The present invention relates to a device and a method for reducing noise and vibrations in a suction pipe in a reaction-type hydropower turbine. The invention is achieved by injecting water into the suction pipe through a finite number of points along the suction pipe's periphery. The injected water can be controlled, thereby counteracting back-flow tendencies, which are an important cause of unsteady phenomena that result in noise and vibrations in the suction pipe.
Reaction-type hydropower turbines include Francis, Kaplan and bulb turbines. This kind of turbine plant can be briefly described by following the movement of the water, beginning with an intake, shut-off devices such as sluice gates and valves, turbine cylinder, stationary vane cascades, such as stay and guide vanes, impeller or turbine wheel, suction pipe and an outlet. The function of the suction pipe is to utilise the water's velocity at the turbine wheel outlet in such a manner that it is recreated as head at the suction pipe outlet. This will permit the total pressure drop over the turbine plant to be increased together with the power produced.
Reaction-type turbines are extremely common in Norwegian hydropower production. They are characterised by high efficiency near the optimised operating point for which the turbine is designed. In the case of production below the operating point, the flow in the suction pipe under the turbine will become unstable. This instability is due amongst other things to the induced velocity field from the turbine wheel in the suction pipe inlet. This field will give rise to rotating eddies in the flow of water, resulting in unsteady effects and leading to noise and vibrations. Noise is mainly a problem for operators in the vicinity of the turbine system. The vibrations, however, have a direct effect on the working life of the turbine system, through increased fatigue loadings and material fatigue. The unsteady effects are discussed in the thesis “An experimental investigation of draft tube flow” by Thomas Velkve, NTNU 2004:36.
Unstable flows will also arise on account of the flow's separation from the walls of the suction pipe. This separation, which is a known phenomenon in fluid-mechanics, will give rise to unsteady effects involving back-flow.
For flow systems in general and turbine systems in particular, the performance or efficiency is often determined by changes in the interface between the fluid and the walls of the flow object. One method of stabilising the interface and preventing or delaying separation of the said interface is to add more impulse to the interface through injection of fluid, use of vortex generators or providing a rough surface, for example like that of a golf ball, in order thereby to increase the mixing between the interface and the flow outside the same interface.
The method of injecting the working medium on the low pressure side of a rotating machine is previously known for compressors in order to achieve favourable effects with regard to delivered amount and head, see U.S. Pat. No. 3,041,848. It should be noted that a known technique in pump operation is to recirculate water from the high pressure side, choke the pressure, for example via a valve, and introduce the water at the inlet on the pump's suction pipe, with the result that the pump operates with a volume flow approaching the optimum.
Injection of working medium into the flow interface in order to control separation in short diffusers is also known, see “Handbook of Hydraulic Resistance”, Idelchik, 3. edition, 1994, p. 260. The principle of improving the performance of short suction pipes or diffusers is also the main object of U.S. Pat. No. 4,515,524. A hydraulic recirculation line is employed here to prevent separation on a suction pipe for reaction turbines. The said device, however, will only have an effect on flows without tangential velocity components, and is therefore not relevant for low load ranges on turbines possessing this very characteristic of the presence of tangential velocity components.
The publication JP 61178563 discloses another example of the prior art, where water is fed into the suction pipe through openings in the suction pipe wall. The openings have an angle of entrance α (
The main object of the present invention is to reduce noise and vibrations in a suction pipe by injecting a working medium into the suction pipe at low operating ranges. There is preferably no injection when the flow of water is close to the optimal operating point for the suction pipe or the turbine system. Thus it is an object of the present invention to increase the range of possible water flows for operation of the turbine.
The present invention provides a device for reducing noise and vibrations in a suction pipe in a reaction-type hydropower turbine, where the suction pipe comprises at least one nozzle for injection of a working medium through the nozzles into the suction pipe, where each nozzle is arranged at an angle γ relative to a horizontal plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of an inlet of the suction pipe, characterised in that each nozzle is at an angle β relative to a horizontally defined tangent at the point of intersection between each nozzle and the suction pipe.
The present invention also relates to a method for reducing noise and vibrations in a suction pipe in a reaction-type hydropower turbine, characterised in that it comprises the following step:
a) injection of a working medium through at least one nozzle provided in the suction pipe, where each nozzle is arranged at an angle γ relative to a horizontal plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of an inlet in the suction pipe and at an angle β relative to a horizontally defined tangent at the point of intersection between each nozzle and the suction pipe.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will become apparent from the dependent patent claims.
The present invention will now be described by means of an embodiment, where reference is made to the attached drawings:
a illustrates a cross section of a nozzle, while
a and b show the extent of back-flows as calculated by means of numerical flow calculation instruments.
D Hydraulic diameter. Also used as a measurement of the minimum cross section A, since hydraulic diameter is defined as D=4A/P, where A is the minimum cross section and P is wetted circumference. For a circular, minimum cross section, A=πD2/4, while P=πD, so that D=D.
