range
of 2.5 to 3 ft/min. This low velocity decreases pressure drop, increases dust-holding capacity, and is
essential to the cleanability of the filters.
As the filters accumulate dust, the pressure drop
gradually rises. When the pressure in the clean-air
plenum reaches a particular value, usually set at 3
to 4 in. of water, gauge, cleaning is initiated. A
cleaning manifold is pressurized nominally to 100
psig with compressed air, extracted from the gas
turbine compressor or some other suitable source.
Upon command from the automatic sequencing
control, a solenoid-operated air valve directs a
brief (about 0.1 s) pulse of air into the filters. This
shocks and causes a momentary backflow through
the filters, dislodging accumulated dust from the
outside of the elements and allowing it to disperse.
Re-entrainment of dust is minimized by the lowvelocity design. The updraft and between filter
velocities are kept at or below 320 and 580 feet per
minute respectively. The process continues, cleaning a few filters at a time, until all elements have
been cleaned and pressure drop reduced to an
acceptable level. A single cleaning cycle is usually
completed in 20 to 30 minutes. This ensures that
the compartment can handle heavy dust loads,
such as those associated with sandstorms, without
excessive rise in pressure drop.
The filter elements are replaced when they
begin to show signs of deterioration caused by
heat and ultraviolet rays from the sun, or when
the cleaning cycle can no longer restore pressure drop. While this period cannot be quantified for all environments, experience indicates
about a two-year life in Middle-East deserts.
However, filter life may be sustantially lower in
extremely harsh environments such as those
heavily laden with airborne cement dust About
100 man-hours are required for complete filter
changeout for an MS7001 gas turbine.
Fipure 12 shows a typical self-cleaning compartment installed on 4 MS6001 gas turbine. It
SELF-CLEANING
INLET FILTER
Figure 12
includes several hundred filter elements, mounted in modules which feed into a tapered cleanair plenum. Each module has the filter elements
enclosed by a metal skirt, which protects them
from damage. The upward velocity of air into
self-cleaning modules is low, so the module acts
as its own weather hood. In order to reduce the
compartment footprint, the modules may be
arranged in two or more tiers. The lower tier of
modules acts as the platform for access to the
upper tier. Walkways, ladders, and railings are
provided as necessary for safe access. Since
access to the clean air plenum is infrequently
required, a bolt-on hatch is provided instead of
a door. There is a convenience outlet to aid interior inspections and maintanence. A differential
pressure gauge/pressure switch is supplied to
read plenum pressure, and control the operation of the self cleaning system. Alarms are provided for excessive differential pressure in the
plenum and for low pressure in the pulse cleaning air supply. Pressure switches are also provided to initiate a controlled shutdown in the event
that differential pressure in the plenum
becomes dangerously high.
Cartridge Type,
Non-Self Cleaning Filters
In environments where the concentration of
airborne contaminants or other considerations
make it impractical to pulse clean inlet filters,
the high efficiency selfcleaning type cylindrical
cartridges may still be used. Such a system can
be identical in configuration to the self-cleaning
compartment with the exception that the puls-.,
ing hardware is omitted.
This system acts as a static barrier filter while
maintaining many of the advantages of the self
cleaning system. Such advantages include high
dust holding capacity, positive sealing mecha7
VANE TYPE
AIR OUTLET
13x5FILTER CHANGEOUT
* COMPLETE CHANGEOUT
TOTAL AIR IN1
1924611
Figure 13
Figure 14
Prefdters
If the ambient dust load is fairly high, as in
some industrial areas, it may be economical to
further protect the high-efficiency filters by
means of inexpensive, disposable media-type prefilters. The mounting frames for the prefilters are
typically placed directly in front of the high-efficiency filters which they protect. Figure 13 illustrates how the pressure drop of the entire filter
system typically varies with time. Three prefilter
changeouts are shown for each change of highefficiency filters, which is a common experience.
A typical two-stage filter system (prefilters and
high-efficiency filters) can remove several hundred pounds of dust from the gas turbine inlet
air before the high-efficiency filters must be
replaced. It is not possible to predict specific
results based on average filter life because each
site is unique; however, 5000 to 7000 fired hours
-is typical of two-stage systems in the United
States. Without prefilters, the life would be
decreased by a factor of two or more.
Inertial Separator
Air containing dust, dirt, and chemical contaminants enter the open end of a V-shaped
pocket (Fig. 14). The ends of the pocket are
solid, with both sides made up of louvered slots.
