The present invention relates to gas and liquid fuel turbine engines used in power generation plants and, in particular, to an improved combustor design for use in industrial gas turbine engines that provides reduced carbon dioxide and oxygen emissions using hydrogen fuel staging and a diluent feed in order to control the formation of OH radicals and co in the combustion exhaust.
Gas turbine engines typically include a compressor section, a combustor section and at least one turbine that rotates to generate electrical power. The compressor discharges directly into the combustor section where hydrocarbon fuel is injected, mixed and burned to produce thermal and kinetic energy. The combustion gases are channeled into and through one or more stages of the turbine which extracts rotational energy from the exhaust gases, with the rotational energy then being used to generate electrical power.
In order to achieve maximum operating efficiencies, gas turbine combustion systems, particularly those employing “multiple can” combustor designs, operate over a wide range of different fuel compositions, pressures, temperatures and fuel/air ratio conditions, preferably with the ability to use either liquid or gas fuels or a combination of fuels (known as “dual fire” systems). Many candidate hydrocarbon fuels used in gas turbine combustors contain unwanted contaminants and/or byproducts of other processes that tend to inhibit combustion and/or reduce the capacity and efficiency of the system. In addition, many existing gas turbine systems tend to operate in a slightly rich mode, i.e., with slightly less than the precise stoichiometric amount of oxygen in the feed necessary to burn the entire hydrocarbon fuel mixture, resulting in at least some incomplete combustion of the fuel and hence a certain amount of carbon monoxide and oxygen necessarily being present in the exhaust gases. Thus, in a conventional gas turbine system, the products of combustion invariably contain CO and small amounts of excess oxygen resulting from the equilibrium chemistry at the nominal temperatures of combustion with even some of the CO2 products of combustion disassociating into CO and O2.
In addition, perfect mixing of fuel and air cannot be achieved in most gas turbine engines, resulting in some of the oxygen present in the feed not reacting with the hydrocarbon fuel. As a result, the resulting exhaust stream from most gas turbine combustors, particularly multiple can combustors, comprise mostly N2 and CO2 but by design still contain residual amounts of CO and O2 which eventually must be removed or reacted in downstream operations in order to maintain desired overall gas turbine efficiencies.
One known solution to removing excess CO and O2 from the exhaust streams of conventional gas turbine engines utilizes a catalyst system in which the products of combustion pass through the turbine section of the engine and then a heat recovery steam generator (“HRSG”) with a portion of the exhaust stream being treated by an oxidation catalyst which at the lower temperatures in the HRSG alters the equilibrium between CO and O2 and CO2 and forces trace amounts of CO and O2 to convert to CO2, resulting in a more environmentally acceptable exhaust stream, i.e., with CO2 and a lower oxygen content. In order for the catalyst to approach zero oxygen and CO content, however, a sufficient amount of CO must be present to consume all the O2 in the exhaust.
Given the practicality of most gas turbine operations (i.e., a slightly rich combustion environment in each combustor can), excess CO in the exhaust is known to have a negative effect on overall engine operation because the energy content of the CO will not be fully captured, eventually resulting in an efficiency penalty to the system. As a result, it has become important in the gas turbine industry to minimize and carefully control the amount of excess CO in the exhaust stream resulting from combustion in each “can” and to monitor and control the CO content leaving a bank of combustors.
Two additional practicalities in the gas turbine art are known to drive the need to control the amount of CO formed in the turbine exhaust. First, the fuel to air ratio of the gas turbine engine is subject to finite control limits since only a limited ability exists to control the exact amount of fuel being fed to each combustor. Second, individual combustors may operate with a slightly different fuel to air ratio, resulting in slight variations in the emissions on a can-to-can basis. Those additional basic design features of combustors have contributed to the need to operate gas turbine engines using a slight amount of excess fuel and to create the right amount of CO such that all (or virtually all) of the oxygen still present in the exhaust eventually is consumed and/or eliminated using catalyst treatment. In the past, it has been difficult to control the exact amount of CO produced during the initial combustion, particularly on a can-to-can basis.
Thus, a need exists for a combustion system that relies on a slightly rich, but sufficiently lean mixture of hydrocarbon fuel and air to yield low emissions of air pollutants, particularly CO, when operating an advanced, high efficiency gas turbine engine. A need also exists to carefully predict and control the amount of CO formed during the initial combustion in each can in order to maximize the operating efficiency of the entire engine, including any downstream catalyst treatment operations.
The present invention addresses the above concerns through a new method for reducing and controlling the CO and oxygen emissions in an “oxyfuel” type gas turbine combustor using a hydrocarbon dominant fuel (such as natural gas or even “dual fire” fuel systems). As in conventional systems, hydrocarbon fuel is burned in each combustor using an oxidizer (e.g., air and/or an oxygen-rich feed). It has been found that the entire combustion dynamics can be improved by injecting additional, interim amounts of one or more auxiliary feed streams described below. The additional interim injections result in the formation of a controlled amount of an OH radical, which in turn helps to reduce the amount of CO and free O2 formed during initial combustion. That is, the OH radical resulting from the injections combines with CO to produce additional CO2, thereby reducing the amount of unreacted CO and oxygen before the exhaust stream leaves the combustor. In the end, the removal of CO and O, in the exhaust improves the overall efficiency of the entire gas turbine engine.
As noted above, the invention offers particular advantages in “rich” combustion systems, i.e., having a Phi value greater than 1.0 (and preferably between 1.0 and 1.1). A rich combustion typically leaves very little oxygen in the exhaust and creates an exhaust environment susceptible to the formation of the OH radical (a “chain breaking” type reaction). The resulting mixture created at that location near the combustor head tends to increase the OH radical density, which in turn reduces the amount of CO by virtue of a subsequent reaction to form CO2. Specifically, by injecting a small amount of free hydrogen, followed by an oxidizer element and then a diluent stream (e.g., nitrogen), the OH radical formed from the hydrogen injection reacts with CO to form carbon dioxide, which can then be more easily and efficiently removed by conventional means.
