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Disclaimer • This training presentation is provided as a reference for preparing for the PJM Certification Exam. • Note that the following information may not reflect current PJM rules and operating procedures. • For current training material, please visit: http://pjm.com/training/training-material.aspx PJM©2014 Generation Unit Basics Interconnection Training Program State & Member Training PJM©2010 1 3/6/2014 Agenda • Provide an overview of: – Generators • Describe the types: – – – – – – PJM©2010 Fossil Steam generating units Nuclear generating units Hydroelectric generating units Combustion turbines Combined Cycle Power Plants (CCPP) Wind Power 2 3/6/2014 Generating Unit Basics Generating Theory Part 1 PJM©2010 3 3/6/2014 Generators • • • • PJM©2010 Basic Operating Principles A.C. Generator Components Generator Rotational Speed Generator Characteristics 4 3/6/2014 Basic Operating Principles • Electromagnetic Induction is the principle used by a generator to convert mechanical energy into electrical energy • Induction is further defined as producing a current and an emf in a circuit by changing a magnetic field around the circuit • For this to happen, three things are needed: - A magnetic field - A current-carrying conductor - A relative motion between the two PJM©2010 5 3/6/2014 Basic Operating Principles PJM©2010 6 3/6/2014 Basic Operating Principles • Generators use mechanical energy from the prime mover to turn the generator’s rotor (field) inside the generator’s stator (armature) • The turning of the rotor’s magnetic field sets up the main airgap flux inducing a voltage in the stator windings • The stator’s output to the system is a three-phase alternating current since the direction of the magnetic field changes in relation to the windings as the rotor turns 360 degrees • One rotation is equal to a complete cycle of power PJM©2010 7 3/6/2014 Basic Operating Principles • Output voltage of the generator is controlled by changing the strength of the magnetic field of the rotor. • This is accomplished by changing the direct current or excitation current that is supplied to the rotor • The field excitation is supplied by the exciter • When real power is constant, the real power output of a generator is equal to the real power demand. • Steady-state equilibrium is defined as the mechanical torque input being equal to the electrical torque output of the generator PJM©2010 8 3/6/2014 Basic Operating Principles PJM©2010 9 3/6/2014 Basic Operating Principles PJM©2010 10 3/6/2014 Basic Operating Principles PJM©2010 11 3/6/2014 Review • A D.C. voltage is applied to the rotor • Rotor is an electromagnet placed inside the stator • The rotor rotates within the stator providing relative motion between the magnetic field and the armature windings • A.C. voltage is induced in the stator • The stator voltage is the output voltage at the terminals of the generator PJM©2010 12 3/6/2014 Basic Operating Principles • How is the output voltage determined? – Strength of the magnetic field – Number and length of turns of conductors – Magnitude of relative motion or rotational speed between the rotor and stator • Control of excitation voltage is the primary means of controlling the generator output voltage PJM©2010 13 3/6/2014 A rotating field is more common because it’s a low voltage, low power circuit It is considerably more difficult to conduct the higher AC voltage and power through a set of collector rings and brushes A.C. Generator Components • Rotating Magnetic Field • Series of Stationary Conductors • Source of D.C. Voltage (Exciter) PJM©2010 15 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components • Synchronous Machine: an AC machine that under steady-state conditions operates at a constant speed and a constant frequency • Main features include: - Rotor supplied with a DC field - Three-phase stator or armature - Prime mover or turbine - Controllable DC source or exciter PJM©2010 16 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor PJM©2010 17 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor • The basic function of the rotor is to produce a magnetic field of the size and shape necessary to induce the desired output voltage in the stator • The rotating field is required to produce a given number of lines of magnetic flux which is obtained by: Ampere-turns • Ampere-turns is the product of the number of turns in the rotor winding and the current in the winding • The rotor body forms the path of the magnetic lines for part of the circuit, and the stator core and air gap provide the return path for the flux PJM©2010 18 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor PJM©2010 19 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor • Generator rotors are made of solid steel forgings with slots cut along the length for the copper windings • Insulated winding bars are wedged into the slots and connected at each end of the rotor and are arranged to act as one continuous wire to develop the magnetic field PJM©2010 20 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor • Two types of rotors: - Cylindrical and salient-pole • Salient-pole rotors are used in low-speed machines with separate field coils primarily for hydroelectric • Cylindrical rotors are used in high-speed machines that uses a slotted integral forging • Rotor design constraints include: - Temperature - Mechanical force - Electrical insulation PJM©2010 21 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor PJM©2010 22 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor • Temperature: - Ampere-turn requirements for the field increase with an increase in rating, which entails a combined increase in heating in the coil • Mechanical force: - Ampere-turn requirements for the field increase with an increase in rating causing a higher centrifugal load • Electrical insulation: - In older units, slot insulation is a primary thermal barrier and as current increases, becomes a greater obstacle PJM©2010 23 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor Advantage: Air gap between the stator and rotor can be adjusted so that the magnetic flux can be sinusoidal including the waveform Disadvantage: Because of its weak structure it is not suitable for high-speed generation It is also expensive PJM©2010 24 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor Advantage: Cheaper than a salient-pole Because of its symmetrical shape, dynamic balance can be obtained making it perfect for high-speed application Disadvantage: Air gap is uniform, generated voltage is polygonal giving way to the susceptibility of harmonics PJM©2010 25 3/6/2014 Rotating Magnetic Field PJM©2010 26 3/6/2014 Rotating Magnetic Field PJM©2010 27 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Rotor PJM©2010 28 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Stator PJM©2010 29 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Stator PJM©2010 30 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Stator • The stator is the stationary part of the generator that is comprised of a series of stationary windings or armature coils and the core • Basic function of the stator core is to provide a return path for the lines of magnetic flux, and support the coils of the stator winding • The stator core is made of soft iron to provide the magnetic field path with a high permeability • The iron is laminated to reduce eddy currents (opposing field) and hysteresis (power losses) PJM©2010 31 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Stator • In the stator, three phase windings are installed 120 degrees apart • Each phase winding is made up of several conductors connected together at each end of the stator and grouped into “poles” • Electromagnetic forces acting on the generator components are of significant importance steady-state running conditions, as well as transient or fault conditions PJM©2010 32 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Stator PJM©2010 33 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Stator PJM©2010 34 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Configuration Two-Pole Generators: • In a two-pole generator, there are three armature winding coils installed in the stator • North and south poles of the rotor are 1800 apart Four-Pole Generators: • In a four-pole generator, there are six armature winding coils installed in the stator • North and south poles of the rotor are 900 apart PJM©2010 35 3/6/2014 Generator Rotational Speed • A generator which is connected to the grid has a constant speed which is dictated by grid frequency • Doubling the magnets in the rotor and doubling the windings in the stator ensures that the magnetic field rotates at half speed • When doubling the poles in the stator, the magnets in the rotor must also be doubled PJM©2010 36 3/6/2014 Generator Rotational Speed • Most steam and gas turbines drive two-pole or four-pole (nuclear) generators with a cylindrical rotor • Four-pole is a repetition of a two-pole generator • Since there is a total four pole reversal for every rotor revolution, the four-pole machine speed is one-half the speed of a two-pole machine for the same voltage output • Hydroelectric turbines run more slowly, driving a salient-pole generator with more than four poles PJM©2010 37 3/6/2014 Generator Rotational Speed Frequency = (# Pole Pairs)(RPM)/60 Example: 2 poles 60 Hz = (1 Pole Pair)(3600 RPM)/60 PJM©2010 38 3/6/2014 Generator Rotational Speed Frequency = (# Pole Pairs)(RPM)/60 Example: 4 poles 60 Hz = (2 Pole Pair)(1800 RPM)/60 PJM©2010 39 3/6/2014 Generator Rotational Speed Synchronous Generator Speeds (RPM) Pole Number 2 4 6 8 10 12 16 20 PJM©2010 50 Hz Speed 3000 1500 1000 750 600 500 375 300 40 60 Hz Speed 3600 1800 1200 900 720 600 450 360 3/6/2014 Generator Rotational Speed PJM©2010 41 3/6/2014 Generator Rotational Speed – 2 Pole PJM©2010 42 3/6/2014 Generator Rotational Speed – 4 Pole PJM©2010 43 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Stator PJM©2010 44 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Exciter PJM©2010 45 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Exciter • The function of the excitation system is to provide direct current for the generator rotor/field windings through slip rings/brushless to produce the magnetic field • Maintains generator voltage, controls var flow, and assists in maintaining power system stability by modifying the field current based on changes in terminal voltage • During load changes or disturbances on the system, the exciter must respond, sometimes rapidly, to maintain the proper voltage at the generator terminals • Utilizes “negative” feedback; as terminal voltage increases, field current decreases PJM©2010 46 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Exciter • Excitation System has three fundamental components: - Exciter: provides field current for the synchronous generator - Automatic Voltage Regulator: couples the terminal voltage to the input of the main exciter - Amplifier: increases the power of the regulating signal to that required by the exciter PJM©2010 47 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Exciter • Basic types of excitation systems: - Rotating DC commutator: uses a DC generator mounted on the shaft of the synchronous generator to supply field current - Slow in response - Requires high maintenance and brushes PJM©2010 48 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Exciter • Basic types of excitation systems: - AC Alternator: uses an AC alternator with AC to DC rectification to excitation to the field winding - Brushless - Inverted alternator where the field winding is on the stator, and the armature windings are on the rotor - Rectification occurs by feeding the alternator output through a thyristor-controlled bridge PJM©2010 49 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Exciter • Basic types of excitation systems: - Static system: composed entirely of solid-state circuitry - Uses a potential and/or a supplied by the synchronous generator terminals - Rectified DC output is fed to the field windings via slip rings and brushes - Less expensive than AC Alternators, and the additional maintenance of the slip rings and brushes is outweighed in that the system does not have a rotating device. 