This application claims priority to European application 12189430.7 filed Oct. 22, 2012, the contents of which are hereby incorporated in its entirety.
The present invention relates to the technology of gas turbines. It refers to a method for operating a gas turbine with sequential combustion according to the preamble of claim 1. It further relates to a gas turbine for the implementation of such a method.
Gas turbines with sequential combustion comprise two combustors as shown for example in
Usually, a high-pressure turbine is positioned between the first combustor 14, 17 and the second combustor 15, 19. However, in this case the high-pressure turbine has been omitted. Instead, dilution air may be injected into the hot gas channel 21 by means of a dilution air supply 23.
In part load operation of gas turbines, the combustor hot gas temperature typically decreases. At a certain hot gas temperature limit, CO emissions rise and set a limit to the emission guarantee range. The CO emissions typically rise when the gas turbine load is reduced from 100% to part-load is shown in
To solve this problem, two different approaches have been proposed in the prior art:
Further related prior art has been identified as follows:
Document DE 103 12 971 A1 discloses a gas turbine assembly, especially for a power unit, comprising a compressor and two downstream combustion chambers in series followed by a turbine. There is a cooling unit arranged between the two combustion chambers. This solution is based on sequential combustion without a high pressure turbine. Due to the missing high pressure turbine between the two combustors comparatively high gas temperatures result at the exit of the first combustor, which would result in a spontaneous ignition when fuel is injected at the second combustor, leading to excessive component thermal stresses near the fuel injection and an insufficient mixing of fuel and air resulting in high emission values.
To avoid this disadvantage it is proposed to cool down the hot combustion gas from the first combustion chamber before injecting fuel into the hot combustion gas to form the fuel-oxidant-mixture for the second combustion chamber. By cooling the hot combustion gas from the first combustion chamber or first combustion step the exhaust gas temperature can be reduced enough that the ignition of the injected fuel is delayed long enough to allow a detached flame and a sufficient mixture in order to have a homogenous and lean fuel-oxidant-mixture.
Document WO 03/038253 relates to the conversion of a sequentially-fired gas turbine unit, essentially comprising at least one compressor, a high pressure combustion chamber, a high pressure turbine, a low pressure combustion chamber and a low pressure turbine. The rotating parts of the compressor, high pressure turbine and low pressure turbine are arranged on a common rotor and on conversion all claimed considerations associated with said gas turbine unit can be advantageously simplified. The converted gas turbine unit comprises a reduced compressor, the original high pressure combustion chamber (operating at lower pressure), the original low pressure combustion chamber and the original low pressure turbine, whereby a reduction of the compressor is achieved by means of removing, without replacement, a number of the final high pressure stages, in relation to the direction of flow or by removing the same from drive and the original high pressure turbine is removed from function without replacement. The high pressure turbine is just a transfer channel between the high pressure combustion chamber and the low pressure combustion chamber. The hot gases flow from said high pressure combustion chamber through said transfer channel directly into the low pressure combustion chamber.
Document EP 2 206 959 A2 discloses a gas turbine system including a fuel reformer system comprising a fuel inlet configured to receive a fuel slipstream, an oxygen inlet configured to introduce an oxygen slipstream, a preconditioning zone configured to pre-treat the fuel slipstream, a mixing zone comprising a premixing device configured to facilitate mixing of the fuel slipstream and the oxygen slipstream to form a gaseous premix, a reaction zone configured to generate a syngas from the gaseous premix, a quench zone configured to mix a fuel stream into the syngas to form a hydrogen-enriched fuel mixture, and a gas turbine configured to receive the fuel mixture.
Document WO 2010/112318 A1 relates to a method for the low CO-emission partial load operation of a gas turbine having sequential combustion, wherein the air ratio of the operative burners of the second combustion chamber at partial load is kept below a maximum air ratio, and to a gas turbine for carrying out said method. In order to reduce the maximum air ratio, a number of modifications are performed in the operating concept of the gas turbine, individually or in combination. One modification is an opening of the adjustable compressor guide vane row before turning on the second combustion chamber. In order to turn on the second combustion chamber, the adjustable compressor guide vane row is quickly closed and fuel is conducted into the burners of the second combustion chamber in a synchronized way. A further modification is the turning off of individual burners at partial load.