The dirt is separated from the air as the air
turns to pass through the open slots in the sides
and the larger dirt particles continue in a
straight line to a collection chute aided by a
bleed fan. The bleed rate is approximately 10
Fiie 15
8
usual choice is the point at which high collection efficiency is combined with acceptable pressure drop, typically 1.0 to 1.5 in. of water.
The bottom curve of Fig. 7 shows typical separation efficiency as a function of particle size.
Since the performance of an inertial separator is
excellent for particles larger than lOpm, this
provides a defense against the compressor erosion described previously. It is also effective
against corrosion if the corrosive particles are in
the greater-than-1Ollm size range.
Generally, inertial separators which, in a sense
are selfcleaning by design, are used as the first
stage of filtration, preceding high-efficiency filters. In this case, they extend the life of the
high-efficiency filters by removing some of the
dust which would otherwise cause them to foul.
Figure 17
upward at low velocity, thereby discriminating
against the snow or rain which is falling downward at some terminal velocity. The terminal
velocities of different forms of precipitation vary
widely (Fig. 17) ,s and it is intuitively evident that
a given hood design will be more effective in
rejecting fast-falling raindrops than slow-falling
snowflakes. In order to quantify this, a modeling
study was conducted on the computer, taking
into account not only the geometry of the hood
and its associated flow field, but also such factors
as the drop-size distributions in rainstorms of
various intensities, Figure 18 gives the rejection
efficiency of single hoods as a function of face
velocity and rainfall rate. A curve is also given
for typical snow rejection. It is clear from these
results that a high degree of rain rejection is
available from hoods of moderate size, but that
large hoods are required to reject snow.
Weather Protection
In cold climates, ingestion of large quantities
of snow or fkeezing rain can cause icing of inlet
components. This can adversely affect performance of filtration equipment, and may result in
physical damage to the inlet duct or the gas turbine compressor. In warmer climates, prolonged
downpours may overload inertial separators,
allowing water to be transmitted downstream. If
there are no high-efficiency filters, this will not be
harmful. If there are highefficiency filters, pro
longed wetting will increase the pressure drop
and weaken the filter media structure. .For these
reasons, certain applications may require that the
air filters be preceded by weather protection.
Weather protection, when required, is usually
provided by means of an inlet hood, such as
shown in Fig. 16, or weather louver%. Louvers
may be subject to icing under winter conditions.
Hoods do not have this problem, and have
demonstrated their suitability in both tropical
and arctic climates. Weather hoods achieve
rejection of precipitation by drawing inlet air
Figure 16
9
Figure 18
ma LFClCHCl
GT21lJ
Figure 19
ty entering the gas turbine; if the compartment uses high-efficiency filters, eIevation prolongs the filter life. A typical arrangement of
an inlet filter compartment using conventional
components is shown in Fig. 19. The entering
air first encounters a bird screen, then the
weather louvres. The access door is just downstream of the weather louvres. Entry is via a
caged ladder and service platform. The compartment includes interior lighting and convenience outlets, and a junction box for electri-
Table 2
Classification of Ambient Air Quality
Air Quality
Clean
Dusty
Contaminated
Desert
Location
Iand Use
Rural
Recreation
Suburban/Urban
Residential
Rural
Agriculture
Urban
Commercial
or Industrial
Seacoast
Dry Lake
Urban
hY
hY
Industrial
Rural
Arid Lands
Agriculture
Description
hY
10
Undeveloped land
Moderate rain
No extended dry season
Continuous ground cover
Light traffic
Mainly single or multiple dwellings
Paved roads, Iight to moderate traffic
Dust-producing activities such as
plowing and harvesting
Stores, warehouses, trucking, mining
construction, manufacturing
Less than 10 miles from salt water
Former seabed in area of low rainfall
Corrosive elements in dust, such as chemicals,
cement, and coal-fired boilers
Also includes areas subject to smoke and fumes
Dust from chemical fertilizers
Little or no rain, extended dry periods
I
1
Environment 1
Prefdters
Clean
Desert
HighEffIciency
1
1
Self
Cleaning
Passive
1x1
I
11
LOCATION OF
SAMPLING STATIONS
FOR AIR-BORNE
NATURAL SEA SALT
GT0407c
Figure21
SALT LEVELS INLAND FROM SURF
AIRFILTRA~ON
IN MAARINE
ENVIRONMENTS
WIND SPEED
.l
SALT-rcu
.mr
4
s
8
(0
MILES FROM SUM
12
Fiie 22
I-
Figure 20
12
Figure 23
Figure 24
Most are available either as single- or threestage systems, the use of which depends on the
environment expected (Fig. 26). Single-stage systems typically consist of a series of vertically oriented hooked vanes mounted parallel to the airflow. These vanes impose several direction
changes to the incoming air. Entrained droplets
impinge upon the sides of the vanes, being
unable to follow the air path due to their greater
mass. The effectiveness of such a system is proportional to the velocity of the air stream and
thus to the momentum of the droplets. After
impingement the droplet migrates along the surface of the vane until a hook is encountered. The
solution migrating to the hooks flows down
along the hooks to a catch through and drain
located below the separator.
