Ch1 - Steam Power Plants
Ch1 - Steam Power Plants
Ch1 - Steam Power Plants
PLANT
STEAM POWER
The PLANT
Principle of Heat Engine and the Second
Law of Thermodynamics
Carnot Cylce
Rankine Cycle
Perfomance Criteria of a Steam Power Plant
Rankine Cycle with Superheated Steam
Rankine Cycle with Reheating and
Regeneration
Objectives
1.Analyse vapor power cycles in which the
working fluid is alternately vaporized and
condensed.
2.Investigate ways to modify the basic
Rankine vapor power cycle to increase the
cycle thermal efficiency.
3.Analyse the reheat and regenerative vapor
power cycles.
4.Review power cycles that consist of two
separate cycles, known as combined
3
cycles.
Thermal Power
Plant
Sub-Systems in a Steam
Power Plant
Our focus will be on subsystem A.
SUB-SYSTEM A
Introduction
Steam (Water Vapor)
Steam is the most common working fluid used in vapor
power cycles because of its many desirable
characteristics, such as: (a) low cost, (b) availability, and
(c) high enthalpy of vaporization#.
Steam power plants are commonly referred to as: (a)
coal plants, (b) nuclear plants, or (c) natural gas plants,
depending on the type of fuel used to supply heat to
the steam.
The steam goes through the same basic cycle in all of
them. Therefore, all can be analyzed in the same
# The amount of energy needed to vaporize a unit mass of
manner.
7
saturated liquid at a given temperature or pressure, hfg.
Sequence of Processes:
Problem Carnot
Cycle
10-3
Consider a steady-flow Carnot cycle which
Is Carnot Cycle
Practical?
11
12
Sequence
Processes
of
Energy Interactions
The boiler and condenser do not
involve any work but both involve
with heat interactions.
14
The pump and the turbine are
Boiler:
supplied in
Turbine:
The amount of work
produced by the turbine,
1015
A steam power plant operates on a simple
ideal Rankine cycle between the pressure
limits of 3 MPa and 30 kPa. The temperature of
the steam at the turbine inlet is 700C, and
the mass flow rate of steam through the cycle
is 50 kg/s. Show the cycle on a T-s diagram
with respect to saturation lines, and determine
(a)the thermal efficiency of the cycle and
(b)the net power output of the power plant
(c)The back work ratio (bwr)
18
1014
Consider a 210-MW steam power plant that
operates on a simple ideal Rankine cycle.
Steam enters the turbine at 10 MPa and 500C
and is cooled in the condenser at a pressure of
10 kPa. Show the cycle on a T-s diagram with
respect to saturation lines, and determine:
(a)the quality of the steam at the turbine exit,
(b)the thermal efficiency of the cycle, and
(c)the mass flow rate of the steam.
Answers: (a) 0.793, (b) 40.2 percent, (c) 165
19
kg/s
that
produces 300 MW of electric power. The power plant
operates on a simple ideal Rankine cycle with turbine
inlet conditions of 5 MPa and 450C and a condenser
pressure of 25 kPa. The coal has a heating value (energy
released when the fuel is burned) of 29,300 kJ/kg.
Assuming that 75 per cent of this energy is transferred
to the steam in the boiler and that the electric generator
has an efficiency of 96 per cent, determine
(a)the overall plant efficiency (the ratio of net electric
power output to the energy input as fuel) and
(b)the required rate of coal supply.
Answers: (a) 24.5 per cent, (b) 150 t/h
The actual vapor power cycle differs from the ideal Rankine cycle as
a result of irreversibilities in various components. Two common
sources of irreversibilities are:
(a)fluid friction, and
(b)heat
loss to the surroundings.
Fluid friction causes pressure
drops in the boiler, condenser,
and the piping between various
components. Water must be
pumped to a higher pressure requires a larger pump and larger
work input.
More
heat
needs
to
be
Isentropic
A pump requires a greater work input, and a turbine produces a
Efficiencies
smaller
work output as a result of irreversibilities.
The deviation of actual pumps and turbines from the isentropic ones
can be accounted for by utilizing isentropic efficiencies, defined
as,
Pump:
Turbine:
In actual condensers, the liquid is
usually
sub-cooled to prevent the
onset of cavitation, which may damage
the water pump. Additional losses occur
at the bearings between the moving
parts as a result of friction. Two other
factors are the steam that leaks out
22
Increasing Efficiency of
Thermal
efficiency ofCycle
the ideal Rankine cycle can be increased by:
Rankine
(a)Increasing the average temperature at which heat is transferred
to the working fluid in the boiler, or
(b)decreasing the average temperature at which heat is rejected
from the working fluid in the condenser.
24
Increasing Efficiency of
Rankine Cycle
increases both
the net work output and heat input to
the cycle. The overall effect is an
increase in thermal efficiency of the
cycle.
Superheating to higher temperatures will
decrease the moisture content of the
steam at the turbine exit, which is
desirable avoid erosion of turbine
blades.
The superheating temperature is limited
by
metallurgical
considerations.
Presently
the
highest
steam
temperature allowed at the turbine inlet
is about 620C.
25
Increasing Efficiency of
Rankine Cycle
Increasing the Boiler Pressure
29
31
y
1-y
34
Mass
of
Steam
Extracted
For each 1 kg of steam
leaving the boiler, y kg
expands partially in the
turbine and is extracted
at state 6.
The remaining (1-y) kg of
the steam expands to the
condenser pressure.
Therefore, the mass flow
35be
rates of the steam will
36
Problem-The Regenerative
Rankine
Cycle
A steam power plant operates on an ideal regenerative Rankine
cycle. Steam enters the turbine at 6 MPa and 450C and is
condensed in the condenser at 20 kPa. Steam is extracted from the
turbine at 0.4 MPa to heat the feedwater in an open feedwater
heater. Water leaves the feedwater heater as a saturated liquid.
Show the cycle on a T-s diagram, and determine:
(a) the net work output per kg of steam flowing through the
boiler, and
(b) the thermal efficiency of the cycle.
Answers: (a) 1017 kJ/kg, (b) 37.8 percent
37
38
Problem-The Regenerative
Rankine
Cycle
A steam power plant operates on an ideal regenerative
Rankine cycle. Steam enters the turbine at 6 MPa and
450C and is condensed in the condenser at 20 kPa.
Steam is extracted from the turbine at 0.4 MPa to heat
the feedwater in closed feedwater heater. Assume that
the feedwater leaves the heater at the condensation
temperature of the extracted steam and that the
extracted steam leaves the heater as a saturated liquid
and is pumped to the line carrying the feedwater.
Show the cycle on a T-s diagram, and determine:
(a)
the net work output per kg of steam flowing
through the
boiler, and
39
(b)
the thermal efficiency of the cycle.
40
Problem-The Reheat-Regenerative
Rankine Cycle
A steam power plant operates on an ideal reheatregenerative Rankine cycle and has a net power output
of 80 MW. Steam enters the high-pressure turbine at 10
MPa and 550C and leaves at 0.8 MPa. Some steam is
extracted at this pressure to heat the feedwater in an
open feedwater heater. The rest of the steam is
reheated to 500C and is expanded in the low-pressure
turbine to the condenser pressure of 10 kPa.
Show the cycle on a T-s diagram and determine:
(a) the mass flow rate of steam through the boiler,
and
(b) thermal efficiency of the cycle.
42
43
44