crshears
Electrical
- Mar 23, 2013
- 1,806
Hello all,
I'm new here; this is my first post. If I'm sending it to the wrong forum, please forgive the error and point me in the right direction!
I'm hoping the following may somehow morph into a post-retirement second career; this pursuit is therefore not on behalf of my employer...
I have undertaken a preliminary feasibility study regarding the conversion of a retired steamship [!] with an intact main reciprocating quadruple-expansion engine [but no usable boilers] into a more-or-less permanently-moored combined-cycle powerplant for electrical generation purposes [conceptually fuelled with natural gas]. Dual-fuelling with distillate oil would allow for the purchase of natural gas on an interruptible basis.
The concept I have in mind uses two or three gas turbines [possibly Dresser-Rand KG2-3E's ?] supplying one or more HRSG's [producing saturated steam at around 225 psig] with an aggregate power output of from somewhere between 4 and 6 MW, producing a further 1.5 - 2.5 MW of electricity from the steam engine. The plan in view is to have the vessel serve as a living, working museum with a revenue stream derived from electricity sales that is independent of, and therefore not at the mercy of, the fickle interest of the vacationing public.
I hold a current and valid Certificate of Qualification in the province of Ontario, Canada as an Operating Engineer, Third Class. I have been employed for over thirty-five years [and still am] in the electrical power industry with backgrounds in the operation of fossil-fuelled and water-powered generation, as well as the operation of transmission and sub-transmission systems from 13.8 kV up to 500 kV. It will thus be understandable that I am strong in operational experience but challenged when it comes to the intricacies of plant design.
This is my question:
Would it be feasible to have the two or three GT's supply one common unfired HRSG?
I'm thinking that the gas side of such an HRSG would have to be partitioned into three discrete bays, or cells, or whatever you might wish to call them, so that the thermodynamic behaviour of each section would closely approximate the characteristics of a stand-alone HRSG.
Since the steam engine electrical output would follow the steam production of the HRSG, I'm thinking the steam-to-gas flow ratio of the HRSG would be at least in the general neighbourhood of constant whether one, two or all three GT's were in service. As a consequence I would not expect undesirable pinch or approach point issues, such as steaming in the economizer section, to occur under normal operating conditions.
The underlying reasons for going with one HRSG would be [a] to avoid the unnecessary capital cost caused by the triplication of boiler water level control systems, isolating valves, etc., etc., particularly if a deaerator section is incorporated into the steam cycle, and to simplify control of water chemistry.
Regards, Carl
I'm new here; this is my first post. If I'm sending it to the wrong forum, please forgive the error and point me in the right direction!
I'm hoping the following may somehow morph into a post-retirement second career; this pursuit is therefore not on behalf of my employer...
I have undertaken a preliminary feasibility study regarding the conversion of a retired steamship [!] with an intact main reciprocating quadruple-expansion engine [but no usable boilers] into a more-or-less permanently-moored combined-cycle powerplant for electrical generation purposes [conceptually fuelled with natural gas]. Dual-fuelling with distillate oil would allow for the purchase of natural gas on an interruptible basis.
The concept I have in mind uses two or three gas turbines [possibly Dresser-Rand KG2-3E's ?] supplying one or more HRSG's [producing saturated steam at around 225 psig] with an aggregate power output of from somewhere between 4 and 6 MW, producing a further 1.5 - 2.5 MW of electricity from the steam engine. The plan in view is to have the vessel serve as a living, working museum with a revenue stream derived from electricity sales that is independent of, and therefore not at the mercy of, the fickle interest of the vacationing public.
I hold a current and valid Certificate of Qualification in the province of Ontario, Canada as an Operating Engineer, Third Class. I have been employed for over thirty-five years [and still am] in the electrical power industry with backgrounds in the operation of fossil-fuelled and water-powered generation, as well as the operation of transmission and sub-transmission systems from 13.8 kV up to 500 kV. It will thus be understandable that I am strong in operational experience but challenged when it comes to the intricacies of plant design.
This is my question:
Would it be feasible to have the two or three GT's supply one common unfired HRSG?
I'm thinking that the gas side of such an HRSG would have to be partitioned into three discrete bays, or cells, or whatever you might wish to call them, so that the thermodynamic behaviour of each section would closely approximate the characteristics of a stand-alone HRSG.
Since the steam engine electrical output would follow the steam production of the HRSG, I'm thinking the steam-to-gas flow ratio of the HRSG would be at least in the general neighbourhood of constant whether one, two or all three GT's were in service. As a consequence I would not expect undesirable pinch or approach point issues, such as steaming in the economizer section, to occur under normal operating conditions.
The underlying reasons for going with one HRSG would be [a] to avoid the unnecessary capital cost caused by the triplication of boiler water level control systems, isolating valves, etc., etc., particularly if a deaerator section is incorporated into the steam cycle, and to simplify control of water chemistry.
Regards, Carl