Du Outlet diameter of turbine impeller, and the suction pipe's inlet diameter.
N Number of nozzles dispersed along the periphery of the suction pipe.
s Vertical distance from the suction pipe's inlet to intersection between nozzles and suction pipe.
si Individual vertical distance for nozzle number i.
α The angle in the horizontal plane between adjacent nozzles.
α1 Angle between nozzles number 1 and 2 in the horizontal plane.
αi Angle between nozzle numbers i and i+1 in the horizontal plane. If i=N, nozzle number i+1 will be identical to nozzle number 1.
β The angle the centre line on the nozzle forms with the tangent to the suction pipe in the horizontal plane.
β1 β angle for nozzle number 1
βi β angle for nozzle number i
γ The angle the centre line on the nozzle forms with the tangent to the suction pipe in the vertical plane.
γi γ angle for nozzle number i.
The horizontal plane is defined as the plane that has the turbine's shaft centre as surface perpendicular.
The vertical plane is defined as the horizontal plane rotated 90 degrees about a line perpendicular to the turbine's shaft centre.
It should be noted that in most cases the turbine's shaft centre will coincide with the central longitudinal axis of the suction tube inlet under the turbine.
The suction pipe injection system is illustrated in
The spacing between the individual nozzles 2 is defined by means of the angle α, see
The number of nozzles N is preferably between 1 and 7. This gives an angle α of 360° and 52° respectively, provided the spacing between all the nozzles is equal.
The angle γ is preferably between 0° and 80°, where angles in the lower range are preferred in order to dampen low-load eddies in the centre of the suction pipe, while angles in the higher range are preferred in order to dampen separation and associated back-flows. The angle γ is more preferred between 10° and 50°.
The angle β is preferably between 20° and 70°, more preferred between 30° and 60°, and even more preferred approximately 40°. As mentioned above, this angle is preferably the opposite of the turbine's direction of rotation 5, in order to counteract tangential flow directions in the flow of water in the suction pipe.
The water injected through the nozzles 2 in the suction pipe preferably has an injection pressure lower than the pressure upstream of the turbine.
The injection of water through the nozzles 2 is preferably carried out continuously. It should be noted that the amount of water injected through the nozzles 2 according to the present invention should not exceed approximately 10% of the amount of water passing through the turbine.
In
The object of the invention is to reduce noise and vibrations at low loadings, typically 30% of nominal output, but also greater than this. In the example in figure 4b a configuration is shown that acts on a turbine with a nominal output of 4 MW, a head of 150 meters water column and a rotational speed of 750 rpm.
As mentioned above, the amount of water injected will preferably be zero at the optimal operating point for the turbine, while for lower operating points the amount of water injected will increase to 10% of the amount of water passing the turbine at the operating point concerned.
a and b illustrate the extent of back-flows as calculated by means of numerical flow calculation instruments. For
The figures illustrate contour values and axial velocities through a section of the suction pipe, see
It should be noted that in the test that was conducted and is described above in connection with
In the description above it is assumed that the injection of water is conducted in an approximately axial direction through the nozzles 2, i.e. that the flow of water has the same direction as the longitudinal direction of the nozzles 2. In an alternative embodiment it will be possible to place a spinning element near the outlet of the nozzles 2, thus changing the direction of the flow of water, with the result that in addition it obtains a tangential direction component, where axial direction is defined by the longitudinal direction of the nozzle, before the flow of water in the nozzles 2 reaches the main flow of water in the suction pipe. A spinning element of this kind is illustrated in
The spinning element's vanes 32 extend continuously along the outside of the centre body 31 and are therefore attached to the inside of the nozzles 2 along their outer edge. The vanes have an inlet edge 32 and an outlet edge 33, where the vane is curved along the longitudinal axis of the centre body, as illustrated in
Many modifications and adaptations of the present invention will naturally be apparent to those skilled in the art, either by interpretation of the above detailed description of the invention or by practising the invention.
The above detailed description is presented particularly with the intention of illustrating and describing advantageous embodiments of the invention. The description, however, in no way limits the invention to the specific embodiments that are described in detail.
The design of the device according to the invention will naturally be dependent on the dimensions of the rest of the turbine system. The various parameters, such as the angles α (i.e. the number of nozzles), β and γ (i.e. horizontal and vertical angular orientation), s (i.e. the spacing between the suction pipe inlet and the nozzles) and whether the spinning element should be employed or not, must therefore be adapted to suit each turbine system.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20044391 | Oct 2004 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO2005/000391 | 10/18/2005 | WO | 00 | 4/26/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/043824 | 4/27/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2507796 | Martin | May 1950 | A |
3041848 | Greenwald | Jul 1962 | A |
4515524 | Fisher | May 1985 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
55 156274 | Dec 1980 | JP |
61178563 | Aug 1986 | JP |
63 088278 | Apr 1988 | JP |
02 067467 | Mar 1990 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080063510 A1 | Mar 2008 | US |