50 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Exciter PJM©2010 51 3/6/2014 A.C. Generator Components: Exciter PJM©2010 52 3/6/2014 Governor Characteristics • Governors control generator shaft speed. • Adjust generation for small changes in load. • Operate by adjusting the input to the prime mover. -Steam flow for fossil -Water flow for hydro -Fuel flow for combustion turbine • Amount of governor control varies according to plant design. • Equivalent to a car’s cruise control PJM©2010 53 3/6/2014 Governor Characteristics • The Watt centrifugal governor was the mechanical means for governor control - Used weights that moved radially as rotational speed increased that pneumatically operated a servo-motor - Electrohydraulic governing has replaced the mechanical governor because of: - High response speed - Low deadband - Accuracy in speed and load control PJM©2010 54 3/6/2014 Governor Characteristics PJM©2010 55 3/6/2014 Governor PJM©2010 56 3/6/2014 Governor Characteristics Mechanical style of governor PJM©2010 57 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 58 3/6/2014 Governor Characteristics PJM©2010 59 3/6/2014 • Load – Rate of frequency decline from points A to C is slowed by “load rejection.” • Generators – Generator governor action halts the decline in frequency and causes the “knee” of the excursion, and brings the frequency back to point B from point C. It is important to note that frequency will not recover from point B to 60 Hz until the deficient control area replaces the amount of lost generation. PJM©2010 60 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 61 3/6/2014 Governor Droop • Adding a droop characteristic to a governor forces generators to respond to frequency disturbances in proportion to their size. • Droop settings enable many generators to operate in parallel while all are on governor control and not compete with one another for load changes. PJM©2010 62 3/6/2014 Generators - Droop • Droop (continued) – Now imagine if there was a feature added to the cruise control such that any change in speed and subsequent signal to the cruise control, would be weighted based on the car’s engine capacity (droop) • Example: – If more load were added to the trailer, both car A and car B would assume more load, however, (because of this new droop feature) the signal from the cruise control (governor) would be based on the engine sizes of the two cars. – Load changes could be more evenly shared between cars PJM©2010 63 3/6/2014 Generators - Droop • Droop – Using the “cruise control” analogy, consider two cars coupled by a chain to a heavy trailer. – If the cruise controls (governors) on each car are not exactly identical there would be instability in how they each carried the load. – One car would assume more load from the trailer, and one car would slow down. – There would be constant racing and runback in the engines of both cars. PJM©2010 64 3/6/2014 Governor Droop PJM©2010 65 3/6/2014 Generators/Cruise Control • Think about the previous analogy of the two cars on cruise control…. • When a generator synchronizes to the system – It couples itself to hundreds of other machines rotating at the same electrical speed. – Each of these generators have this “droop” feature added to their governor – They will all respond in proportion to their size whenever there is a disturbance, or load-resource mismatch. PJM©2010 66 3/6/2014 Generators - Deadband • Deadband – An additional feature displayed by generators. – Deadband is the amount of frequency change a governor must “see” before it starts to respond. – Deadband was really a natural feature of the earliest governors caused by friction and gear lash (looseness or slop in the gear mechanism) – Deadband serves a useful purpose by preventing governors from continuously “hunting” as frequency varies ever so slightly PJM©2010 67 3/6/2014 Generator Characteristics • Generator limitation factors – Power capability of the prime mover – Heating of generator components (I2R losses) – Necessity to maintain a strong enough magnetic field to transfer power from the rotor to the generator output PJM©2010 68 3/6/2014 Generator Characteristics • Heating of generator components – Heat generated within the armature windings is directly related to the magnitude of the armature current – Heat generated in the rotor is directly related to the magnitude of the field current – Heat dissipated by the generator is limited by the cooling system design PJM©2010 69 3/6/2014 Generator Characteristics • Magnetic field strength – Controlled by excitation voltage – If excitation voltage is lowered: • Voltage induced in A.C. windings is lowered • More VARS absorbed by generator from system • Undervoltage can cause overcurrent conditions in the stator and lead to armature or stator heating – Capability curves provide Max/Min limits PJM©2010 70 3/6/2014 Generator Characteristics • Relay protection: - Stator short circuits - Grounded field (unbalanced air-gap fluxes; vibration) - Loss of excitation (loss of synchronization) - Unbalanced phase currents (overheating of the rotor) - Motoring or reverse power (overheating of turbine) - Loss of synchronism (system electrical center) - Abnormal frequency (turbine/generator damage) - Overexcitation (hot spots and saturation of generator/ transformer) - External faults (uncleared faults) PJM©2010 71 3/6/2014 Power Factor MVA = MW2 + MVAR2 MVA = 100.2 Power Factor is the ratio of Real Power to Apparent Power: PF = P/S AC Power is made up of three components: - Reactive Power (Q) - Real Power (P) - Apparent Power (S) PJM©2010 72 3/6/2014 Generator Capability Curve • The steady-state capability of a generator as it is influenced by the power factor is divided into three major components on the curve • Region A-B: Zero power factor lagging to rated power factor - Generator is over-excited - Field current is at rated value - Capability limitation is field overheating PJM©2010 73 3/6/2014 Generator Capability Curve • Region B-C: Rated power factor lagging through unity to 0.95 power factor leading - Capability limitation is dependent on the stator current - Maximum nameplate stator amperes should not be exceeded PJM©2010 74 3/6/2014 Nameplate Data • Main Generator “Nameplate” Characteristic Data • Rated Output • 496,000 kVA • Rated Voltage • 22,000 v • Rated Stator Current • 13,017 amps • Rated Field Current • 3,017 amps • Power Factor • 0.9 • Poles • 2 • Phases • 3 • Electrical Connection • Wye • Rated Speed • 3,600 RPM • Rated Frequency • 60 Hz • Rated Hydrogen Pressure • 48 psig • Rated Hydrogen Purity • 97% PJM©2010 75 3/6/2014 Generator Capability Curve • Region C-D: leading power factor operation - Excessive heating in the stator end-iron due to flux leakage from the core - Capability limitation is end-iron heating - This is also an underexcitation region and capability is further reduced by the voltage squared during reduced terminal voltage operation PJM©2010 76 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 77 3/6/2014 MVAR Flow & Voltage VAR / Voltage Relation • MVARs flow “downhill” based on voltage • Flow from high per unit voltage to low per unit voltage PJM©2010 78 3/6/2014 MVAR Flow & Voltage VAR / Voltage Relation • MVAR flow between buses is determined by magnitude difference between bus voltages • Voltage magnitude difference is driving for MVAR flow • The greater the voltage drop or rise between 2 locations – the greater the MVAR flow V1 V2 X Bus 1 PJM©2010 Bus 2 V1 (V1 - V2) VARs = X 79 3/6/2014 MW Flow & Power Angle Power-Angle Relation • MW flow between buses is determined by phase angle difference between voltages at the buses • Phase angle difference between voltages is called Power Angle which is represented by the symbol PJM©2010 80 3/6/2014 MW Flow & Power Angle Power Angle P PJM©2010 81 3/6/2014 Power Angle • Rotor Angle on transmission system is similar to rotor angle – aka: Load angle or Torque angle • No load – Field pole of rotor lined up with stator field (in phase) – =0 • Load added – Rotor advances with respect to stator – MW flow out of machine PJM©2010 82 3/6/2014 MW Flow & Power Angle Rotor Angle MW PJM©2010 83 OUT 3/6/2014 Generator Synchronizing • In order to synchronize properly, three different voltage variables must be monitored: - Voltage magnitudes - Frequency of the voltages - Phase angle difference between the voltages • If voltage magnitudes are not matched, Mvar will rise suddenly when the breaker is closed • If frequencies are not matched, a sudden change in MW flow will occur when the breaker is closed • Most important, if phase angle difference is not minimized, MW flow will increase when the breaker is closed PJM©2010 84 3/6/2014 Generator Synchronizing • System is modeled as an infinite bus • With the unit output breakers open, the generator is operated at slightly above system frequency • Excitation is adjusted for equal voltage magnitudes on either side of the output breakers • The phase angle difference between the unit and system is monitored through the use of a synchroscope • When the phase angle is small and heading towards zero, the output breakers are closed pulling the generator in step with the system PJM©2010 85 3/6/2014 Generator Synchronizing PJM©2010 86 3/6/2014 Generator Synchronizing Voltage Frequency Phase Angle PJM©2010 87 3/6/2014 Generator Synchronizing • Reference (Running) voltage: Bus voltage • Incoming voltage: Generator voltage • Clockwise motion: Generator frequency is greater than bus frequency • Once synchronized, excitation system can be put into automatic voltage regulation, and speed governor can be put in automatic generation control PJM©2010 88 3/6/2014 Four-Part Process Basic Energy Conversion PJM©2010 89 3/6/2014 Generating Unit’s Principles of Operation Energy Conversion Process Chemical Energy (Fuel) to Thermal Energy (Steam) to Mechanical Energy (Work) to Electrical Energy (Generator) PJM©2010 90 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Four Phases - Steam/Water Cycle – Generation (Boiler) • Changes chemical energy of fuel to thermal energy of steam and water in boiler – Expansion (Turbine) • Changes potential energy to kinetic energy • Nozzle changes pressure to velocity • Thermal energy to mechanical energy. PJM©2010 91 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Four