The disclosure relates generally to dynamic control of tolerances in a machine, and more particularly, to tolerance control in a spray nozzle, such as may be used in gas turbine systems and other machines.
A variety of machinery includes spray nozzles and other components that require precise internal dimensions to operate effectively. These same components can be subject to wear and deformation during operation that may alter one or more critical dimensions of the component. For example, a spray nozzle may be subject to mechanical and electrochemical erosion, causing the diameter of the aperture controlling fluid flow to increase and thereby decrease fluid pressure in the system and undermine the desired fluid velocity and dispersion. In some cases, decreased performance requires that the eroded spray nozzles be removed and replaced.
Some gas turbines may include a wet compression system to improve turbine operation power output in high temperatures (ambient air over about 60 degrees Fahrenheit). Wet compression systems may include a water injection rack mounting an array of spray nozzles, specifically small capacity hydraulic atomizers, connected to one or more valve-controlled water paths for precisely controlling location, timing, and pressure of water injected into the gas turbine for cooling. Such wet compression systems may create finely atomized water drops (1-50 micron diameter) injected into an air inlet duct through spray nozzle apertures with critical dimensions of less than several hundred microns. Droplet size is important to control the timing and distribution of evaporative cooling of water droplets entering the compressor stages. Changes of critical internal dimensions in the spray nozzle over time due to erosion may cause a greater variation in droplet sizes and/or increases in mean droplet size. These changes may have adverse impact on gas turbine performance and wear, including airfoil damage or degradation.
A first aspect of this disclosure provides a method of using a surface coating to control component dimensions for a fluid path. A fluid system including a wear component having a critical dimension defined by at least one component surface is operating. A change in the critical dimension of the wear component from surface erosion of the at least one surface is detected. In response to detecting the change in the critical dimension, coating additive is dispensed into the fluid system during operation of the fluid system. At least one surface is coated with the coating additive to offset at least a portion of the change in the critical dimension.
A second aspect of the disclosure provides a system using a coating to control component dimensions. A fluid system includes a wear component having a critical dimension defined by at least one component surface. A controller detects a change in the critical dimension of the wear component from surface erosion of the at least one surface and generates a control signal based on detecting the change in the critical dimension. An additive system deploys a coating additive to form a coating layer on the at least one component surface during operation of the fluid system and in response to the control signal from the controller.
A third aspect of the disclosure provides a gas turbine combustion system. The system includes at least one fluid nozzle having an aperture width defined by at least one internal surface. A primary fluid path provides a primary fluid to the at least one fluid nozzle during operation of the gas turbine combustion system. An additive fluid path deploys an additive coating material into the primary fluid path in response to a control signal. The coating additive forms a coating layer on the at least one internal surface to reduce the aperture width. A controller detects a change in the aperture width of the at least one fluid nozzle and generates the control signal based on detecting the change in the aperture width.
The illustrative aspects of the present disclosure are arranged to solve the problems herein described and/or other problems not discussed.
These and other features of this disclosure will be more readily understood from the following detailed description of the various aspects of the disclosure taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings that depict various embodiments of the disclosure, in which:
It is noted that the drawings of the disclosure are not necessarily to scale. The drawings are intended to depict only typical aspects of the disclosure, and therefore should not be considered as limiting the scope of the disclosure. In the drawings, like numbering represents like elements between the drawings.
In some embodiments, a fluid system, such as a gas turbine combustion fuel injection system and compressor wet compression system, may include one or more wear components that suffer surface erosion or other changes that changes one or more critical dimensions. A wet compression system is to use the water evaporative latent heat to cool the air during the compression process inside a compressor to reduce specific compression work, therefore to increase gas turbine power output and overall efficiency. Such fluid systems may include any system relying at least in part on controlled movement of material components in solid or fluid states, including various configurations of fluid injection systems, such as combustion systems. Other fluid injection systems may include various sprayers, drip systems, material application jets and streams, and other industrial systems combining fluid sources, fluid paths, and fluid nozzles, including spray nozzles, stream nozzles, laminar flow nozzles, and drip nozzles. Wear components may include components with at least one defined surface exposed to mechanical or electrochemical wear during operation of the fluid system. In some embodiments, the wear components include one or more components with surfaces defining or adjacent to a fluid path through the system and subject to wear from contact with the fluid and related fluid flows. For example, the fluid nozzle for dispersing fluid from a pressurized fluid path may include internal surfaces, including those defining the aperture through which the fluid leaves the nozzle. In some embodiments, the wear components may include surfaces subject to gas flows and/or periodic contact with other solid surfaces and positioned in the fluid system such that fluid or gas flows including additive coatings could reach and deposit materials on their exposed surfaces during operation of the fluid system. Operation of a fluid system may be the normal operation of the machine for its intended commercial purpose, exclusive of installation, maintenance, repair, storage, recovery, or other functions that interrupt normal operation. Critical dimensions may be physical distances defined by one or more component surfaces that materially contribute to the operability and/or efficiency of a fluid system, where variation in the critical dimension changes the operating performance or likelihood of failure of the component or system in a material way.