The present invention also ensures that other unwanted emissions (particularly NOx) do not exceed expected and/or mandated EPA exhaust limitations. That is, the invention provides a combustion system using a premixed combustion feed which would be characterized as slightly rich, but with a fuel/air mixture lean enough to ensure that thermal NOx formation in the zone remains negligible. The addition of hydrogen and oxidizer feeds followed by a diluent coolant are also sufficient to meet the inlet temperature demands of the gas turbine. The invention thus has particular advantages in applications where the inlet temperature demands of the turbines are so high as to preclude the possibility of achieving low thermal NOx emissions levels by lean premixed combustion alone.
These and other advantages of the invention are achieved by providing a combustor for a gas turbine that includes the following basic features as described in greater detail in connection with
In the exemplary embodiments described below in connection with
CO+OH→CO2
Significantly, none of the known prior art processes rely on hydrogen and oxide injection to precisely control CO formation at that point in a combustor can, particularly in order to reduce the amount of CO down to the desired stoichiometric amount.
By way of summary, the present invention covers a method for reducing the amount of carbon monoxide and oxygen emissions in an oxyfuel hydrocarbon combustion system, comprising the steps of feeding defined amounts of hydrocarbon fuel and an oxidizer component into one or more combustors, typically the type found in a gas turbine engine, igniting the mixture of hydrocarbon fuel and oxidizer to form a first combustor exhaust stream, monitoring the amount of carbon monoxide in the exhaust at the head end of each combustor in order to identify one or more target locations downstream of the initial exhaust stream for purposes of injecting free hydrogen and a supplemental oxidizer component into the combustor. Both injected components serve to reduce the amounts of carbon dioxide and oxygen remaining in the exhaust, and thus the amount of injected hydrogen and oxidizer component may vary, depending on the detected amount of carbon monoxide.
The invention also contemplates injecting a fixed amount of a diluent component into one or more combustors at a point further downstream from the initial exhaust stream in order to control the temperature, particularly as related to the conversion of CO to CO2. It has been found that method has particular benefits in rich operating systems, namely those with Phi values greater than 1.0 in which a certain amount of carbon monoxide inherently results from the initial combustion reaction.
The invention also includes a gas turbine engine comprising the following basic elements: A gas compressor, a plurality of combustors, a turbine driven by the expanded exhaust from the combustors, a primary fuel circuit for the combustors, means for feeding hydrocarbon fuel and air to each combustor, a supplemental fuel circuit for one or more of the combustors defined by a plurality of hydrogen and oxidizer injection nozzles for feeding additional hydrogen and an oxidizer component into the combustors, a carbon monoxide sensor disposed in the exhaust stream, and a feedback control for determining and controlling the amount of additional hydrogen necessary to reduce the level of carbon monoxide and oxygen present in the exhaust.
As noted above, a gas turbine engine typically includes a compressor section, a combustion section and a turbine section with the compressor section driven by the turbine through a common shaft connection. The combustion section nominally includes a circular array of a plurality of circumferentially spaced combustors with the fuel/air mixture being burned in each combustor to produce the hot energetic flow of gas which flows through a transition piece for directing the gas to the turbine blades of the turbine section. A conventional combustor is described in commonly-owned U.S. Pat. No. 5,259,184. For purposes of the present description, only one combustor is illustrated, it being understood that all of the other combustors arranged about the turbine will be substantially similar to the combustor illustrated in
The term “oxyfuel” as used in connection with
Turning to the figures,
Nominally, a controlled amount of hydrocarbon fuel (such as natural gas) feeds directly into the gas turbine combustor where it ignites and produces thermal energy. The spent exhaust gases exiting from the combustor drive the gas turbine 18 and typically pass at a lower pressure into a heat recovery steam generator (not shown). As noted above, the combustion section often includes a circular array of a plurality of circumferentially spaced combustors. A prescribed fuel or fuel/air mixture is burned in each combustor to produce a hot energetic flow of gas which flows through a transition piece for transporting the gas to the turbine blades of the turbine section which serves as the main driving force to generate electricity via rotating shaft 26 and electrical generator 24 as shown.
Referring now to
Immediately downstream of the mixing head, the fuel air mixture ignites using a pilot flame in the primary combustion zone 48. Thereafter, an assembly such as that described in commonly-owned U.S. Pat. No. 6,192,688, directs the combined hot gases of combustion 50 into the turbine nozzles and turbine blades into turbine section 18. An exemplary combustion system can also include a plurality of start-up fuel nozzles, premixing fuel nozzles and an ignition device (not shown) such as an electrically energized spark plug. The initial combustion in the primary combustion zone thus occurs as air under pressure mixes with fuel from the start-up fuel nozzles and/or the premixing fuel nozzles.
In like manner, the periodic oxidizer injections downstream of the mixing head as described above can be made using individual and/or manifold type oxidizer injection ports 64, with the number and size of the injection ports again dependent upon on actual combustor operation and the amount of OH radical being formed for reaction with CO. An exemplary feedback control system for determining the amount of hydrogen and oxidizer necessary to reduce the levels of carbon monoxide and oxygen in the final exhaust nominally will include a plurality of sensors for detecting the amount of carbon monoxide and OH radical in the exhaust (for example at or near the combined combustion gases 50 in
The fourth column in particular confirms that the amount of CO in the exhaust drops significantly following the staged injections described above.
While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiment, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.