A three-stage system typically consists of a firststage vane as described above, followed by a coalescer pad and a second vane stage. The coalescer
pad is typically a nonwoven pad approximately 1
in. thick, made from polyester or similar material.
This pad functions to capture smaller droplets
that were not removed in the first stage of the
separator. After capture these droplets may either
drain down through the pad to the catch through
below or agglomerate with other droplets to form
larger droplets which become re-entrained in the
air stream. These agglomerated droplets are cap
tured by the last stage of vanes, which is typically
identical to the first stage.
Figure 27 shows salt penetration through typical single-stage and three-stage moisture separators as a function of windspeed. These penetration curves can be computed by combining
moisture separator collection efficiencies with the
particle size distribution curves of Fig. 24 and the
overall salt content as a function of wind velocity
from Fig. 20. Tobas particle size distribution
curves and the dashed upper limit curve from Fig.
20 were used for these particular calculations.
*Y-
-*I I.. .
GT04OQ(
Figure 25
MOISTURE SEPARATORS
SINGLE STAGE
+@%%a
AIR FLOW
TRIPLE STAGE
COALESCER PA0
@@fig,,,
MIST EXTRACTOR
12265551
Figure 26
calcium chlorides. Conversely, once the salt is in
crystalline form, it will not deliquesce until the relative humidity rises to about 73 percent,
Since relative humidity in maritime air very
rarely falls below 45 percent, salt will almost
always be present in droplet form. The exception
to this could be gas turbine installations using
anti-icing systems to heat the inlet air. Under the
assumption that the inlet heating system adds
negligible moisture to the air, Fig. 25 shows the
temperature rise required to decrease relative
humidity to 45 percent as a function of ambient
conditions. If the inlet heating schedule has a
temperature rise equal to or greater than that
defined by the appropriate curve, the relative
humidity of the heated air will drop to such levels that salt will exist as dry crystals.
SALT PENETRATION
SPRAY EXCLUDED
SALT
?ENETRATlON.
020400000
WIN0 EFEEO. NW
Figure 27
14
GTO408
Table 4
Experience with High-Velocity Moisture
Separators on GE
Heavy-Duty Gas Turbines
spray and droplets are not encountered. Highefficiency filters were used to remove salt crystals from the inlet air.
ANTI-ICING SYSTEMS
Moisture
Separator
Application
Ships
45
Platforms,
Others
12
Arabian
Introduction
1 z&gi 1 Eg- 1
Gulf
I
I
9
1
I
1
I
Experience
Over 75 General Electric heavy-duty gas turbines equipped with single- or three-stage highvelocity moisture separators have been installed
on platforms, ships, or coastal sites.12 These
applications are summarized in Table 4.
Several of the platform. and ship turbines
have accumulated over 40,000 fired hours with
the original buckets and nozzles. Successful
operation is based on the following conditions:
l
Icing Phenomena
Precipitate icing occurs when water is ingested
as a liquid or solid at temperatures near or below
freezing, with wet snow and freezing rain being
obvious examples. If the precipitation remains
suspended in the air-stream, it causes no special
problems. However, ice will adhere strongly to
most surfaces, and buildup can be a particular
problem if the temperature is near freezing.13
If a body of air cools at relatively constant
moisture content, a point is reached at which the
vapor condenses, forming water droplets. This is
the dew point. Further depression of the temperature results in super-cooling of the droplets.
This condition is unstable, so that when droplets
contact an inlet surface, rapid buildup of hoarfrost results. In typical air masses, with many condensation nuclei present, suspended droplets
remain liquid until about -22OF.14
When fuels are burned, both heat and water
vapor are released into the atmosphere. The
heat tends to reduce relative humidity (RH),
while the water vapor tends to increase it.