Phases - Steam/Water Cycle – Condensation (Condensate System) • Changes steam to water removing latent heat • Recover condensate • Largest efficiency loss: 1035 BTU/Lb – Feedwater (Feedwater System) • Increases energy, both thermal (temperature) and potential (pressure) of water returning to the boiler, including the economizer • 1% gain in efficiency for every 100 F rise PJM©2010 92 3/6/2014 Generating Unit Basics Fossil Generation Part 2 PJM©2010 93 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Coal / Oil / Gas Steam Plants – Provide about 76.9% of the PJM area generation – Power output is as low as 15-20 MW or as high as 1,300 MW – Rate of change of power is several MW/min. on older units, and 10-20 MW/min. for newer units PJM©2010 94 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Fossil steam plants can use coal, oil, gas • Each fuel requires a unique set of components to control the reaction that produces heat, and handle the by-products of the reaction • These factors place limitations on the operating capabilities of the plant PJM©2010 95 3/6/2014 Fossil Generation • Boiler is defined simply as a closed vessel in which water is heated, steam generated, and superheated under pressure by the application of additional heat • Basic functions of a boiler: - Pressure containment - Heat transfer - Steam separation • Two types of boilers: - Subcritical (drum type) - Supercritical PJM©2010 96 3/6/2014 Fossil Generation PJM©2010 97 3/6/2014 Fossil Generation PJM©2010 98 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Drum Type Boiler Components – – – – – – PJM©2010 Economizer Steam Drum Downcomers Mud Drum Superheater (3% efficiency gain/1000 F inc) Reheater (4%-5% gain/1000 F inc) - Lower pressure/same heat 99 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Economizer: Improve boiler efficiency by extracting heat from the flue gases and transferring it to the feedwater • Steam Drum: Separate the water from the steam generated in the furnace walls • Downcomers: Return path for the feedwater back to the boiler; located away from main heat source • Mud Drum: Fed from downcomers; collection point for sentiment and impurities PJM©2010 100 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Superheater: Increases cycle efficiency by adding heat to raise the steam temperature above its saturation point; located in the flue gas path - Radiant: Direct radiation from the furnace - Convection: Absorb heat from hot gases • Reheater: Adds energy to the steam that has been partially used by the turbine PJM©2010 101 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 Principles of Operation • Furnace Air System – Air Heaters • Used to transfer heat from stack flue gases to the combustion and primary air – Forced Draft Fans • Used to maintain windbox and secondary air pressure to accelerate combustion – Induced Draft Fans • Used to maintain a negative furnace pressure • Always larger than FD due to combustion gas expansion PJM©2010 103 3/6/2014 Air Heater Air Inlet PJM©2010 104 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 Steam Turbine PJM©2010 106 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine • Steam Turbine: Form of heat engine with the function of converting thermal energy into a rotating mechanical energy • Turbine is made up of four fundamental components - Rotor: carries the blades or buckets - Stationary part - Nozzles: flow passages for the steam - Foundation: support for the stationary and rotor parts PJM©2010 107 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine PJM©2010 108 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 109 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine • Two steps are required to convert the thermal energy of the steam into useful work: - Thermal energy of the steam is converted into kinetic energy by expanding the steam in stationary nozzles or in moving blades - Thermal energy is converted into work when the steam passes through the moving blades PJM©2010 110 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine • Turbine Stages – High Pressure Turbine (HP) • Supplied by Main Steam (Suphtr. outlet) • Exhausts to boiler Reheater – Intermediate Pressure Turbine (IP) • Supplied by Reheat Steam (Reheater Outlet) • Exhausts to Low Pressure Turbine – Low Pressure Turbine (LP) • Supplied by IP Turbine exhaust • Exhausts to Condenser PJM©2010 111 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine PJM©2010 112 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine • Each turbine stage consists of stationary blades (nozzle) and the rotating blades (buckets) • Nozzles convert the potential energy of the steam into kinetic energy directing the flow into the rotating blades • The buckets convert the kinetic energy into forces, caused by the pressure drop, into rotation • Limitations on blades: - Erosion due to moisture (Low pressure) - Solid particle erosion PJM©2010 113 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine - Blading PJM©2010 114 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine • Auxiliary Turbine Equipment - Bearings: - Thrust axially locate the turbine shaft - Journal support the weight of the shaft - Shaft seals: series of ridges and grooves around the housing to reduce steam leakage - Turning gear: slowly rotates the turbine, after shutdown to prevent bowing of the shaft and to even out temperature distribution - Vibration detection: measures the movement of the shafts in their bearings PJM©2010 115 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine - Bearings PJM©2010 116 3/6/2014 Steam Turbine – Turning Gear PJM©2010 117 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Operating Limitations: - Eccentricity: shaft out of concentric round - Differential expansion: rotor and turbine casing heat up and expand at different rates - Bearing vibration limits - Critical speed: harmonics due to natural resonance - Back pressure limitation: fatigue cracks and harmonics on low pressure blades PJM©2010 118 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Operating Limitations: - Bearing material: temperature limitations - Bearing oil: temperature limitations - Babbitt material: temperature limit - Rotor prewarming PJM©2010 119 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Turbine Trips: - Low bearing oil pressure - Thrust bearing wear detection - Low vacuum - Bearing vibration/bearing metal temperature - Low steam temperature - Differential expansion - Reverse power - High heater level PJM©2010 120 3/6/2014 Principles Of Operations PJM©2010 121 3/6/2014 Condensate System PJM©2010 122 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 Condenser PJM©2010 124 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Condensate System – Condenser: converts the exhaust steam into water after it leaves the last stage of the turbine – Hotwell: receptacle where water is collected from the condenser – Hotwell Make-up / Draw-off valves: distilled or demineralized water to compensate for losses or excesses to or from the condensate storage tank - Controlled by the deareator level PJM©2010 125 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Condensate System - Demineralizers: condensate purification - Condensate Pumps - Low Pressure Feedwater Heaters: condensate is pumped to be preheated before entering the deareator - Deareator: open heater where condensate passes and is mixed with steam to increase temperature and remove noncondensible gases (mainly oxygen) - Provides water to the suction side of the Boiler Feed Pump PJM©2010 126 3/6/2014 Condensate System – Feedwater Heater PJM©2010 127 3/6/2014 Condensate System – Feedwater Heater PJM©2010 128 3/6/2014 Condensate System - Deaerator PJM©2010 129 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Feedwater System – Boiler Feed Pump: supplies water to the boiler and has to overcome boiler pressure, friction in the heaters, piping, and economizer – High Pressure Feedwater Heaters (Boiler feed pump pressure): preheats the feedwater before entering the boiler – Economizer: serves as a feedwater heater effecting economy by extracting heat from the flue gases PJM©2010 130 3/6/2014 Feedwater System – Boiler Feed Pump PJM©2010 131 3/6/2014 Feedwater System – Boiler Feed Pump PJM©2010 132 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 Principles of Operation • Miscellaneous Systems – Gland sealing: enable the turbine to be sealed where the shaft exits the casing (air out, steam in) – Hydrogen Cooling System: cooling water coils in the generator to cool the hydrogen gas – Hydrogen Seal Oil System: seals the generator where the shaft exits the casing keeping the hydrogen in – Cooling Water (Lube oil, hydrogen, seal oil, service water, and stator oil) PJM©2010 135 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 136 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Miscellaneous Systems: - Circulating Water: primarily provides the cooling water for the condenser - Turbine Lube Oil: free of foreign material and moisture supplied at proper temperature, pressure, and quantity - Fire Protection PJM©2010 137 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 138 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 139 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 140 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Miscellaneous Systems – Bottom Ash (slag): course, granular, incombustible by-products collected from the bottom of the boiler – Fly ash: fine-grained, powdery particulate that is found in flue gas – Fuel Systems: Oil, Gas, Coal – Service Air: for deslagging and any pnuematic needs within the plant – Control Air: used on pneumatic applications where moisture cannot be tolerated such as instrumentation and control PJM©2010 141 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Miscellaneous Systems - Demineralization: purification of condensate for boiler - Waste Water Treatment: - Station Battery (Lube oil, cooling water, turning gear) - Scrubber Facilities: traps pollutants and sulfur that is produced from burning coal and natural gas from escaping into the air PJM©2010 142 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Super Critical Boiler (Once Thru): the boiler feed pump supplies the pressure for the cycle • Once proper pressure is obtained, heat is applied, and water is directly converted to steam without going through the boiling process – – – – – PJM©2010 Does not have a boiler drum No recirculation process Consists of many circuits of superheaters Operates in excess of 3206.2 psia / 705.4 F Requires a Start-up system (By-pass) 143 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 144 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Supercritical boilers cannot use the drum design because there is no distinct water/steam phase transition above the critical pressure • Boiler is operated at supercritical pressures (~3200) as compared to the subcritical (~2400) • Increased efficiency: 1.5% to 2% gain using a supercritical as opposed to a subcritical for same output • More efficient in certain MW ranges PJM©2010 145 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 146 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • The form of steam turbine employed with supercritical conditions