The present invention relates generally to gas turbine combustion chambers and, more particularly, to an improved gas turbine combustion chamber control valve.
Combustion turbines generally take in air and compress the air in a compression turbine stage. Gas or oil fuel is metered into a combustion chamber and the resulting hot exhaust gas then passes over the turbine blades creating torque on a shaft. Typically the shaft is connected to a generator that then produces electricity.
The metering of the fuel in the combustion chamber can be critical because it controls the speed of the turbine as the load varies. For example, when the fuel is metered with high resolution, emissions of environmentally unfriendly gases can be lowered.
The metering of the flow of gas or oil into the combustion chamber is typically performed with a fuel control valve. A typical fuel control valve for a gas turbine utilizes a stationary metering seat and an adjustable metering plug to meter the fuel through the valve. The metering plug is connected by a valve stem to an actuator which modulates the position of the metering plug and therefore the flow of fuel through the valve. Typically the actuator is a hydraulic driven linear actuator.
With parenthetical reference to corresponding parts, portions or surfaces of the disclosed embodiment, merely for the purposes of illustration and not by way of limitation, the present invention provides an improved combustion turbine control valve (20) comprising a fuel intake flow passage (21) to a combustion chamber (22) of a combustion turbine (23), a control valve assembly (25) configured to meter fuel flow through the flow passage to the combustion chamber from an upstream side (26) to a downstream side (27), the control valve assembly comprising a metering valve body (30) having a valve seat (31) defining an inlet port (32) in the flow passage between the upstream side and the downstream side, a metering valve plug (33) movable relative to the metering valve body from an open position (
The valve seat may comprise a frusto-conical seat surface (38) and the metering valve plug may comprise a frusto-conical plug surface (40) in the second pressure-affective area of the metering valve plug. The frusto-conical plug surface may be offset (49) relative to the frusto-conical seat surface so as to engage the frusto-conical seat surface and define a circular seal (50) when the metering valve plug is in the closed seated position. The third pressure-affective area may be annular and the circular seal may be located proximate to an outer circumference (48) of the annular third pressure-affective area. The chamber passage may extend through the metering valve plug. The actuator may comprise hydraulic ports and a servo system for actuating the metering valve plug between a closed position and an open position. The actuator may comprise an electro-mechanical actuator (36) or an electro-hydrostatic actuator (136). The combustion turbine may power an electric generator (24). The first pressure-affective area may be substantially equal to or less than the second pressure-affective area. The valve assembly may further comprise a fail-safe mechanism (55) configured and arranged to bias said metering valve body toward said closed seated position, and the fail-safe mechanism may comprise a spring disposed in the chamber.
At the outset, it should be clearly understood that like reference numerals are intended to identify the same structural elements, portions or surfaces consistently throughout the several drawing figures, as such elements, portions or surfaces may be further described or explained by the entire written specification, of which this detailed description is an integral part. Unless otherwise indicated, the drawings are intended to be read (e.g., cross-hatching, arrangement of parts, proportion, degree, etc.) together with the specification, and are to be considered a portion of the entire written description of this invention. As used in the following description, the terms “horizontal”, “vertical”, “left”, “right”, “up” and “down”, as well as adjectival and adverbial derivatives thereof (e.g., “horizontally”, “rightwardly”, “upwardly”, etc.), simply refer to the orientation of the illustrated structure as the particular drawing figure faces the reader. Similarly, the terms “inwardly” and “outwardly” generally refer to the orientation of a surface relative to its axis of elongation, or axis of rotation, as appropriate.
Referring now to the drawings, and more particularly to
Process valve assembly 25 is provided to meter the fuel flow through fuel intake passage 21 and into combustion chamber 22. As shown in
Valve plug 33 is a generally hollow cylindrical member elongated about axis x-x and slidably disposed within sleeve 43 of valve body 30 such that it is moveable longitudinally along axis x-x from an open position shown in
The top end of valve plug 33 has an upwardly-facing horizontal annular surface 37. Surface 37 and the inner walls of the upper portion of valve body 30 define chamber 34. Sub-passages 35a and 35b of passage 35 extends through surface 37 and connect chamber 34 to fuel passage 21 and fuel intake pressure in fuel passage 21 when plug 33 is in both the open and closed position. Upper surface 37 has a pressure-affective area value A1 that is exposed to gas or fluid in chamber 34. Because surface 37 is in a plane transverse to axis x-x and the permitted direction of travel of plug 33 in sleeve 43 of body 30, surface 37 generally defines pressure-affective area value A1, which is the area acted on by pressure in chamber 34 to apply a force in the permitted direction of travel of plug 33 in sleeve 43 of body 30, namely downward and parallel to axis x-x.