Typically, the burning of fuel tends to reduce
RH when ambient temperatures are warmer
than about -20F. When colder than about -30F
the burning of fuel increases RH. Between these
limits, a calculation (which includes initial RH)
is required to predict the effect. If weather conditions inhibit mixing of the air, an increase in
RH can give rise to the arctic phenomenon
The number of stages in the moisture separator is a function of the allowable salt ingestion criteria and the expected wind velocities
at the site. North Sea sites have statistically
higher wind velocities than Gulf of Mexico
sites and therefore require three stages
instead of one.
The moisture separators, particularly the
coalescer pads, must be protected from
drilling mud and cement, sandblasting material, and, in some locations, duststorms. This
will prevent frequent changeout of the coalescers due to plugging from these materials.
Prefilters upstream of the separators may be
necessary to remove these contaminants.
Liquid seals on the separator drains must be
maintained so that drainage water will not
be drawn into the compartment downstream of_. the separators.
Figure 28
even if the screen ices because of cold air being
drawn through any leaks in the ductwork.
Finally, another pressure alarm can be located
in the inlet plenum. If desired, this switch can
be used to initiate a controlled shutdown when
the pressure drop of the total inlet system reaches a predetermined level.
Ingestion of snow and freezing rain into the
inlet should be minimized in order to make the
job of the anti-icing system easier, particularly in
the near-freezing temperature range. One way
that this is done is by elevating the inlet filter
compartment. Studies show that the flux of
blowing snow drops by a factor of about 5 when
going from an elevation of 5 to 25 ft.15 There is
little benefit in further elevation because winddriven snow tends to be concentrated near
ground level. Ingestion of rain and snow is also
minimized by use of a properly designed weather hood if conventional filtration is to be used.
Protective Features
Inlet systems for cold climates are designed to
protect the gas turbine from damage due to
icing and to keep the machine running with
minimum effect on performance. Typical
designs include self cleaning filters which can
remove ice in much the same way that they
remove dust, an inlet heating system to inhibit
ice formation downstream of the filters, and
protective devices to prevent damage in the
event of system malfunction or operation outside the normal design envelope. These features
are illustrated in Fig. 28 which shows the side
elevation of an inlet system.
The anti-icing module contains the inlet heating manifold, which introduces warm air downstream of the self cleaning filters in the inlet
duct. If there is icing on the inlet filters, a pressure switch which senses increasing pressure
drop, initiates the self cleaning system. An alarm
is signalled if pressure drop continues to
increase. If no action is taken by the operator, a
gas turbine shutdown is signalled by the inlet
protective pressure switches. The split trash
screen in the inlet duct protects against ingestion of ice as well as trash. Its design is such that
it can pass air without excessive pressure drop,
Self-Cleaning Filters
Experience shows that selfcleaning filter cartridges can remove hoarfrost in much the same
way that they clean themselves of dust. Tests
SELF-CLEANING INLET FILTER
GTO6807
Figure 29
16
have been conducted by filter vendors to simulate precipitate icing by spraying water from fog
nozzles under winter conditions. These tests
have demonstrated that, although ice can be
built up on filters, the porosity of this ice is typically so high that the drop in filter pressure stays
within acceptable limits. A frost point detector
may be used to signal the selfcleaning system to
begin pulsing when icing conditions are present. This helps alleviate any potential problems
associated with a buildup of ice on the filters by
removing it as soon as it begins to form.
The unanswered key question was whether
there would be ice formation in the gas turbine
inlet bellmouth due to the temperature depression which occurs there. To study this, extensive
tests were run on an LM2500 gas turbine in
western Canada during the 1981-82 winter (Fig.
29). This machine, which has a self-cleaning
inlet air filter with no inlet heating, had already
completed a full year of successful operation
before the test.
During the test, which covered an additional
2700 fired hours of winter operation, a data logger recorded ambient and inlet temperature
and humidity, pressure drop, and engine performance parameters at lo-minute intervals. In
addition, time-lapse video tape recordings were
made through viewing ports in the inlet plenum
in order to visually identify any ice in the bellmouth. During the test period, frequent intervals of high humidity at below-freezing temperatures were recorded. Frost was visible on the
inlet guide vanes for one period of less than a
minute, but there was no ice build-up, and no
icing problems were experienced.
Two trends can be seen which help to explain
these favorable results. First, when ambient air is
supersaturated with respect to ice, air downstream of the filters is found to be just at the
frost point, indicating that frost is forming on
the outside of the filter elements. Moisture
which freezes on the filters is obviously no
longer available to cause problems at the bellmouth. If too much frost builds up on the filters, it is removed by the self-cleaning action.
