The present invention relates generally to a gas fired combined cycle power plant and more particularly relates to a modified bottoming cycle for improved output and efficiency.
A combined cycle power plant utilizes a gas turbine and a steam turbine in combination to produce power. The power plant is arranged such that the gas turbine is thermally connected to the steam turbine through a heat recovery steam generator (“HRSG”). The HRSG is a non-contact heat exchanger that allows feedwater for the steam generation process to be heated by otherwise wasted gas turbine exhaust gases. The HRSG is a large duct with tube bundles interposed therein such that water is heated to steam as the exhaust gases pass through the duct. The primary efficiency of the combined cycle arrangement is the utilization of the otherwise wasted gas turbine exhaust gases.
Modern combined cycles typically employ two (2) or three (3) steam generation pressures to recover the maximum energy from the gas turbine exhaust. These cycles also often include water supply temperature controls to maintain the tubes above the water dew point so as to avoid potential corrosion. Such cycles may optimize to HRSG exit gas temperatures as low as about 150° Fahrenheit (about 66° Celsius). In some instances, the customer may require a higher minimum HRSG exit gas temperature, for example so as to allow for a lower cost (shorter) stack. This minimum HRSG exit gas temperature constraint results in an unavoidable performance reduction because it requires the recovery of less exhaust energy to the steam. A higher HRSG exit gas temperature traditionally has been achieved by reduction of the low pressure surface area because the low pressure steam production thus sacrificed has the lowest potential to make work.
Thus, there is a desire for a combined cycle power plant that provides increased efficiency while meeting higher than optimum HRSG stack temperature requirements when needed.
The present application thus describes a combined cycle power plant including a gas turbine, a steam turbine, and a heat recovery steam generator. The power plant also includes a feedwater heater positioned downstream of the steam turbine and a fuel moisturization system in communication with the heat recovery steam generator.
The fuel moisturization system may include a fuel saturator and a fuel superheater. The power plant further may include a second feedwater heater and a turbine intercooler.
The present application further describes a method for operating a combined cycle power plant. The power plant includes a gas turbine operating on a fuel stream, a steam turbine, and a heat recovery steam generator. The method may include the steps of heating the water exiting the steam turbine prior to entering the heat recovery steam generator, adding water to the fuel stream, and heating the fuel stream entering the gas turbine.
The heating the water step may include heating the water in a feedwater heater and/or in a turbine intercooler. The adding water step may include adding water to the fuel stream in a fuel saturator. The heating the fuel step may include heating the fuel in a fuel superheater. The method further may include the step of further heating the water prior to entering the heat recovery steam generator. The further heating the water step may include heating the water in a turbine intercooler.
The present application further describes a combined cycle power plant. The power plant may include a gas turbine, a steam turbine, a heat recovery steam generator, a feedwater heater positioned down stream of the steam turbine, and a fuel moisturization system in communication with the heat recovery steam generator. The fuel moisturization system may include a fuel saturator and a fuel superheater. The power plant further may include a second feedwater heater and/or a turbine intercooler. The heat recovery steam generator may include two, three, or more pressure sections.
These and other features of the present invention will become apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon review of the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the drawings and the appended claims.
Referring now to the drawings, in which like numerals indicate like elements throughout the several views,
The steam turbine system 18 is associated with a multi-pressure HRSG 32. The HRSG 32 is a counter flow heat exchanger such that as feedwater passes therethrough the water is heated as the exhaust gas gives up heat and becomes cooler. The HRSG 32 has three (3) different operating pressures (high, intermediate, and low) with means for generating steam at the various pressures and temperatures as vapor feed to the corresponding stages of the steam turbine system 18. The HRSG 32 may include, for example, a lower pressure section 34, an intermediate pressure section 36, and a high pressure section 38. Each section 34, 36, 38 generally includes one or more economizers, evaporators, and superheaters.
Condensate is fed from the condenser 26 to the HRSG 32 via one or more conduits 40 with the aid of a condensate pump 42. A gland seal condenser 44 also may be used. The condensate subsequently passes through the low pressure section 34 of the HRSG 32. In a known manner, steam from the low pressure section 34 is fed to the low pressure section 24 of the steam turbine system 18 via a conduit 46. Condensate and/or feedwater pass through the intermediate section 36 and are returned to the intermediate pressure section 22 of the steam turbine system 18 via a conduit 48. Finally, condensate is passed through the high pressure section 38 of the HRSG 32 and is returned to the high pressure section 20 of the steam turbine system 18 via a conduit 50. Hot water produced via the HRSG 32 also may be used for a fuel heating system 52.
In this system, the HRSG exit temperature can be impacted by reducing the surface area within the low pressure section 34 of the HRSG 32, either the evaporator and/or the economizer. The net effect is lower low pressure steam generation and total heat recovered to raise the temperature of the HRSG exit gas. In the case of a HRSG exit gas temperature limit, the performance loss is a matter of reduced low pressure steam production and more unrecovered exhaust energy escaping from the HRSG 32.
The feedwater heater 56 selectively increases the supply temperature of the condensate to the HRSG 32. Specifically, the feedwater heater 56 improves thermal performance by raising the supply water temperature rather than lowering the water temperature exiting into the low pressure steam drum of the low pressure section 34. Higher output and efficiency are achieved because full low pressure steam generation is restored as is the work the steam produces as it expands through the low pressure section 24 of the steam turbine system 18. Heat recovered to steam generation and rejected with the HRSG exit gas may be the same, although the use of the low pressure extraction steam to preheat the feedwater has the secondary benefit of reducing condenser heat rejection.
If this embodiment is applied without HRSG temperature limitations, the use of the fuel saturator 60 and the fuel superheater 62 lowers the HRSG temperatures below that achievable in the power plant 10 shown in
The power plant 100 also includes a fuel moisturization system having a fuel saturator 130 and a fuel superheater 140. The fuel saturator 130 is similar to the fuel saturator 60 described above and is situated within the low pressure section 36 (in this embodiment) of the two pressure HRSG 32. Likewise, the fuel superheater 140 may be similar to the fuel superheater 62 described above and in communication with this low pressure section 36 of the HRSG 32. As such, the boiler feedwater is heated with low pressure steam turbine extraction and water for fuel moisturization is heated as far as allowed by the stack temperature limit.
Although the embodiments shown in
It should be understood that the foregoing relates only to the preferred embodiments of the present invention and that numerous changes and modifications may be made herein without departing from the general spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the following claims and the equivalents thereof.