It is an objective of the present invention to provide a method for operating a gas turbine with sequential combustion which reduces CO emission and pressure drop for part-load operation without increasing the flashback risk.
A further objective of this invention is the provision of a gas turbine for implementing such a method.
This and other objectives are obtained by a method for operating a gas turbine with sequential combustion, where the gas turbine comprises a compressor, a first combustor with a first combustion chamber and first burners, which receives compressed air from the compressor, a second combustor with a second combustion chamber and second burners, which receives hot gas from the first combustor with a predetermined second combustor inlet temperature, and a turbine, which receives hot gas from the second combustor, in which the second combustor inlet temperature is reduced for base-load operation of the gas turbine, and that the second combustor inlet temperature is increased when decreasing the gas turbine load from base-load to part-load.
The second combustor inlet temperature can for example be reduced for base-load operation by admixing of a dilution air flow and/or by a reduction in the fuel to air ratio in the first combustor, thereby increasing the first combustion exit temperature.
The second combustor inlet temperature can be increased at part load relative to the base load inlet temperature for example by increasing the first combustor exit temperature. It can also be increased at part load relative to base load by reducing the dilution air flow relative to the dilution air flow at base load.
According to an embodiment of the invention dilution air is additionally mixed to the hot gas from the first combustor to achieve a reduced second combustor inlet temperature versus the exit temperature of the first combustor. Additional admixture of dilution air in this context can for example be an increase in the ratio of admixed dilution air to first combustor exit mass flow at part load relative to the ratio at base load.
Specifically, the dilution air mass flow is varied in order to achieve larger variations of second combustor inlet temperature. Larger variations mean larger than the variations, which would be achieved by only varying the first combustor outlet temperature. The variations of the first combustor outlet temperature are limited due to combustor stability and life time limitations. An increase to higher first combustor outlet temperatures is limited due to life time and pulsation limits. A decrease to lower first combustor outlet temperatures is limited by a flame out limit and extinguishing pulsations limits. This variation in dilution air flow may for example occur either as a driven proportion of the total combustor air as a result of variation in compressor exit massflow and first and second combustor firing temperatures and pressure distribution versus load, or by a regulated feed system.
According to another embodiment of the invention the exit temperature of the first combustor or second combustor inlet temperature, respectively, is controlled as a function of the gas turbine load.
According to a further embodiment of the invention the exit temperature of the first combustor or second combustor inlet temperature, respectively, is controlled as a function of the combustion pressure, especially in the first or second combustor or compressor plenum or at turbine inlet.
According to still another embodiment of the invention a gas with short ignition times, especially with high H2 content or a gas containing high proportion of higher order hydrocarbons, termed C2+ gas, is used as a fuel. A fuel gas for example containing more than 5% or more than 10% (mol %) H2 and/or C2+ can be considered as a gas with a high proportion of H2/C2+, and correspondingly have a short ignition time relative to the ignition time of a fuel gas with for example more than 95% or more than 90% methane content. A gas with short ignition time is a gas with an ignition time which is smaller than the ignition time of a fuel gas with 95% methane and a maximum of 5% H2 when using hydrogen containing fuels and a gas with short ignition time is a gas with an ignition time which is smaller than a fuel gas with 95% methane and 5% C2+ when using fuel gas containing higher order hydrocarbons. If the fuel gas contains H2 and C2+ the shorter ignition time is relevant to determine the “short ignition time” limit.
The gas turbine for conducting the method according to the invention comprises a compressor, a first combustor with a first combustion chamber and first burners, which receives compressed air from the compressor, a second combustor with a second combustion chamber and second burners, which receives hot gas from the first combustor with a predetermined second combustor inlet temperature, and a turbine, which receives hot gas from the second combustor. It is characterized in that a mixer is arranged in a hot gas channel directly connecting the first and second combustor, with said mixer connected to a dilution air supply.
