The present disclosure relates generally to a solar thermal power plant, and more particularly, to a solar thermal power plant having a plurality of preheaters utilizing steam extracted from a steam turbine to improve steam generation efficiency within the power plant.
In conventional power plants, fossil fuels are typically burned to generate steam, which is used to drive power-generating devices. In such plants, water is fed to a boiler using the fossil fuels to heat the water and generate steam. The steam is then used to drive turbine generators that generate electricity. In order to increase the efficiency of the process of turning the water into steam, the water is often preheated as it is fed to the boiler. It is common practice to pass this feedwater stream through a preheating unit, such as an economizer, to primarily cool the flue gases flowing to an air preheater as well as raise the temperature of the feedwater before being fed into the boiler. In order to sufficiently cool the flue gases, the temperature of the feedwater entering the economizer must be limited to a relatively low temperature.
In conventional thermal solar power plants, solar receivers include panels of tubes that function as an economizer by heating the working fluid flowing through the solar receiver. This preheating of the working fluid is costly, requiring additional mirrors and/or heliostats to heat the economizer panels.
Accordingly, a need exists for a less costly solution to maximize the preheating of the working fluid (e.g., the water and/or stream) to increase the overall efficiency of the solar thermal power plant.
In one aspect of the present invention, a solar thermal power plant includes a steam generating portion having a steam drum and an evaporator. The steam drum separates water and steam. The evaporator receives the water from the steam drum to generate steam using solar energy provided thereto. The solar thermal power plant further includes a turbine that receives the steam from the steam generation portion. A plurality of extraction stages extracts steam from the turbine. A plurality of feedwater heaters receive steam from the steam extraction stages to heat feedwater provided by the turbine, wherein the heated feedwater is provided to the steam generation portion.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method of operating a solar thermal power plant includes providing feedwater to a steam drum that separates water and steam. The method further provided water from the steam drum to an evaporator that receives the water from the steam drum to provide the steam. The method includes providing a turbine that receives the steam; and extracting steam from the turbine to provide the feedwater and to heat the feedwater. The method further includes receiving steam from the steam extraction stages to heat the feedwater provided by the turbine, wherein said heated feedwater is provided to the steam generation portion.
Referring now to the Figure, which is an exemplary embodiment, and wherein like elements are numbered alike:
In one embodiment of the invention, a solar steam power generation system or solar thermal power plant 10 is shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The solar receiver 12 receives recycled water and/or steam from the steam turbine 30 via input pipe 18. A steam drum 40 receives the water and/or steam 19 from the input pipe 18. In the steam drum, the incoming water is distributed along the entire length of the drum by the water distribution header (not shown). Nozzles (not shown) in the distribution headers direct the incoming water in the downward direction in order to minimize turbulence and aid in circulation. The received water and/or steam 19 mixes with the water 42 in the drum 40 and is directed to the downcomers 44, e.g., pipes or tubes. The downcomers 44 originate at the steam drum 40 and terminate at the evaporator inlet 46, directing the water 42 to the evaporator 36.
A circulating pump 48 pumps the recirculated water 42 from the steam drum 40 disposed at the top of the evaporator panel(s) (i.e., the water wall) to the bottom inlet 46 of the evaporator panel(s). This circulating pump 48 provides a constant flow of cooling water to the evaporator panel(s) for all load conditions. This permits rapid response to load changes.
The solar energy reflected from the mirrors and/or heliostat 24 of
From the steam drum 40, steam 51 is directed to the superheater 38 through the superheater inlet 52 via pipe 55 and then on to the superheater panels. The solar energy superheats the steam entering the superheater 38. From the superheater outlet 54, the steam is directed to the steam line 28. The superheater outlet is equipped with the following: safety valve, ERV and start-up vent, drain valves, motor operated stop valve, and pressure, flow, and temperature instrumentation (not shown).
The steam provided by the steam line 28 to the steam turbine 30 expands and rotates the turbine and the generator 32, thus producing electricity at 15. The steam exiting the turbine is condensed in a condenser 60 and the condensate is fed back to the input pipe/line 18 to the solar receiver 12. A feedwater pump 74 provides the condensed steam back to the steam drum 40 of the solar receiver 12.
As shown, the turbine 30 includes a high pressure end 62 and a low pressure end 64 having multiple stages therein at different pressures. The steam expands as it progresses through the turbine 14 from the high pressure end 62 to the low pressure end 64. In one exemplary embodiment, the progression of the steam through the turbine 14 drives blades or the like that rotate a turbine output shaft 31 that drives the generator 32.
In one embodiment, the turbine 12 includes a plurality of steam extraction stages 66 that provide steam to a plurality of feedwater heaters 68 at various pressure levels. The condensed steam 76 from the condenser 60 is fed through a plurality of feedwater heaters 68, whereby thermal energy is conducted from the steam of the extraction stages 66 to the condensed feedwater (e.g., condensed steam) 76 to heat the feedwater 18 to a maximum temperature as possible, which may be in a range of approximately 20° F. to 50° F. below the saturation temperature of the water 42 in the steam drum 40.
The turbine 30 may include approximately 6-9 extraction stages 66 and corresponding feedwater heaters 68. In one embodiment, at least one extraction stage 66 at the low pressure end 64 is fed directly to the condenser 60 and condensate 76 (e.g., condensed steam) from the condenser is provided to a plurality of feedwater heaters 68. Each of the remaining steam extraction stages 26 feed steam to the feedwater feeders 68. Each of the heaters 68 uses the provided steam to heat (e.g., in incremental stages) the condensed steam 76 as it is passed from the condenser 60 through the feedwater heaters 34 and is returned to the steam generating portion 12. In one embodiment, each feedwater heater 68 returns residual condensed steam 78 of each respective extraction stage 66 to the condenser 60 along a feedback conduit 72. The resulting condensate (e.g., preheated water and/or steam) is then fed from the feedwater heaters 68 to the steam generating portion 12 via the input pipe 18 to the steam drum 40.
Compared to conventional power plants, a solar thermal power plant, be it a trough or a tower design, is different. There is no combustion chamber, there are no products of combustion that require a heat recovery system and, therefore, the design can be optimized by shifting the economizer heating duty from the expensive heliostats/parabolic mirrors—receiver island to the steam turbine island. The present invention accomplishes this by providing an increased number of steam extraction stages 66 in a steam turbine 30 and the installation of additional feedwater heaters 68 (see
As one will appreciate, the embodiment of a solar generation system 10, shown in
Referring to
Similar to that described in U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/045,361, which is incorporated herein by reference, the tubing in any of the solar panels, e.g., the evaporator 36, the superheater 38 and the reheater 108, may included tubes that have a rifled inner surface to increase the thermal transfer between the tubing and the water and/or steam flowing therethrough.
Furthermore, while the solar power generation system 10, shown in
While the invention has been described with reference to various exemplary embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of co-pending U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/057,360, filed on May 30, 2008, and co-pending, U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/045,361, filed on Apr. 16, 2008, the contents of both applications being incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61057360 | May 2008 | US | |
61045361 | Apr 2008 | US |