Second, temperatures in the inlet bellmouth
run about 2 to 3F warmer than air leaving the
filter compartment, even though there is no
inlet heating system. This heating, which tends
to counteract temperature depression, is apparently due to a combination of radiation and conduction from hot parts of the engine.
Numerous gas turbine installations now use
self-cleaning filters as an anti-icing system. The
self-cleaning filter has become the standard
inlet filtration system at Prudhoe Bay, Alaska
Tmixed - Tambien t
Thot - Tambient
where
w = Weight flow per unit time
T= Temperature
Early inlet heating systems included exhaust
recirculation, exhaust heat recovery, and cornpressor bleed recirculation designs. These systerns were used to prevent ice buildup both on
the inlet filters and in the ducting and compressor. With the advent of the self-cleaning filter,
and its inherent anti-icing ability, inlet heating is
used today mainly in areas where compressor
icing is of potential concern.
Of the previously mentioned inlet heating
systems, only the compressor bleed system is
typically used today. This is due to the relative
simplicity of the system and its less costly effects
on turbine performance.
BLEED INLET
HEATING
GT2113j
Figure 30
17
PHOTO TRANSISTOR
TEMP SENSOR
Figure 31
ent temperature and the gas turbine model. The
system is basically quite simple, since only one
control valve is required. Because of its simplicity, the reliability has been excellent in Alaska
and Canada, as well as the North Sea.
While the compressor bleed system is simple
and reliable, there is some performance degradation due to the compressor bleed requirement. This can be minimized by heating only
the minimum amount necessary to keep all
parts of the inlet system at a relative humidity
below the frost point. This determination cannot be made on the basis of temperature alone.
What is needed is a device which can measure
the potential for icing, so that a control can be
designed which causes the air to be heated just
enough, but no more.
The key to the solution of this problem is a sensor which measures the moisture content of the
air. Such a device is shown in Fig. 31. A beam from
a lightemitting diode is reflected onto a phototransistor from the polished surface of an electrically cooled plate. The plate is cooled to the point
where dew or frost just begins to deposit, interrupting the beam. Its temperature is measured,
and the difference between this temperature and
the air temperature defines the potential for condensate icing. This device measures absolute
humidity, avoiding the problems inherent in relative humidity sensors and lending itself well to
optional inclusion in a control system.
COOCINti
PSY
Recommendations
Good experience with self-cleaning filters for
both inlet air filtration and anti-icing has made
it the standard system in environments with a
high icing potential. There is no question that
self-cleaning filters provide very high air quality;
thousands of hours of desert operation have
demonstrated this conclusively. As a means of
00
60
60
100
D R Y BUl.B T E M P E R A T U R E F
Figure 32
18
120
TC23564
1732566
TIDB - T2WB
TlDB-T2WB
Water Requirements
Evaporative coolers find their greatest application in arid regions. In such areas it is not uncommon to find that available water has a significant
percentage of dissolved solids. If make-up water is
only added in sufficient quantity to replace the
water which has been evaporated, it is obvious
that the water in the tank (which is also the water
pumped to the media for evaporation) must
gradually become more laden with minerals. In
time, these will tend to precipitate out on the
media and reduce evaporation efficiency, and the
hazard increases that some minerals will become
entrained in the air and enter the gas turbine. In
order to minimize this it is usual to continually
bleed some water from the tank to keep the mineral content diluted. This is termed blowdown.
The total amount of water which must be provided as make-up is the sum of evaporation and blowdown. The rate at which water evaporates from a
cooler depends upon the ambient temperature
ad humidity, the altitude, cooler effectiveness, and
the airflow requirement of the gas turbine. The
MEDIA PACK
COOLER
DESIGN
20 ,
80
90
TEMP - F
1W
110
120
GT2114
Figure 33
Figure 34
19
W=(%+l) (%+l)
where
F
flood
factor
blowdown =
factor
Figure 35
20
Operational Experience
85% EFFECTIVE
;:TE/\SE
,,o~
IN OUTPUT - X
RH-
2Qx
12 -
30x
40x
50%
60%
DRYsu.BTEMPERATUREr
TEMP - F
GT21141
Figure 36
Figure 37
21
Power Increase
The exact increase in power available from a
particular gas turbine as a result of inlet air cooling depends upon the machine model and site
altitude as well as ambient temperature and
humidity. However, Fig. 37 can be used to make
an estimate of this benefit for evaporative coolers. As would be anticipated, the improvement is
greatest in hot, dry weather. The power increase
from a cooling coil is also dependent upon the
chiller capacity so it is difficult to make a general estimation. The addition of an inlet cooler is
economically viable when the value of the
increased output exceeds the initial and operating costs, and appropriate climatic conditions
permit effective utilization of the equipment.