is the same as that for subcritical cycles, although temperatures and pressures are higher - Stronger materials for rotor forgings, casings, steam lines, and valves - Ferritic materials are being replaced by nickelbased superalloys - Special alloys on the last stages of blading PJM©2010 147 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Start-Up System: - Before steam can be supplied to the turbine, the boiler must be brought up from a virtual cold condition to supercritical temperature and pressure - Provides minimum flow through the pressurized parts of the boiler matching the steam temperature and pressure to the initial metal temperature of the turbine for shorter roll times - Provides a steam source for deaeration and also a means of heat recovery during start-up PJM©2010 148 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation Limitations: • Temperature limit on the furnace water wall caused by increases in pressure and final steam temperatures • Corrosion of superheater and reheater tubes caused by the increase in steam temperatures • Airheater thermal efficiency is compromised because an increase in feedwater temperature to the boiler leads to a rise in airheater gas inlet temperature PJM©2010 149 3/6/2014 Principles of Operation • Super Critical Boilers – Advantages • Greater efficiency (45%) • Faster response to changing load • Reduced fuel costs due to thermal efficiency • Low emissions (CO2, NOx, SOx) – Disadvantages • Long start-up time • Expensive to build (greater press. / temp.) • Requires a start-up system • Loss of circulation causes serious boiler damage PJM©2010 150 3/6/2014 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 151 Megawatt Limitations • Limitations that can restrict scheduled or operating MW capacity of a generating unit: – – – – PJM©2010 Environmental Fuel Maintenance Operating 152 3/6/2014 Megawatt Limitations • Environmental – Maximum allowable water temperature, pH (solubility) and turbidity (suspended solids) of cooling water return to river or lake – Maximum allowable values of substance discharged to the atmosphere • Nitric Oxide - NOX • Sulfur Dioxide - SO2 • Carbon Monoxide – CO • Carbon Dioxide – CO2 • Particulates - Opacity PJM©2010 153 3/6/2014 Megawatt Limitations • pH (solubility): depends on the relative concentration of hydrogen ions - A substance is acidic if the positive cations outnumber the negative anions - The acidity of cycle water has a great impact on the corrosion of system components • Turbidity: suspended solids such as sediment, mud, and dirt that are in the water • Dissolved solids: minerals picked up by the water that will form hard adherent deposits on the internal surfaces of the boiler (Conductivity meter) PJM©2010 154 3/6/2014 Megawatt Limitations • Dissolved Oxygen: entrapped in water, attacking metal parts including feedwater, condensate, and boiler tubes • Iron: concentration must be at a certain level in order to raise temperatures in a supercritical unit • Silica: found in water as a dissolved solid PJM©2010 155 3/6/2014 Megawatt Limitations • Fuel – Excessive moisture/bad weather - Coal - Difficulty unloading - Buildup in chutes - Sliding on conveyor belts - Frozen coal - Poor quality - Excessive slagging tendencies - High ash resistivity PJM©2010 156 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 157 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 158 3/6/2014 Megawatt Limitations • Oil: - Moisture: deteriorates the performance of oil increasing the risk of corrosion - Coking - Particulate and impurities • Gas: - Moisture: when mixed with impurities form a corrosive mixture PJM©2010 159 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 160 3/6/2014 Fuel Types • Gas, oil, and coal • Oil: - Needs to be prewarmed to pump (150-180o) and to burn (250-3300) - Guns need cleaned and maintained regularly • Coal: crushed or pulverized - Type of burner - Pulverized - Stoker - Cyclone • Major problem is flame detection in boiler PJM©2010 161 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 162 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 163 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 164 3/6/2014 Megawatt Limitations • Maintenance – Auxiliary equipment out of service, scheduled or unscheduled which prevents full output • Heat Cycles • Heaters, condensate or boiler feed pumps • Pulverizers (Mills) or oil pumps, gas • Fans: ID, FD, or primary air • Pumps: circulating water • Fuel • Ash handling PJM©2010 165 3/6/2014 Megawatt Limitations • Operating – – – – PJM©2010 Boiler Water Chemistry Poor equipment thermal performance High vibration on rotating equipment High condenser backpressure • Vacuum leaks • Dirty condenser waterboxes 166 3/6/2014 Boiler Water Chemistry • Scale: hard tube deposits/overheat failure • Oxygen: causes corrosion in boiler tubes • Silica (O2): limits operating pressure and can leave deposits on turbine blades causing imbalances and loss of turbine efficiency • Condenser leaks are the main source of impure water PJM©2010 167 3/6/2014 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 168 Key 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. PJM©2010 Cooling tower Cooling water pump Three-phase transmission line Step-up transformer Electrical generator Low pressure steam turbine Boiler feedwater pump Surface condenser Intermediate pressure stage Steam control valve High pressure stage Deaerator Feedwater heater Coal conveyor 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 169 Coal hopper Coal pulverizer Boiler steam drum Bottom ash hopper Superheater Forced draft fan Reheater Combustion air intake Economizer Air preheater Precipitator Induced draft fan Flue gas stack 3/6/2014 Generating Unit Basics Nuclear Generation Part 3 Nuclear Generation PJM©2010 170 3/6/2014 Nuclear Generation • • • • PJM©2010 Has the greatest potential as an energy source Provide about 19.1% of the PJM area generation Power output can be as high as 1,200 MW The nature of nuclear fuel requires the rate of raising power be limited to very slow rates at certain times during the 12-24 month fuel cycle of the reactor. 171 3/6/2014 Nuclear Generation • Government Control - Nuclear Regulatory Commission - Power plants must conform to NRC regulations - Once a license is received it must be maintained by certain rules “Tech Specs” - “Tech Specs” are the laws that describe operational requirements of plant equipment, and operating/shutdown limitations on plant equipment - Violations could result in fines and/or forced plant shutdown PJM©2010 172 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 173 3/6/2014 Nuclear Generation • In US, Light-Water Reactors are pre-dominant • Light-water reactors use ordinary water to slow down the fast neutrons produced in the reaction • Light-water reactors use enriched uranium, U235 • Two types of light-water reactors: - Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) - Boiling Water Reactor (BWR) - Both types supply steam at or near saturation at approximately 1000 psi PJM©2010 174 3/6/2014 PWR/BWR Reactors PJM©2010 175 3/6/2014 Nuclear Generation • The Boiling Water Reactor operates essentially the same way as a fossil-fueled generating plant where a steam/water mixture is produced within the vessel • The Pressurized Water Reactor differs from the Boiling Water Reactor in that the steam is produced in the steam generator rather than in the reactor vessel • In the United States, PWR’s outnumber the BWR’s two-thirds to one-third PJM©2010 176 3/6/2014 Nuclear Generation • The fission process or the “splitting apart” of an atom is what produces heat in a nuclear reactor • The process occurs when a free neutron enters the nucleus of a fissionable atom causing the nucleus to become unstable, vibrate, and split into two at a high rate of speed releasing 2 to three more neutrons • The kinetic energy of the split is transformed into heat • The process continues into a chain reaction • The key is to control the rate of the emitted neutrons and the nuclear chain reaction PJM©2010 177 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 178 3/6/2014 Nuclear Generation • Nuclear fission provides ~ 10 million times more energy than conventional chemical processes • Conventional light water reactors utilize fuel with an initial 235U concentration enriched to at least 3.5% • Heat from the reaction has a conversion efficiency of 33% • Fuel is loaded at 3.5% 235U and replaced once the concentration has fallen to 1.2% • A 1 GW light water plant consumes 30 tons of fuel per year in comparison to 9,000 tons of coal per day for a fossil plant of the same magnitude • Pound of highly enriched uranium has the same amount of energy as 1 million gallons of gasoline PJM©2010 179 3/6/2014 Nuclear Generation • Basic Components of a Nuclear Reactor: - Fuel: pellets of enriched uranium encased in fuel rods that are bundled in assemblies - Control Rods: absorb neutrons controlling the rate of the chain reaction - Coolant: usually water to carry heat away from the reactor - Moderator: material used to slow neutrons down PJM©2010 180 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 181 3/6/2014 Control Rod PJM©2010 182 3/6/2014 Fuel Assembly • Both PWR’s and BWR’s fuel assemblies consist of the same major components: - Fuel rods: approximately 12 feet long containing the ceramic fuel pellets and are arranged in a square matrix from 17x17 (PWR) to 8x8 (BWR) - Spacer grids: separate the individual rods providing rigidity of the assemblies and allowing the coolant to flow freely up through the assemblies and around the fuel rods - Upper and lower end fittings: structural elements of the assemblies; directs flow of coolant through the assemblies PJM©2010 183 3/6/2014 Fuel Assembly PJM©2010 184 3/6/2014 Fuel Assembly PJM©2010 185 3/6/2014 Pressurized Water Reactor PJM©2010 186 3/6/2014 Pressurized Water Reactor • Two major systems are used in the conversion: - Primary system: transfers heat from the fuel to the steam generator - Secondary system: steam formed in the steam generator is transferred to the main turbine generator • In order for the primary and secondary systems to perform their functions, there are approximately one hundred support systems PJM©2010 187 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 188 3/6/2014 PWR Components • Reactor Vessel: supports and contains the fuel core and supplies the flow paths for coolant • Steam Generator: heat exchanger between primary and secondary systems • Reactor Coolant Pump: pumps water back to the reactor (2, 3, or 4 cooling loops) A 1000-1300 Mw unit would require (4) 6,000-10,000 hp pumps • Pressurizer: controls pressure in the cooling system to prevent boiling in the reactor (2250 psi at 590-600 degrees F). Acts as a surge tank also. PJM©2010 189 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 190 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 191 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 192 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 193 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 194 3/6/2014 PWR Components • Reactor vessel houses the reactor core and all associated support and alignment devices including: Core Barrel: houses the fuel and supports the fuel assemblies - Reactor Core - Upper