According to an embodiment of the gas turbine of the invention the first burners are connected to a fuel supply, and that a control unit is connected to the dilution air supply and the fuel supply for controlling said supplies in order to control the exit temperature of the first combustor or second combustor inlet temperature, respectively.
According to another embodiment of the inventive gas turbine the control unit comprises an input for a load signal representing the gas turbine load.
According to a further embodiment of the invention the control unit comprises an input being connected to a pressure transducer, which senses a combustion pressure of the gas turbine.
According to a further embodiment of the invention the control unit comprises an input being connected to a temperature transducer, which senses the inlet temperature to the second burner/exit temperature of the first combustor.
The present invention is now to be explained more closely by means of different embodiments and with reference to the attached drawings.
In a state-of-the-art gas turbine operation concept (OPC), the inlet temperature to the second combustor (TI,SEV) is maintained almost constant for the whole load range from base-load to part-load (see curve D in
According to the present invention, an OPC is applied, which is characterised by a higher second combustor inlet temperature (TI,SEV) at part-load (higher hot gas temperature from the first combustor) and lower second combustor inlet temperature at base-load (see curve E in
Notably, no flashback issues are expected a part-load, in particular for carbon base fuels (i.e. natural gas, C2+, etc.) because of the longer ignition times due to the lower pressure.
At the same time, the burners of the second combustor can be designed for lower volume flow rates (and therefore velocities) which reduces significantly the pressure drop.
Notably, the minimum velocity (residence time) of a second (e.g. SEV) burner is given by the flashback limit at the highest pressure. By reducing the base-load inlet temperature (TI,SEV at 100%) the ignition time is extended so that the burner can run at lower velocity without any additional flashback risk. Also, a longer mixing section can be implemented for further NOx reduction.
In accordance with curve E of
According to a first embodiment of the invention, a mixer (22 in
Specifically, in the mixer 22, the dilution air mass flow is—in addition to a variation in the fuel supply—also varied in order to achieve larger variations of the second combustor inlet temperature (TI,SEV).
An advantage of the method according to the invention is the possibility to increase the hot gas temperature of the first combustor (=TI,SEV) much more. In the state of the art, where a high pressure turbine is provide between the two combustors, one is limited by said high pressure turbine: Either one loses too much life-time or needs too much cooling air for part load operation with an increased hot gas temperature of the first combustor.
An advantage of the method according to the invention is the possibility to operate the combustion system with varying gaseous fuel compositions without detriment to the engine performance, since more reactive gaseous fuels (which are less susceptible to part load CO production, but are characterised by shorter ignition delay times) can be derated in the first combustor at part and base load to reduce the overall inlet temperature to the second burner and second combustor. The second combustor firing temperature and inlet temperature to the turbine however remain unchanged. In a state-of-the-art gas turbine operation concept (OPC), the required reduction of the second burner burner inlet temperature for such reactive gaseous fuels would, by virtue of the presence of the high pressure turbine, result in an associated engine performance loss.
One can increase the hot gas temperature of the first combustor at part-load by >10% or even >20% of the absolute hot gas temperature of the first combustor at base-load (in the state of the art one is limited to some 50K). Therefore CO problems can be mitigated effectively.
At part-load the second combustor hot gas temperature, TE,SEV, is reduced and typically the compressor inlet guide vanes are closed. The reduced mass flow with reduced turbine inlet temperature leads to a pressure, which is between 30% and 60% of the base-load pressure. This leads to a higher ignition delay time for the second burner. Therefore the flow velocity can be reduced without a flash back risk (=>low pressure drop) or gases with short ignition times can be burnt (high H2 content or high C2+ gases).
The exit temperature of the first combustor (=TI,SEV) can be controlled by a control of the fuel mass flow to the first combustor and/or by injection of a dilution air at the combustor exit (mixer 22 in
According to a further embodiment of the invention the exit temperature of the first combustor 14, 17 is controlled as a function of the gas turbine load. In
According to another embodiment of the invention the exit temperature of the first combustor 14, 17 is controlled as a function of the combustion pressure (e.g. in the first or second combustor/compressor plenum/turbine inlet pressure). In
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