omegamanltj
Marine/Ocean
- Jul 6, 2015
- 6
Good Day,
I wish to describe an unusual situation I have come across and see if anyone has any opinions on which is the best way to set up the plant.
I have recently been relieving as a casual on two offshore facilities- floating production , storage and offtake facilities, (FPSO's) The two vessels FPSO’s which are almost sister vessels but not quite. The power distribution configuration is that there are three gas turbine generators on deck which are about 10 MW rating at 6.6 kv and there are three diesel generators below in the “ships engine room” which are about 900 kw at 415 V. These are known as the “essential generators “ , as they can supply the “essential loads” , that is to say everything other than the oil production equipment. This includes the ships services if the vessel has to disconnect from the mooring in case of cyclones, which has happened twice time since I have been here.
As with most ships the star points of the generators are not connected to earth. I believe this is whats called an I-T network where there is no neutral as such, or you could consider it to "float" above earth. This is typical marine practice.
Normally while on the oil field, all consumers, both topsides and essential are supplied by the GTG’s.- see the diagram in the attachment. the breakers circled in blue are normally opened when the vessel is connected to the oil field- i.e the "normal situation". The breakers circled in red are opened in the situation where a GTG and diesel are paralleled prior to load transfer and disconnect from oil field.
The gas turbines are usually powered by the oil field gas but can run on diesel, but they are very thirsty. The HV consumers are virtually all related to the oil production equipment and thus are not needed for sail away. For the sake of this discussion I will call the two vessels A and B.
When we disconnected from the oil field on vessel A, I noticed that it was possible to run for some time , hours in fact, with a diesel generator and a GT paralleled, before we eventually transferred all load to the diesels and sailed off. There was however a switch that you had to activate called “feedback” . I cant recall what that switch actually did though.
However on vessel B it is only possible to parallel them for about 25 seconds while transferring the load . A relay supposedly trips the Diesel gen if they are paralleled longer than that. One of the engineers on vessel B told me this was because of “circulating currents” , but I dont see how that could be because there is no earth connection. The senior electrician told me it was in case of fault current on the GTG you could possibly overload and destroy the diesel alternator as it was rated much smaller than the GTG, and when I told him of the practice on vessel A he seemed to think it was very dangerous.
However I cant see how fault currents could feed back into the diesel as no part of the circuit is earthed.
I noticed by reading some documentation that vessel A was originally fitted with a timer to prevent long time paralleling but it was removed ( no mention why) but it was stated that when running in parallel that the switchboard should not be left unattended.
I suspect the reason is simply because the load sharing is basically manual and there could be a risk that if the diesel load dropped off too much the GTG could start running it like a motor- although there should be a reverse power trip if that were to occur. i.e its more of a mechanical reason than an electrical one.
Does anyone have an opinion about this set up - can you see any potential problems electrically wise , i.e with fault currents or circulating currents when running a 10 MW GTG in parallel with a 0.9 MW diesel generator.
I wish to describe an unusual situation I have come across and see if anyone has any opinions on which is the best way to set up the plant.
I have recently been relieving as a casual on two offshore facilities- floating production , storage and offtake facilities, (FPSO's) The two vessels FPSO’s which are almost sister vessels but not quite. The power distribution configuration is that there are three gas turbine generators on deck which are about 10 MW rating at 6.6 kv and there are three diesel generators below in the “ships engine room” which are about 900 kw at 415 V. These are known as the “essential generators “ , as they can supply the “essential loads” , that is to say everything other than the oil production equipment. This includes the ships services if the vessel has to disconnect from the mooring in case of cyclones, which has happened twice time since I have been here.
As with most ships the star points of the generators are not connected to earth. I believe this is whats called an I-T network where there is no neutral as such, or you could consider it to "float" above earth. This is typical marine practice.
Normally while on the oil field, all consumers, both topsides and essential are supplied by the GTG’s.- see the diagram in the attachment. the breakers circled in blue are normally opened when the vessel is connected to the oil field- i.e the "normal situation". The breakers circled in red are opened in the situation where a GTG and diesel are paralleled prior to load transfer and disconnect from oil field.
The gas turbines are usually powered by the oil field gas but can run on diesel, but they are very thirsty. The HV consumers are virtually all related to the oil production equipment and thus are not needed for sail away. For the sake of this discussion I will call the two vessels A and B.
When we disconnected from the oil field on vessel A, I noticed that it was possible to run for some time , hours in fact, with a diesel generator and a GT paralleled, before we eventually transferred all load to the diesels and sailed off. There was however a switch that you had to activate called “feedback” . I cant recall what that switch actually did though.
However on vessel B it is only possible to parallel them for about 25 seconds while transferring the load . A relay supposedly trips the Diesel gen if they are paralleled longer than that. One of the engineers on vessel B told me this was because of “circulating currents” , but I dont see how that could be because there is no earth connection. The senior electrician told me it was in case of fault current on the GTG you could possibly overload and destroy the diesel alternator as it was rated much smaller than the GTG, and when I told him of the practice on vessel A he seemed to think it was very dangerous.
However I cant see how fault currents could feed back into the diesel as no part of the circuit is earthed.
I noticed by reading some documentation that vessel A was originally fitted with a timer to prevent long time paralleling but it was removed ( no mention why) but it was stated that when running in parallel that the switchboard should not be left unattended.
I suspect the reason is simply because the load sharing is basically manual and there could be a risk that if the diesel load dropped off too much the GTG could start running it like a motor- although there should be a reverse power trip if that were to occur. i.e its more of a mechanical reason than an electrical one.
Does anyone have an opinion about this set up - can you see any potential problems electrically wise , i.e with fault currents or circulating currents when running a 10 MW GTG in parallel with a 0.9 MW diesel generator.