Internals: sits on top of the fuel and contains the guide columns to guide the control rods - • Steam generator allows the secondary feedwater to absorb sufficient heat from the reactor coolant to boil and form steam PJM©2010 195 3/6/2014 Pressurized Water Reactor Control Rods Reactor Vessel Inlet Outlet Water flows downward on the outside of the core barrel to the bottom of the reactor. The flow then turns upward in between the fuel rods from the bottom to the top of the reactor. The water leaves the reactor on it way to the steam generator Core Barrel PJM©2010 196 3/6/2014 PWR Components PJM©2010 197 3/6/2014 PWR Components • The Reactor Coolant Pump provides forced primary coolant flow to remove the heat being generated by the fission process • Major components of the RCP - Motor - Hydraulic section (impeller and discharge volute) - Seal package: prevents water from leaking up the containment shaft into the containment atmosphere • Horsepower rating is 6,000 to 10,000; approximately 100,000 gallons of coolant per minute per pump PJM©2010 198 3/6/2014 PWR Components PJM©2010 199 3/6/2014 PWR Components • Pressurizer is the component in the reactor coolant system which provides a means of controlling the system pressure due to changes in coolant temperature • Pressurizer operates with a mixture of steam and water in equilibrium - Coolant temperature increases, coolant density decreases and the coolant takes up more space causing steam pressure to increase - Coolant temperature decreases, coolant density increases and the coolant will occupy less space causing steam pressure to decrease PJM©2010 200 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 201 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems • Main Steam System - Condensate/Feedwater System • • • • PJM©2010 Chemical and Volume Control System Auxiliary Feedwater System/Steam Dump System Residual Heat Removal System Emergency Core Cooling Systems 202 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems Main Steam System Condensate/Feedwater System PJM©2010 203 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems • Chemical and Volume Control System is a major support system for the reactor coolant system - Purifies reactor coolant using filters and demineralizers - Adds and removes boron - Maintains the pressurizer level at setpoint PJM©2010 204 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems PJM©2010 Chemical and Volume Control System 205 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems • Auxiliary Feedwater System and Steam Dump System work together to remove heat from fission decay in the reactor during shutdown to prevent fuel damage - Auxiliary feedwater system pumps water from the condensate storage tank to the steam generators producing steam that can be dumped to the main condenser through the steam dump valves or directly to the atmosphere if the condenser or steam valves are not available PJM©2010 206 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems PJM©2010 Auxiliary Feedwater System/Steam Dump System 207 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems • Residual Heat Removal System is used when the decay heat is not sufficient to generate enough steam in the generators to continue the cool down by removing heat from the core and transferring it to the environment PJM©2010 208 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems PJM©2010 Residual Heat Removal system 209 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems • Emergency Core Cooling Systems - Provide core cooling to minimize fuel damage for a coolant loss - Ensure the reactor remains shutdown following the cool down associated with a main line steam rupture • Both incidents of coolant loss and a ruptured steam line are contained through the injection of large quantities of borated water - Four separate systems (powered from diesel generators) - High pressure injection system - Intermediate pressure injection system - Cold leg accumulators - Low pressure injection system PJM©2010 210 3/6/2014 Secondary Systems PJM©2010 Emergency Core211Cooling Systems 3/6/2014 Pressurized Water Reactor • Utilizes two to four separate cooling systems • Reactor water and steam are separate. • Reactor power is controlled by boron injection in the reactor coolant • Moderator is the reactor coolant • Control rods are inserted from the top • Water is pressurized to about 2250 psi and heated to ~ 600 degrees F without boiling PJM©2010 212 3/6/2014 Pressurized Water Reactor • Advantages: - Fuel leak in core is isolated - Very stable due to producing less power as temperatures increase - Can be operated with a core containing less material reducing the chance of the reactor running out of control - Enriched uranium allows ordinary or light water to be used as a moderator PJM©2010 213 3/6/2014 Pressurized Water Reactor • Disadvantages: - Coolant water is highly pressurized to remain liquid at high temperatures requiring high strength piping and a heavy pressure vessel - PWR’s cannot be refueled while operating - High temperature coolant with boric acid is corrosive to carbon steel limiting the lifetime of the reactor, and adds to the overall cost for filtering and radiation exposure - Fuel production costs are increased by use of enriched uranium PJM©2010 214 3/6/2014 Pressurized Water Reactor • Disadvantages: - It is not possible to build a fast breeder reactor with PWR design - Reactor produces energy slower at higher temperatures; a sudden decrease in temperature could increase power production PJM©2010 215 3/6/2014 Boiling Water Reactor PJM©2010 •Primary Containment: includes the suppression chamber, the reactor, and the recirculation pumps •Reactor Building: (secondary containment) surrounds primary containment and serves the same purpose as the PWR’s auxiliary building •Turbine Building 216 3/6/2014 Boiling Water Reactor • Inside a BWR, a steam water mixture is produced when reactor coolant moves upward through the core • The major difference in this operation from other nuclear systems is the steam formation in the core • Steam is separated from the mixture as it leaves the core and enters two stages of moisture separation directly exiting to the main turbine • Reactor power is controlled by varying the coolant flow through the reactor core by using the recirculation pumps and jet pumps PJM©2010 217 3/6/2014 3/6/2014 218 BWR Components • Reactor Vessel Assembly includes - Core Support Structures - Core Shroud: provides a partition to separate the upward flow of coolant through the core from the downward recirculation flow - Moisture Removal Equipment - Steam separators - Steam dryers - Jet Pump Assemblies: accelerating jet pulls in or entrains the reactor coolant delivering it at an elevated pressure • Recirculation Pump: same as the reactor coolant pump for a Pressurized Water Reactor PJM©2010 219 3/6/2014 Boiling Water Reactor Steam Dryers Water flows downward on the outside of the core barrel to the bottom of the reactor. The flow then turns upward in between the fuel rods from the bottom to the top of the reactor. Steam is separated at the top from the water. Steam Separators Shroud PJM©2010 220 3/6/2014 Systems • • • • • PJM©2010 Reactor Water Cleanup System Decay Heat Removal Reactor Core Isolation cooling Standby Liquid Control System Emergency Core Cooling Systems 221 3/6/2014 Systems • The purpose of the Reactor Water Cleanup System is to maintain high reactor water quality by removing fission products, corrosion products, and other soluble and insoluble impurities PJM©2010 222 3/6/2014 Systems PJM©2010 223 Reactor Water Cleanup System 3/6/2014 Systems • Decay Heat Removal works similar to the systems used during shutdowns for a PWR • During a reactor shutdown, the core will still continue to generate decay heat PJM©2010 224 3/6/2014 Systems PJM©2010 Decay Heat Removal 225 3/6/2014 Systems • Reactor Core Isolation Cooling provides makeup water to the core for cooling when the main steam lines are isolated and the normal supply of water to the reactor vessel is lost PJM©2010 226 3/6/2014 Systems PJM©2010 Reactor Core Isolation Cooling 227 3/6/2014 Systems • Standby Liquid Control System injects boron (neutron poison) into the reactor vessel to shutdown the chain reaction, independent of the control rods, and maintain the reactor shutdown as the plant is cooled PJM©2010 228 3/6/2014 Systems PJM©2010 Standby Liquid Control System 229 3/6/2014 Systems • Emergency Core Cooling Systems provide core cooling under the loss of coolant accident conditions to limit fuel cladding damage - Systems consist of two high pressure and two low pressure systems - High pressure system is independent requiring no auxiliary AC power, plant air systems, or external cooling water systems. It also works in conjunction with the automatic depressurization system which opens safety relief valves - Low pressure system includes the core spray system and the low pressure residual heat removal system PJM©2010 230 3/6/2014 Systems High Pressure Emergency Core Cooling System PJM©2010 231 Low Pressure Emergency Core Cooling System 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 Boiling Water Reactor • Utilizes one cooling loop • Reactor water and steam are one and same • Reactor power is controlled by positioning the control rods when starting up the reactor and operating up to 70% of rated power • Increasing/decreasing water flow through the core is the normal method for controlling power when operating between 70% and 100% rated power • Control rods are inserted from the bottom • Water is kept at 1000 psi and does not boil until ~ 545 degrees F PJM©2010 233 3/6/2014 Boiling Water Reactor • Advantages: - Reactor vessel and associated components operate at a lower pressure as compared to a PWR - Operates at a lower nuclear fuel temperature - Fewer components; no steam generators or pressurizer vessel - Fewer pipes, welds, and no steam generator tubes lowering the risk of a loss of coolant - Vessel is subject to little irradiation (brittleness) - Can operate at lower core power density using natural circulation and can be designed so that recirculation pumps are eliminated PJM©2010 234 3/6/2014 Boiling Water Reactor • Disadvantages: - Complex design; two-phase fluid flow requiring more in-core nuclear instrumentation and complex operational calculations - Larger pressure vessel than PWR, with corresponding cost - Turbine contamination with fission products requiring shielding and access control during normal operations - Control rods are inserted from below for current BWR designs PJM©2010 235 3/6/2014 Nuclear Systems • Plant Systems – There are approximately 80 systems in a nuclear power plant – Three systems that control and/or limit nuclear plant output are: • Control rod drive system • Reactor coolant system • Off-gas system PJM©2010 236 3/6/2014 Nuclear Systems • Control Rod Drive System: controls reactor power output. • Reactor Coolant System: removes energy from the core and transfers it directly (BWR) or indirectly (PWR) to the steam turbine • Off-Gas System: Processes air and any non-condensable gases in the main condenser before being released to the environment. Condenser vacuum is decreased if gases are not removed. PJM©2010 237 3/6/2014 Nuclear Plant Auxiliaries • Similarities (Nuclear to Fossil) - Feedwater system contain the same components, but with less pumping power required due to the lower feedwater pressure and low-pressure steam - Reactor feed pumps are equivalent to boiler feed pumps • Contrasts - For fossil, feed pumps are driven by steam; motor drives are applied to reactor feed pumps - Nuclear does not require large fan drives or large fuel preparation drives PJM©2010 238 3/6/2014 Nuclear Plant Auxiliary Power system • The basic auxiliary power system of a nuclear facility is very similar to a fossil plant, except for the engineered safety features • ESF systems are intended to ensure safe shutdown of the reactor under abnormal conditions • The aux power system must be able to supply power to redundant drives and loads which provide the safety features predominantly the core cooling systems • The power system must provide separate paths to redundant ESF systems and must have (2) off-site power sources available after a shutdown is initiated PJM©2010 239 3/6/2014 Nuclear Limitations • Equipment Vibration – Individual component vibration is monitored by a central computer – Systems are quickly identified and isolated to prevent damage from excessive vibration – A problem area in nuclear plants are the protective relay panels • Excessive vibration may cause a system or plant shutdown due to vibration of relays PJM©2010 240 3/6/2014 Nuclear Limitations • Power Ascension: 0-100% power increase depends on: - Amount of testing required during start-up - After a forced outage, power ascension takes ~ 24 hours - After a refueling outage, power ascension takes ~ 48 hours • Fuel Depletion: occurs by the absorption of neutrons and the fission process • Reactor core refueling: 1/4 to 1/3 of the fuel bundles are removed at intervals of 12-18 months PJM©2010 241 3/6/2014 Nuclear Generation • Abnormal Operations – Reactor SCRAM (Safety Control Rod Axe Man) (Safety Cut Rope Axe Man) • When all control rods move into the core to shut down the reactor. – A SCRAM occurs when a protective device sends a signal to the control rod drive system. – Reactor power decreases because the control rod material absorbs neutrons, thus interrupting the nuclear chain reaction. – The cause of a SCRAM must be determined before a unit is restarted. PJM©2010 242 3/6/2014 Generating Unit Basics Hydroelectric Generation Part 4 Hydroelectric Generation PJM©2010 243 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Hydro once played a significant role in the electric utility industry accounting for 30%-40% of the total energy produced • Currently, hydroelectricity produces about 10% of the electricity generated in America • Hydro is regarded as a free source of energy since it uses no fuel • Because the water cycle is an endless, constantly recharging system, hydro power is considered a renewable energy PJM©2010 244 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Provide about 3.7% of PJM’s energy • Typical PJM unit output is between 20 and 510 MW • Two types of hydroelectric generating plants: - Run-of-River - Pumped Storage • Pumped storage facilities operate the same as runof-river with the exception of the motor pump function PJM©2010 245 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Basic elements of hydroelectricity - Water at one elevation, and a dam to hold it there - Lower elevation location where the water output can be directed - Hydraulic turbine connected to a generator - Penstock to conduct water from the upper level through the turbine at a lower level - Controls and auxiliaries (Governor oil pump, head-gate motors, crane, air compressor) PJM©2010 246 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Hydro plants capture the kinetic energy of falling water • Power capacity of a hydro plant is the function of two variables: - Flow rate which is expressed in cubic feet per second (Kinetic energy) - Hydraulic head: difference vertically between head water and tail water elevation (Potential energy) PJM©2010 247 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • A simple formula for approximating electric power production at a hydroelectric plant is: P = ρhrgk, where - P is Power in watts, - ρ is the density of water (~1000 kg/m3), - h is height in meters, - r is flow rate in cubic meters per second, - g is acceleration due to gravity of 9.8 m/s2, - K is a coefficient of efficiency ranging PJM©2010 248 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Basic Parts of a Hydroelectric Plant: - Dam: a reservoir is constructed by building a dam. The dam will increase the height of the water level and the working head (potential energy) of the plant - Trash racks: removes debris from entering the intake gate and penstock - Intake gate/Valve house: controls the intake for the flow of water into the powerhouse. Usually includes the trash racks and gates and the entrance to a canal, penstock, or directly to the turbine PJM©2010 249 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Basic Parts of a Hydroelectric Plant: - Penstock: pipe between the surge tank and plant that carries the water from the reservoir to the turbines in the station - A disilting chamber precedes the penstock to remove larger size sediment from entering - Surge tank: to avoid sudden, large pressure increases due to rapid start of the turbine or valve closing - Acts as a pressure relief opening to absorb surplus kinetic energy - Acts as a balancing reservoir to supply or store additional water during starting or closing of the gates and valves PJM©2010 250 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Basic Parts of a Hydroelectric Plant: - Draft tube: diffuser that regains residual velocity energy of the water leaving the turbine runner - Runner: the rotating element of the turbine that converts hydraulic energy into mechanical energy - Turbine/Generator: vertical/horizontal machine that is low speed, and inherent high reactance PJM©2010 251 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation - Amortisseur Windings: - Reduce overvoltage induced in the field caused by surges/unbalances in the stator - Reduce overvoltage in the stator caused by unbalanced faults on the machine - Reduce generator output oscillations caused by loads connected through resistance circuits - Aids in stability reducing rotor oscillations - Wicket Gates: adjustable vanes that control the amount of water that can enter the turbine. These are controlled by the governor by changing the angle of the gates PJM©2010 252 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation PJM©2010 253 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Types of Hydraulic Turbines - Impulse: - Used in high head plants: needs less water volume - Low-velocity head is converted into a high-velocity jet and directed into spoon-shaped buckets - Energy supplied is kinetic completely - Runner operate in air; water is at atmospheric pressure - Efficiency is less than Reaction-type at full load, but better at partial load PJM©2010 254 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation PJM©2010 Pelton 255 Wheel 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation PJM©2010 256 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Advantages of an Impulse turbine: - Greater tolerance for sand/other particles in the water - Better access to working parts - No pressure seals around the shaft - Easier to fabricate and maintain - Better part-flow efficiency • Disadvantage: unsuitable for low-head sites because of low specific speeds PJM©2010 257 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Types of Hydraulic Turbines - Reaction: - Two types: Francis and propeller (Kaplan) - Runner is fully immersed in water and enclosed in a pressure casing - Pressure differences impose lift forces causing the runner to rotate - Low to medium head is converted into high speed - Energy supplied is both kinetic and “pressure head” PJM©2010 258 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation Francis PJM©2010 259 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation Kaplan Turbine PJM©2010 260 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Advantages of a Reaction turbine: - Rotate faster at the same given head and flow conditions - Eliminates a speed-increasing drive system - Simpler maintenance thereby reducing costs - Higher efficiency - High running speeds at low heads from a compact machine • Disadvantages: - Require more sophisticated fabrication - Poor part-flow efficiency characteristics PJM©2010 261 3/6/2014 Run-of-River PJM©2010 262 3/6/2014 Run-Of-River • Low impact method that utilizes the flow of water within the natural range of the river, requiring little or no impoundment. • Produce little change in the stream channel or stream flow • Plants can be designed using large flow rates with low head or small flow rates with high head • Hydraulic head is the elevation difference that the water falls in passing through the plant PJM©2010 263 3/6/2014 Run-Of-River • Operating Considerations • Rainfall in Watershed Area • River Flow and Forebay/Tailrace Elevation • Water Quality Impacts - Dissolved Oxygen - Higher temperatures - Decreased food production - Siltation - Increased phosphorus and nitrogen - Decomposition products • Ice during frigid temperatures PJM©2010 264 3/6/2014 Run-Of-River • Advantages: - Reduced exposure to price volatility - Minimal construction - Ecologically sound - Reliable - Low operating costs PJM©2010 265 3/6/2014 Prevents debris from entering Minimizes pressure surges or the effects of water hammer Penstock Head: Vertical change in elevation between the head water level and the tailwater level. PJM©2010 Acts like a diffuser. Maintains a water column between turbine and downstream Provides high efficiency operation by recuperating kinetic energy Pump Storage PJM©2010 267 3/6/2014 Pump Storage • Uses off-peak electricity to pump water from a lower reservoir to an upper reservoir • During periods of high electrical demand, water is released to generate electricity • Most modern plants utilize a reversible Francis-type turbine which operates in one direction of rotation as a pump, and the opposite direction as a turbine connected to a synchronous generator/motor driving the pump in one direction, and generating power in the other direction PJM©2010 268 3/6/2014 Pump Storage • Operating Considerations • Water Quality Impacts - Thermal Stratification - Toxic Pollutants - Eutrophication: loss of nutrients • Reservoir Sedimentation • Flood Control and Hazard • Groundwater level • Ice Formation PJM©2010 269 3/6/2014 Pump Storage PJM©2010 270 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 271 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Both Run-Of-River and Pump Storage offer: - Rapid start-up, shutdown, and loading - Long life - Low operating and maintenance costs - Low outage rates - Units, when generating, can respond and follow to system load changes limited only by the speed with which the gate valves can be operated - Can be designed to operate as a synchronous condenser for voltage control when not generating PJM©2010 272 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Auxiliary Equipment: - Inlet valve pressure oil system - Lubricating oil system: turbine/generator bearings - Hydraulic oil system: turbine governor control - Cooling water system: used to supply cooling water the generator air coolers, lube oil coolers, turbine/generator bearings, and transformers - Compressed air system: supply compressed air to various turbine and generator auxiliaries for rotor lifting, generator braking, charging governor oil systems, control systems, and service air PJM©2010 273 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Auxiliary Equipment: - De-watering system: used to dewater the powerhouse in case of seepage and maintenance - Used for de-watering the tunnels and penstocks - Pump water out of the draft tube for maintence - Service units: small hydraulic turbine/generator used for station service and as a independent source of power in case of system separation - Turbine gland water for shaft packing - Fire protection PJM©2010 274 3/6/2014 Hydroelectric Generation • Safety Considerations: - Extra flywheel effect is built into the generator dictated by the hydraulic conditions to prevent excessive rate of rise in speed if load is suddenly lost - Both turbine and generator need to be built to stand “runaway” speed due to the possibility that full load may be lost at a time when the gate-closing mechanism is inoperative - “Runaway” speed is defined as turbine speed at full flow, with no shaft load PJM©2010 275 3/6/2014 Generating Unit Basics Combustion Turbine Part 5 Combustion Turbines PJM©2010 276 3/6/2014 Combustion Turbines • Combustion turbines play an important role in utility system generation planning • Characteristics that make it attractive include: - Peaking applications - Where a exhaust heat recovery system can be used - Base-load operation • Combined-cycle units provide most of the advantages of the simple-cycle peaking plant with the benefit of a good heat rate; it also requires less cooling water than conventional fossil and nuclear of the same size PJM©2010 277 3/6/2014 Simple-Cycle Combustion Turbines • Operation is similar to a jet engine • Air is compressed, mixed with fuel in a combustor, to heat the compressed air • The turbine extracts the power from the hot air flow • It is an internal combustion engine employing a continuous combustion process • 2/3 of the produced shaft power runs the compressor; 1/3 produces the electric power PJM©2010 278 3/6/2014 Simple-Cycle Combustion Turbine • Brayton Cycle: describes the relationship between the space occupied by the air (volume) and the pressure that its under (basic thermodynamic cycle) - Air is compressed increasing the pressure as the volume of space occupied by the air is reduced - Air is heated at a constant pressure continuously - Hot compressed air is allowed to expand reducing the pressure and temperature while increasing the volume ( power to the turbine shaft - Volume and temperature of the air is decreased as heat is absorbed into the atmosphere PJM©2010 279 3/6/2014 Simple-Cycle Combustion Turbine PJM©2010 280 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 Combustion Turbine PJM©2010 282 3/6/2014 Combustion Turbine • Basic Parts of a Combustion Turbine: - Starting package: AC motor and a hydraulic torque converter - Compressor: draws in and compresses the air - Combustor: adds fuel to heat the compressed air - Turbine: extracts the power from the hot air flow - Generator: produces the electric power output PJM©2010 283 3/6/2014 Combustion Turbines • • • • • PJM©2010 CTs are quick response units. Can be started, loaded and shutdown remotely. Typical capacity is 15-180 MW. Not designed to run on a continuous basis. CTs make up about 3% of the PJM area generation. 284 3/6/2014 Combustion Turbines • CT Advantages – Automatic- Unmanned (some cases) – Low initial capital investment – Turn-key operation (modular construction) – Self contained unit – Short delivery time – Fast starting and fast load pickup – Governor response units – Black start capability – No cooling water required – Low emission – Minimum operation and maintenance costs – Minimum transmission requirements PJM©2010 285 3/6/2014 Combustion Turbines • CT Disadvantages – Fuel operating cost (heat rate) – Low Efficiency: 25%- 40% – Thermal stress • High rate of temperature change • Short life due to cycling • High maintenance cost PJM©2010 286 3/6/2014 Combustion Turbines • Efficiency can be increased by: - Regeneration: install a heat exchanger (recuperator) gives 5-6% efficiency increase and improved part-load applications - Intercooling: is a heat exchanger that cools the gas during the compression process - Reheating: used when turbine has two stages increasing efficiency by 1-3% by reheating the flow between the two stages PJM©2010 287 3/6/2014 Simple-Cycle Combustion Turbine PJM©2010 288 3/6/2014 Combustion Turbine • Output Limitations: - Ambient air temperature and density - High barometer/low temp: air most dense - Low barometer/high temp: air least dense - Highest efficiency: cold, dense air - Cold weather - Lube oil temperature - Moisture in fuel PJM©2010 289 3/6/2014 PJM©2010 Combustion Turbines • Environmental – Stack Emission (NOx/CO2/CO) • Temperature 980 - 1000 F. • High temperature in combustion section accelerates nitric oxide emission • Particulate emission – opacity (oil) – Sound levels – Combined cycle units require: • Circulating water source • Waste water treatment for plant effluent PJM©2010 291 3/6/2014 Combustion Turbines • Because turbine combustors operate at a very high temperature, high levels of NOX are produced • Common methods for control: - Water injection to reduce combustion temperature - Selective Catalytic Reduction is an after-treatment to remove NOX - Xonon is a combustor that operates below the NOX formation temperature PJM©2010 292 3/6/2014 Simple Combined Cycle Unit PJM©2010 293 3/6/2014 Simple Combined Cycle Unit • One combustion turbine unit along with an associated generator AND • One Heat Recovery Steam Generator (HRSG) along with it’s own steam turbine PJM©2010 294 3/6/2014 Simple Combined Cycle PJM©2010 295 3/6/2014 Combined Cycle Unit • Heat Recovery: utilizing the large volume of exhaust that is high in oxygen content • Duct Burner: direct-fired gas burner located in the turbine exhaust stream that boosts the total available thermal energy • HRSG: heat recovery steam generator utilizes the heat in the turbine exhaust • Diverter: used to divert turbine exhaust to the atmosphere • The higher the electrical efficiency of the turbine, the lower the available thermal energy in the exhaust PJM©2010 296 3/6/2014 Combined Cycle Unit PJM©2010 297 3/6/2014 Combined Cycle • The HRSG’s convert heat in the CT exhaust gas to steam for use in the steam turbine • CT’s utilizing the HRSG can be operated from 50 to 100% peak load • Start-up system (static frequency converter) is used to start the rotation for light-off of the CT • Generator acts as a synchronous motor • The generator’s stator and rotor is supplied by current via a start-up transformer • The rotor is supplied by the static excitation system • The stator is supplied from the SFC PJM©2010 298 3/6/2014 Combined Cycle Unit • HRSG incorporates features of conventional fossil-fired boilers such as: - Economizer, Evaporator, and Superheater - Auxiliary systems for the steam turbine portion are similar to conventional steam plants - Cooling water must be supplied for the steam turbine’s condenser - Operates with a simple feedwater cycle PJM©2010 299 3/6/2014 Simple Combined Cycle Unit PJM©2010 300 3/6/2014 Multiple Combined Cycle • More than one combustion turbine unit along with it’s own generator AND • More than one Heat Recovery Steam Generator (HRSG) along with one or more steam turbines and generators PJM©2010 301 3/6/2014 Multiple Combined Cycle PJM©2010 302 3/6/2014 Combined Cycle and Co-Generation • Combined Cycle units can be used in conjunction with CoGeneration • Co-Generation (Distributed Generation) – A means of generating hot water, and / or high and low pressure steam and electricity at the same time, from the same energy source, yielding a highly efficient power plant PJM©2010 303 3/6/2014 Combined Cycle with Cogeneration PJM©2010 304 3/6/2014 Why Combined Cycle Plants? • • • • • • • PJM©2010 Competition / Future Projections Plant Conversions / Stagnant Efficient Environment Cheaper / Built Faster Short Payback Time Distributed Power Applications 305 3/6/2014 Competition /Future Projections • Competition between Generation Companies, IPPs, Merchant Plants and others to participate in the selling of energy produced in an efficient manner. PJM©2010 306 3/6/2014 Thermal Efficiency PJM©2010 Generation Type Efficiency Combustion Turbine Steam (no reheat) Steam (reheat) Combined Cycle 28% - 34% 31% - 35% 36% - 41% 42% - 53% 307 3/6/2014 Environment • Gas fired Combined Cycle Unit – Lower Emissions • • • • SO2 and Particulate emissions are negligible Nox emissions are lower than a conventional coal plant No production or emission of sludge No production or emission of ash – Land Use • CCPP on the average require five times less land than a coal fired plant (100 acres versus 500 acres) – Water Use • Lower cooling and condensate water consumption • Condensing steam turbine is only about 35% of output PJM©2010 308 3/6/2014 Short Payback Time • High Availability rate of 90% • CCPP is designed primarily for Peaking and Intermediate or Mid-Merit use. • CCPP can also be used as a Base Load unit • CCPP also has excellent performance responsiveness for spinning reserve capability PJM©2010 309 3/6/2014 Advantages/Disadvantages • Advantages: – Higher efficiency – Lower capital investment – Operational flexibility – Base, Intermediate or Peaking – Distributed Power application – Dual fuel capability - Natural gas (primary/Low sulfur fuel oil (secondary) – Technological and Strategic advantages over Steam Power Plants (STPP) PJM©2010 310 3/6/2014 Advantages/Disadvantages • Disadvantages: - Increased chemistry requirements with more complex plants - Rapid heating and cooling of critical components - Emissions to the environment: nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulfur dioxide (SO2), carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2), and opacity - Availability and cost of fuel - Poor thermal performance, high vibration, tube leaks, and ambient conditions - Auxiliary equipment out of service which prevents unit from achieving full load PJM©2010 311 3/6/2014 Generating Unit Basics Wind Generation Part 6 Wind Power Generation PJM©2010 312 3/6/2014 Wind Power Generation • Wind is a form of solar energy caused by: - Uneven heating of the atmosphere by the sun - Irregularities of the earth’s surface - Rotation of the earth • Wind flow patterns are modified by: - Earth’s terrain - Bodies of water - Vegetative cover PJM©2010 313 3/6/2014 Wind Power Generation • Wind power turns kinetic energy of the wind into mechanical and electrical power • Power available in the wind is proportional to the cube of its speed (Double the speed increases the power by a factor of eight) • Wind power depends on elevation and wind speed • Wind speed increases with altitude and over open areas • It is considered a free and renewable resource just like hydroelectricity PJM©2010 314 3/6/2014 Type of Wind Generators • Horizontal Axis Wind Turbine (HAWT) Most commonly used type of