siklus thermal pembangkit
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sistem pembangkit Pelajaran Konversi energiTRANSCRIPT
Thermal PowerOrigins of Steam Power
Papin (1690) First Steam-operated pistoni) water boiled in cylindrical chamber containing tight fitting pistonii) steam exerted force on piston, causing it to riseiii) piston retracted into chamber after walls cooled down(cycle time – many minutes)
Savery (1699)Rate of steam condensation increased by spraying cold water over outside of pistonchamber (cycle time ~ a minute)Newcomen (1712)Rate of steam condensation improved still further by injecting cold water directly intosteam chamber (cycle time 5-10 seconds) Watt (1775)Incorporated separate condenser, thereby removing need to reheat walls of piston chamber. Commercial steam engines of 20 kW power in use by 1800
Thermal Power Stations
Note: thermal includes fossil-fuel and nuclear powerHeat source is part of Steam CycleThermodynamics of cycle independent of nature of heat source
Steam Cycle: Main Components
WaterPump
Boiler
Heat in
Turbine (expander)
Electrical powerCondenser
Cooling waterHeat out
Properties of SteamTemperature K
Specific entropy kJ/kg/K
Critical pressure 221 bar
p=0.006 bar
Sub-criticaldry steam
Super-criticalfluid
Sub-criticalwater-steam
mixture(wet steam)
100% water0% steam
0% water100% steam
Ice-water vapour mixture
Entropy/temperature diagram is best for power station cycles
Any TWO thermodynamic parameters are sufficient to define state of fluideg S,T or P,H (Steam Tables)
Dryness fraction (quality) x = mvapour/(mvapour +mwater)
s = (1 x) swater + x svapour
T
s
Carnot Cycle (Ideal Cycle)1) Heat absorption at constant temperature, Ta (boiler) 122) Isentropic expansion work output (turbine) 233) Heat rejection at constant temperature, Tb (condenser) 344) Isentropic compression (pump) 41
1 2
4 3
T
Tb
Ta
Q12
Q34
W23W41
S
Energy Conservation (1st Law of Thermodynamics) Q12 + W23+ Q34+ W41= 0
(Note: Q12 > 0, W23 < 0, Q34 < 0, W41 > 0)
Cycle efficiency, c (Useful work out)/(Heat input at Ta)ie c (| W23| W41)/ Q12| (Ta Tb)/ Ta 1 Tb/ Ta
(Note: T measured in K (absolute temperature) – formaldefinition of absolute temperature scale)
Practical difficulties in using a Carnot Cycle
1) Boiler operates only in wet-steam regime otherwise temperature would rise when all the water has turned to steam, violating condition for Carnot Cycle turbine expands wet steam water droplets hit turbine blades (damage)
2) Maximum temperature (Ta) is limited to ~650 K efficiency of cycle is severely constrained
3) Compression of water/steam mixture is thermodynamically unstable (water droplets) very large volume compressor (expensive)
Rankine Cycle overcomes all these problems
Rankine Cycle
Step 1:a) Condense all the steam to waterin the condenserb) Pumping water to high pressure requiressmall volume machine and little energy
T
Tb
S
2a
1b1a
2b2c
Step 2: Use 3-stage boiler (~ constant pressure)a) Economiser – water heated at constant pressureb) Evaporator – water/steam mixture heated at constant pressurec) Superheater – dry steam heated at constant pressure
[Note that there is a small drop in pressure through the boiler tube in order to overcome frictional losses]
Ta
Tb
T
S
Step 3:Expand dry steam through a turbineto generate shaft power
In practice, water droplets still form in the low pressure end of the turbine, so the steam is reheated at various stages
Ta
Tb
T
S
reheaters
from boiler
to condenser
HP: high pressure turbineIP: intermediate pressure turbineLP: low pressure turbine
HP IP LP
Frictional losses across turbine blades vary like u2 (FD=½CDAu2)ie very large for large u (near speed of sound)
Losses reduced significantly by using many stages in series (~50 stages)
The loss of kinetic energy at each stage is small and turbulence is reduced
Other practical effects limiting efficiency
a) Boiler tubes have finite thickness, so outer wall temperature is higher than water/steam temperatureb) Metallurgical limit to temperature/pressure difference boiler tubes can withstand (creep/crack formation)c) Many pipes/tubes in flow circuit frictional losses
d) Condenser is a vacuum chamber air leaks in but can not condense, so ‘air blanket’ forms, preventing water vapour from condensing on cold surface of condenser tubes
3
4
T
S
1
2
Q23
W34
Q41
W12
Efficiency of Rankine Cycle
Condenser at 30 C at a pressure of 0.04 barCompressor increases pressure to 170 barThree-stage boiler at 170 bar a) economiser raises temperature to 352 C b) evaporator at 352 C c) superheater raises temperature to 600 CAdiabatic turbine
T p hf hg sf sg
Water/Steam 30 0.04 126 2566 0.436 8.452Water/Steam 352 170 1690 2548 3.808 5.181Dry Steam 600 170 3564 6.603
where hf and hg are the specific enthalpies and sf and sg are thespecific entropies of the fluid and gas, respectively, in kJ/kg.
Specific enthalpy h u +pvisobaric, constant pressure, dh du + pdv dQdh Tds + vdp so isentropic dh vdp or h W
i) W12 V(p2 p1) = 10(170 0.04) 1017 kJ/kg 3
4
T
S1
2
Q23
W34
Q41
W12
ii) 12 isentropic so h2h1 + W12 126 + 17 143 kJ/kg
iii) 23 isobaric so Q23 h3 – h2 3564 143 = 3421 kJ/kg
iv) 34 isentropic so W34 h3 – h4 and s3 s4
s4 (1x)sf4 + xsg4
6.603 (1x)0.436 + 8.452 x x 0.769
3
4
T
S1
2
Q23
W34
Q41
W12
v) h4 (1x)hf4 + xhg4
h4 (1x)126 + 2566 x x 0.769 h4 2002 kJ/kg
34 isentropic so W34 h3 – h4
3564 – 2002 1562 kJ/kg
vi) useful work/heat in (W14 – W12)/Q23 (1562 – 17)/3421 0.452 45.2%
vii) cf Carnot Cycle c(T3 T4)/T3 (873 303)/873 0.653 65.3%
Combined Cycle Gas Turbine (CCGT) Stations
In recent years gas turbines and steam turbines have been combined toincrease the efficiency to around 50-60% (upper temperature ~1200 C)
Gas Turbine
CombustionChamber
Gaseousfuel
air
compressedair
Compressor Turbine
Exhaust gas
a) Heat generated by internal combustion rather than via a high temperature heat exchanger (boiler)
b) No cooler required since exhaust gases vented to atmospherePlant much smaller. Work done by compressor issignificant, though this is compensated by very hightemperature ~ 1200 C (Turbine blades ceramic coatedand water cooled)
Tp
patmosTmax
S
Brayton CycleCompressor
Combustion
Turbine
CCGT Station
Heat out
CombustionChamberGaseous
fuel
air
compressedair
Compressor Turbine
Exhaust gasWaterPump
Boiler
Heat in
Turbine
Condenser
Cooling water
Exhaust gas
T
S
Rankine Cycle
BraytonCycle
Heat of exhaust gases used to helpraise steam for steam turbine
Many CCGTs have been built in the UK in the 90s due to availability ofcheap gas and relaxation of governmental controls
CCGT Station
660 MW Power Plant
Stator for a 660 MWgenerator being assembled
Low pressure turbine, part of a 660 MW assembly