The bottom end of valve plug 33 has an outwardly and downwardly-facing frusto-conical surface 40 and a downwardly-facing horizontal annular surface 41. The bottom end of valve plug 33 has pressure-affective area value A2 that is exposed to gas or fluid received in port 32 when valve plug 33 is in the open position. This pressure-affective area value A2 is the area of the surfaces in a plane transverse to axis x-x, which is the area acted on by pressure in port 32 to apply a force in the permitted direction of travel of plug 33 in sleeve 43 of body 30, namely upward and parallel to axis x-x. Plug 33, including surface 40, is symmetrical about axis x-x so the force components from pressure transverse to axis x-x and the permitted direction of movement of plug 33 cancel each other.
As shown, pressure-affective area value A1 of the top face of plug 33 is almost equal to pressure-affective area value A2 of the bottom face of metering plug 33, such that the gas forces on the valve are almost balanced. The only difference in the area is the result of shaft 51. The circular openings of passages 35a and 35b are equal on the top face and bottom face of plug 33 and therefore balance out. Actuator 36 at this point is only required to overcome the frictional forces and accelerating forces of the valve assembly.
As shown, seat 31 and the bottom end face of metering plug 33 are dimensioned such that, when seated, pressure-affective area value A3 of the bottom end face 41 of metering plug 33 is less than pressure-affective area value A1 of the top end face 37 of metering plug 33, such that the differences in the pressure-affective area values A1 and A3 multiplied by the gas pressure, shared through passage 35 between the upstream side of valve intake port 32 and chamber 34, provides a sufficient seat force to keep valve 25 in the closed sealed position. With this new configuration, the actuator input force only needs to be large enough to overcome the friction forces plus the acceleration forces plus the force to initiate the seal. The sum of these forces is typically ⅓ the valve seating force requirements.
In addition, pressure-affective area value A1 is substantially equal to or less than pressure-affective area value A2. If they are substantially equal, the forces cancel and no additional load is required to actuate valve plug 33. If pressure-affective area value A1 is less than pressure-affective area value A2, then a bias towards the open position is provided.
As shown in
Actuator 36 is an electro-mechanical actuator (EMA) configured to actuate plug 33 in sleeve 43 between the open and closed positions. In this embodiment, an electric motor is connected through shaft 51 to a nut which converts the rotary movement of the motor to linear movement to valve plug 33. Thus, the electric motor is mechanically connected to rotate shaft 51, which has continuous helical threads machined on its circumference running along its length. Threaded onto shaft 51 is ball nut 52 with corresponding helical threads. Nut 52 is prevented from rotating with shaft 51 such that, when shaft 51 is rotated, nut 52 will be driven along the threads of shaft 51. The direction of motion of ball nut 52 depends on the direction of rotation of shaft 51 and therefor the directional rotation of the rotor of the motor. As shown, the top of plug 33 is attached to ball nut 52, such that rotational motion of the motor can be converted to linear displacement of valve plug 33.
In this embodiment, similar to the first embodiment, the bottom end face of valve plug 33 has pressure-affective area value A2 that is exposed to gas or fluid received in port 32 when valve plug 33 is in the open position. As shown, pressure-affective area value A1 of the top face of plug 33 is almost equal to pressure-affective area value A2 of the bottom face of metering plug 33, such that the gas forces on the valve are almost balanced. The only difference in the area is the result of LVDT 151. The circular openings of passages 35a and 35b are equal on the top face and bottom face of plug 33 and therefore balance out. When valve plug 33 is in the closed seated position shown in
Alternatively, an electro-hydraulic actuator (EH) may be used to control movement of plug 33. The electro-hydraulic actuator generally comprise control electronics which create a command input signal, a servo-amplifier which provides a low power electrical actuating signal which is the difference between the command input signal and the feed-back signal generated by the feed-back transducer, a servo valve which responds to this low power electrical signal and controls the flow of hydraulic fluid to plug 33 and sleeve 43 to position plug 33, and a power supply, generally an electrical motor and a pump, which provides the flow of a hydraulic fluid under high pressure. The feed-back transducer measures the output position of the actuator and converts this measurement into a proportional signal which is send back to the servo-amplifier.
As another alternative, the actuator may be a conventional hydraulic actuator. With a hydraulic actuator, an unbalanced pressure applied to valve plug 33 generates the force to move valve plug 33 between the open and closed position.
Alternatively, a battery back-up system for actuator 36 may be used. The battery is configured to power the drive for the actuator servo motor during a power failure so actuator 36 can still drive plug 33 to the closed seated position.
With actuator 136, a number of fail safe alternatives may be employed. As with actuator 36 shown in
While a fail safe mechanism that drives valve assembly 25 to a closed position has been shown, as a further alternative, the fail-safe mechanism can be orientated to drive valve assembly 25 to the open position. For example, a spring can be positioned on the other side of plug 33 to bias plug 33 to the open position.
The present invention contemplates that many changes and modifications may be made. Therefore, while an embodiment of the improved gas turbine combustion chamber control valve has been shown and described, and a number of alternatives discussed, persons skilled in this art will readily appreciate that various additional changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention, as defined and differentiated by the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2014/035633 | 4/28/2014 | WO | 00 |