SUMMARY
It has been shown that there are many environments which are naturally hostile to gas turbine operation, but that General Electric has
developed a wide range of inlet air treatment
equipment which permits its machines to adapt
to these conditions and operate successfully.
With the information given in this paper, it is
hoped that gas turbine users will be able to identify potential needs for air treatment, and to
knowledgeably consider equipment options.
General Electric applications engineers have
many years of experience in this field and are
ready to assist in selection of suitably equipped
inlet compartments to enhance gas turbine performance, reliability, and maintainability.
REFERENCES
1. Beltran, A.M., and Shores, D.A., Hot
Corrosion, Chapter 11 from Superalloys,
C.T. Sims and W.C. Hagel, eds., John Wiley
and Sons, 1972.
Q 1991 GE Company
22
>
CONVERSION FACTORS
The following is a list Of COWerSiOn factors most
commonly used for gas turbine performance.
To
Convert
acres
atm
atm
bars
bars
Btu
Btu
Btu/h
Btulh
Btu/h
Btulhp-h
Btulhp-h
BtulkWh
BtulkWh
Btullb
Btullb
C
C
cm3
cm3
F
ft
ft*
fta
fts
ft-lb
ft-lb
ftlmin
ft3/min
ft3!min
gal
gallmin
hectares
hp (U.S.)
To
Multiply By
To
hectares
kg/cm*
lb/in.*
atm
lb/in.*
J (joules)
kcal
kcallh
kJlh
W (watts)
kcal/kWh
kJlkWh
kcal/kWh
kJlkWh
kcallkg
kJlkg
F
K
ft3
in.3
C
m
m*
I (liters)
m3
Btu
kg-m
km/h
I/s
m3/min
m3
I/s
acres
kW
4.047 x 10
1.0333
1.47 x 10
9.869 X 10-l
1.45 x 10
1.055 x lo3
2.52 x 10
2.520 x 10-l
1.0548
2.931 x 10
3.379 x 10
1.4148
2.5198 x 10-l
1.0548
5.555 x 10
2.3256
(C x 915) + 32
C + 273.18
3.531 x 10~
6.102 x lo-*
(F-32) x 519
3.048 x 10
9.29 x 10-2
2.832 x 10
2.832 x lo-*
1.286 x 1O-3
1.383 x 10-l
1.8288 x lo-*
4.720 x 10-l
2.832 x lo-*
3.785 x 1O-3
6.308 x lo-*
2.471
7.457 x 10
To
Multlply By
hp (U.S.)
in.
in.
in.2
in. of mercury
hp (metric)
cm
mm
mm*
kg/cm*
1.014
.
2.540
.
2.54 x 10
6.452 x lo*
3.453 x lo-*
in. of water
(at 4C)
kg/cm*
2.54 x 1O-3
in. of water
(at 4X)
lb/in.*
3.613 x lo-*
Convert
Btu
lb
kg
kg/cm*
lb/in.*
kg-m
ft-lb
kg/m3
lb/f@
km
miles (statute)
kW
hp
I
fts
lb
kg
lb/In.*
kg/cm*
lb/in.*
Pa
lb-ft*
kg-m*
llmin
ftsls
llmin
galls
m
ft
m*
ft*
m3
fts
mile (statute) km
tons (metric) kg
tons (metric). lb
W
Btulh
W
Btulmin
W
ft-I b/s
W
hp
9.486 x 1O-4
2.2046
1.422 x 10
7.233
6.243 x lo-*
6.214 x 10
1.341
3.531 x 10-2
4.536 x 10
7.03 x lo-*
6.8948 x lo3
4.214 x 10-l
5.886 x 1O-4
4.403 x 1o-3
3.281
1.076 x 10
3.531 x 10
1.6093
1.0 x lo3
2.205 x lo3
3.4129
5.688 x lo-*
7.378 x lo-
1.341 x,10-s
GE Industrial &
Power,Systems \
General Electric Company
Building 2, Room 1158
one River Road
One
Schenectady, NY 12345
6/91(2Mb