In the embodiment shown, gas turbine system 100 includes an air intake subsystem 110 to provide combustion air into compressor 104. For example, air intake subsystem 110 may include a series of ductwork 112 from an ambient air intake 114 to a compressor inlet chamber 116. Air from outside gas turbine system 100 may enter ambient air intake 114 and pass through inlet filter 118 to travel along the path defined by ductwork 112. Air intake subsystem 110 may include a number of additional functional components along the path of ductwork 112. For example, air intake subsystem 110 may include an evaporative cooler filter 120 to reduce the temperature of air entering through ambient air intake 114. Air intake subsystem 110 may include inlet silencers 122 to reduce the noise of gas turbine compressor 104 to meet power plant noise requirement. In the embodiment shown, air intake subsystem 110 includes air cooling subsystem 150 and, more specifically, a wet compression spray system. The portion of air cooling subsystem 150 that may be disposed along the path of ductwork 112 may include an array of spray nozzles 152 or other fluid nozzles. For example, spray nozzles 152 may include a two dimensional grid of liquid nozzles on a frame perpendicular to the air flow path through ductwork 112. The grid of liquid nozzles may be supported by a lattice of support members that include fluid channels for one or more fluid paths connecting to each spray nozzle (not individually shown) in array of spray nozzles 152. In some embodiments, spray nozzles 152 may be distributed across the cross section of ductwork 112 and the support lattice defines a plurality of open squares through which the air may pass around the nozzles and support lattice. The nozzles arrangement is configured to have optimal water/air ratio that minimizes the temperature distortion both radially and circumferentially inside the compressor. Air intake subsystem 110 may incorporate a drain 124 to enable condensed fluid to flow out of air intake subsystem 110 rather than being sucked into compressor 104.
Air cooling subsystem 150 may include a network of fluid sources, fluid paths, pumps, filters, and valves for providing cooling fluids, generally water, to spray nozzles 152 in the intake air flow path of intake air intake subsystem 110. For example, combustion air cooling subsystem 150 may include a fluid source 154, such as a water tank or connection to a plant water system or water service, containing a primary cooling fluid for use by combustion air cooling subsystem 150. In the embodiment shown, fluid source 154 is connected to air cooling subsystem 150 by a source valve 156 and source filter 158 and fluid flows along a fluid path, such as through a pipe, to a primary pump 160. For example, primary pump 160 may be a motor-driven centrifugal pump, positive displacement pump, diaphragm pump, magnetic drive pump, peristaltic pump, or gear, drum, piston, or other pump. Primary pump 160 pumps the primary fluid along a fluid path that may include a control valve 162, filter 164, sensor 166, and distribution valve 168 before reaching a distribution manifold 170 for one or more fluid paths 172, 174, 176 for one or more sections of spray nozzles 152. In various embodiments, any number of fluid paths to spray nozzles 152 may be possible. In some embodiments, fluid paths 172, 174, 176 may correspond to different zones in the array of fluid nozzles 152. In some embodiments, fluid paths 172, 174, 176 may be examples of individual fluid paths for each of spray nozzles 152. Fluid paths 172, 174, 176 may include nozzle path control valves 178, 180, 182 and nozzle sensors 184, 186, 188. Control valves 178, 180, 182 may enable the selective use and flow control for each fluid path and nozzle sensors 184, 186, 188 may provide sensor data for measuring or evaluating flow through each nozzle path. For example, nozzle sensors 184, 186, 188 may include pressure or flow sensors positioned to detect and quantify changes across the individual fluid paths. In some embodiments, nozzle sensors 184, 186, 188 may include other sensing modalities, such as temperature, particulate, electrochemical, electrical conductivity, or other sensors.