wind turbine • Vertical Axis Wind Turbine (VAWT) – most common Emerging Technologies and many times smaller capacity and use • Ducted Wind Turbines (DWT) Developed decades ago, this design causes the wind speed to increase just before it strikes the blades, which in turn creates faster revolutions. Normally smaller operations • Wind power provides more than 2.5% of all electricity consumption (2010) 315 PJM©2010 315 3/6/2014 Wind Power Generation PJM©2010 316 3/6/2014 Wind Turbine Major Parts 317 PJM©2010 Other type units may have gear boxes 317 Over the past decade, wind turbine use has increased at more than 25 percent a year 3/6/2014 Tower Components 318 PJM©2010 318 Power plants are the largest stationary source of air pollution in the United States 3/6/2014 Wind Generation • Generator: Induction - Utilizes the principle of electromagnetic induction - Requires reactive power for excitation - Requires the stator to be magnetized from the grid, at least initially, to produce the rotational magnetic flux - Generating: Produces electrical power when the rotor is rotated faster than synchronous frequency causing an opposing rotor flux to cut the stator coils producing a current in the stator coils - Motoring: stator flux rotation is faster than rotor rotation creating opposing rotor flux causing the rotor to drag behind the stator flux by a value equal to the “slip” PJM©2010 319 3/6/2014 Induction Generator • Produces electric power when the shaft of the generator is rotated faster than the synchronous frequency of the equivalent induction motor • Induction generators: - Produce useful power at varying rotor speeds - Simpler both mechanically and electrically than other types of generators - Do not require brushes or commutators - Not self-exciting; require external excitation PJM©2010 320 3/6/2014 Induction Generator • The rotating magnetic flux from the stator induces currents in the rotor, which also produces a magnetic field - If the rotor turns slower than the rate of the rotating flux, the machine acts like an induction motor - If the rotor turns faster than the rate of the rotating flux, the machine acts like an induction generator, producing power at the synchronous frequency - In a stand-alone situation, capacitor banks are used to supply the magnetizing flux until the machine starts producing power PJM©2010 321 3/6/2014 Induction Generator Most Wind Generators use 4 or 6 pole generators based on cost and size savings PJM©2010 322 3/6/2014 Wind Power Generation • Anemometer: measures wind speed transmitting data to the controller • Blade: catches the wind causing the blades to “lift” converting it to rotational shaft energy • Brake: mechanically, electrically, or hydraulically stops the rotor in emergencies • Chopper: used in the rectifier circuit - Improves the power factor of the overall system - Controls the level of DC voltage - Controls the torque of the machine PJM©2010 323 3/6/2014 Wind Power Generation • Controller: computer which monitors the turbine conditions such as overheating and power quality. It also starts the turbine, yaws it against the wind, and checks the safety systems - Starts at wind speeds 8-16 mph - Shutdown at wind speeds greater than 55 mph • Gearbox: optimizes the power output by connecting the lowspeed shaft to the high-speed shaft increasing rotational speeds (30-60 rpm to ~ 1,000 to 1,800 rpm) Newer “direct-drive” generators operate at lower rotational speeds without gear boxes (5-11.7 rpm) PJM©2010 324 3/6/2014 Wind Power Generation • Inverter: converts incoming DC power into AC power for use on the Interconnection • Nacelle: housing atop the tower containing the gear box, lowand high-speed shafts, generator, controller, and brake • Pitch: blades turned out of the wind to control rotor speed and keep the unit from turning into too high or low winds to restrict electrical production • Rectifier: converts incoming AC power into DC power for excitation • Rotor: blade and hub assembly. Power available to the blades is proportional to the square of the diameter of the rotor PJM©2010 325 3/6/2014 Wind Power Generation • Tower: tubular steel, concrete, or steel lattice • Wind vane: measures wind direction and communicates with the yaw drive to orient the unit properly with respect to the wind • Yaw: Rotation of the unit parallel to the ground to face winds. Upwind turbines face into the wind; yaw drive keeps the rotor facing into the wind (Not required on a downwind turbine) PJM©2010 326 3/6/2014 Wind Power Generation • Wind turbines are available in a variety of sizes - Largest has blades that span more than the length of a football field, stands 20 building stories high, and produces electric power for ~ 1400 homes - Smaller machines have rotors between 8 and 25 feet, standing ~ 30 feet, supplying an all-electric home or small business up to 50 kW - Utility-scale turbines range in size from 50 kW to 7.50 MW PJM©2010 327 3/6/2014 Wind Power Generation • Advantages: - Wind is a free, renewable resource - Clean, non-polluting energy • Disadvantages: - Higher initial investment - 80% equipment, 20% site preparation/installation - Environmental - Noise produced by the rotor blades - Visual impacts - Avian/bat mortality - Intermittent wind/remote locations PJM©2010 328 3/6/2014 Generating Unit Basics Solar Power Generation Part 7 Wind Power Generation PJM©2010 329 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Solar power is the conversion of sunlight into electricity, either directly (photovoltaic), or indirectly (concentrated solar power) - Photovoltaic: solar cells that change sunlight directly into electricity. Individual solar cells can be grouped into panels and arrays of panels for a wide range of applications - Solar Energy Concentrator Systems: generates electricity by using heat from solar thermal collectors to heat fluid which produces steam that drives a turbine/generator package. PJM©2010 330 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Photovoltaic cell, or solar cell, is a non-mechanical device usually made from a silicon alloy - Individual cells, considered to be the basic building block of the system, vary in size from ½ to 4 inches across - To increase power output, cells are connected electrically into modules which are further connected to form an array - The number of modules in an array depends on the amount of power output needed PJM©2010 331 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Photons, particles of solar energy, are absorbed by the cells dislodging electrons from the cell material’s atoms causing the electrons to migrate to the PV cell’s front surface • The resulting imbalance in charge between the cell’s surfaces creates a voltage potential similar to a DC battery • Once a load is connected across the cell’s surfaces, a current flows completing the circuit PJM©2010 332 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Applications of a Photovoltaic Cell: - First used to power US space satellites - Small consumer electronics (calculators, watches) - Provide electricity to pump water, power communications equipment - Solar panel installations on residential roofs PJM©2010 333 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Advantages of a Photovoltaic Cell: - Conversion from sunlight to electricity is direct; generators are unnecessary - Arrays can be installed quickly and in any size - Environmental impact is minimal, requiring no water for cooling and generating no by-products such air or water pollution - No greenhouse gases • Disadvantages of a Photovoltaic Cell: - Photovoltaic cell is dependent on sunlight. Clouds and fog have a significant effect on its performance - DC must be converted to AC power requiring inverters - Most modules have a 10% efficiency PJM©2010 334 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Solar Energy Concentrator System: - Works the same as fossil fuel generation, except that the steam is produced by heat collected from sunlight and transferred indirectly to a fluid - Main types of solar energy concentrator systems: - Parabolic trough system - Solar dish/engine system - Solar power tower PJM©2010 335 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Parabolic Trough System: - The collector utilizes a long parabolic-shaped reflector (mirror) that focuses the sun’s rays on a receiver pipe located at the focus of the parabola - The collector tilts with the sun’s movement from east to west - Concentration ratio (focus) is 30 to 100 times the sun’s normal intensity, achieving fluid temperatures over 750 degrees F - Transfer fluid, usually oil, is heated as it circulates from receiver to heat exchanger to superheat water into steam for use in a conventional steam turbine/generator PJM©2010 336 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation PJM©2010 337 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Solar Dish/Engine System: - Uses collectors, always pointing straight at the sun, to concentrate the solar energy at the focal point of the dish - Concentration ratio (focus) is much higher than a trough system, typically over 2,000 with a fluid temperature over 1,380 degrees F - Stirling engine converts heat into mechanical energy by compressing the working fluid when cold, heating the compressed fluid, and then expanding the fluid through a turbine or with a piston to produce work - Engine is coupled to an electric generator to convert the mechanical energy into electrical power PJM©2010 338 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation PJM©2010 339 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Solar Power Tower: - Generates electricity by focusing concentrated solar energy on a tower-mounted heat exchanger - The system uses flat sun-tracking mirrors called heliostats to reflect and concentrate the solar energy onto a central receiver tower (concentrated energy can be as much as 1,500 times that of the energy coming in from the sun) - Energy losses are minimized as the energy is directly transferred from the heliostats to a single receiver PJM©2010 340 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation PJM©2010 341 3/6/2014 Solar Power Generation • Disadvantages of Solar Energy: - The amount of sunlight at the surface of the earth is not constant. It depends on location, time of day, time of year, and weather conditions. - Because the sun doesn’t deliver that much energy to any one place at any given time, a large surface area is needed to collect the energy at a useful rate PJM©2010 342 3/6/2014 Summary • Overview – Generators – Electrical and governor characteristics • Plant Principles of Operation – – – – – – – PJM©2010 Steam Nuclear Hydro Combustion Turbines Combined Cycle Power Plants (CCPP) Wind Power Solar Power 343 3/6/2014 Questions? PJM©2010 344 3/6/2014 Disclaimer: PJM has made all efforts possible to accurately document all information in this presentation. The information seen here does not supersede the PJM Operating Agreement or the PJM Tariff both of which can be found by accessing: http://www.pjm.com/documents/agreements/pjmagreements.aspx For additional detailed information on any of the topics discussed, please refer to the appropriate PJM manual which can be found by accessing: http://www.pjm.com/documents/manuals.aspx PJM©2010 345 3/6/2014