Air cooling subsystem 150 may include an additive coating fluid path 190 for selectively providing additive coating material into fluid paths 172, 174, 176 for one or more of spray nozzles 152. An additive tank 192 may provide a reservoir or source of an additive coating material that may be dispensed into the primary fluid path via distribution manifold 170 of combustion air cooling subsystem 150. In some embodiments, the additive coating material may be a water-borne anti-corrosive surface coating additive that may be mixed with water in the primary fluid path and thereby distributed to spray nozzles 152. For example, a combination vapor phase corrosion inhibitor and a non-zinc metal complex inhibitor may form a multilayer adhesive surface film on steel or similar metal surfaces in a wear component, with or without acrylic. In some embodiments, a multi-metal organic corrosion inhibitor additive may be used to coat steel, iron, aluminum alloy, galvanized steel, stainless steel, copper, and other metal wear components within the flow path of air cooling subsystem 150. Other water-borne coating additives with an affinity for the target surfaces may be used, including various combinations and dilutions thereof. In addition to the mechanical changes in the physical dimensions of component being coated, the additive coating material may be selected for providing enhanced resistance to further electrochemical erosion by providing a protective ion layer over the original component surface. In some embodiments, an additive pump 194 moves the additive coating material from additive tank 192 along an additive fluid path 196 and into the primary fluid path of combustion air cooling subsystem 150. In the embodiment shown, additive fluid path 196 selectively provides additive coating material into distribution manifold 170 where it can be directed along fluid paths 172, 174, 176 in a manner similar to the flow of the primary fluid. Distribution manifold 170 may enable additive coating material to enter fluid paths 172, 174, 176 prior to spray nozzles 152. In some embodiments, additive fluid path 196 may include its own manifold and/or more complex fluid paths for selectively intersecting one or more fluid paths 172, 174, 176. In some embodiments, additive coating material may be mixed with water in a desired proportion in additive tank 192 or elsewhere along additive fluid path 196 and a calculated proportion of additive coating material may be controllably mixed with the primary fluid flow to produce a desired proportion of additive coating material in the fluid reaching spray nozzles 152. In some embodiments, the fluid flow through additive fluid path 196 may include a sufficient proportion of the primary fluid, such as water, that the fluid flow through additive fluid path 196 may temporarily replace the primary fluid flow from fluid source 154 for some or all of fluid paths 172, 174, 176 while maintaining the cooling operation of combustion air cooling subsystem 150.
In some embodiments, the various sensors, control valves, and pump controls of combustion air cooling subsystem 150 may be connected to one or more controllers, such as controller 198. For example, controller 198 may be an integrated control system for air cooling subsystem 150, one or more system management applications on a general purpose computer, or an interface or subsystem of a larger industrial automation system. In some embodiments, controller 198 includes one or more programmed workflows for managing operation of combustion air cooling subsystem 150 in an automated fashion. For example, controller 198 may monitor data received from nozzle sensors 184, 186, 188 to determine when one or more control parameters, such as pressure or flow rate, reaches a threshold value indicative of a change in a critical dimension of one or more spray nozzles 152. For example, when pressure decreases without a commensurate change in pump pressure, fluid temperature, or other factors, an increase in the aperture width due to erosion in spray nozzles 152 may be identified. When such a threshold is reached, controller 198 may issue a control signal to additive pump 194 and/or any related fluid control valves to direct additive coating material from additive fluid path 196 into one or more of fluid paths 172, 174, 176 to reach the effected spray nozzles 152. Controller 198 may continue to monitor the relevant control parameters until the additive coating material through the effected spray nozzles provides a sufficient coating on the surfaces in the flow path to return the critical dimension back within tolerance such that additive pump 194 may be turned off and additive fluid path 196 may be again isolated from the primary flow paths. In some embodiments, pump speed, valve control, or other control features of additive coating fluid path 190 may be dynamically varied by controller 198 to adjust a proportion of additive coating mixed with the primary fluid and delivered through spray nozzles 152. These control features may enable controller 198 to automatically vary the proportion of additive coating and primary fluid among a plurality of proportion values based on the change in the critical dimension, such as aperture width, rather than one hundred percent additive coating fluid, one hundred percent primary fluid, or a single fixed proportion. Dynamic control of the proportion of additive coating to primary fluid may be implemented in cases where the proportion of additive coating may be continuously varied to maintain and/or restore the critical dimensions during operation of gas turbine system 100 and, more specifically, air cooling subsystem 150.
The embodiments described in
The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of the disclosure. As used herein, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms “comprises” and/or “comprising,” when used in this specification, specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof.
The corresponding structures, materials, acts, and equivalents of all means or step plus function elements in the claims below are intended to include any structure, material, or act for performing the function in combination with other claimed elements as specifically claimed. The description of the present disclosure has been presented for purposes of illustration and description, but is not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the disclosure in the form disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the disclosure. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the disclosure and the practical application, and to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand the disclosure for various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180320521 A1 | Nov 2018 | US |