Rreach
Mechanical
- Mar 7, 2001
- 11
Hi,
This is regarding normal shutdown of a steam turbine.
For one of our steam turbines, for a normal shutdown, once it reaches minimum governor speed, the logic will close the governor valve first to 500 rpm before sending a signal to close the steam inlet valve. And according to the engineer on site, he said the turbine will slowly be ramped down in a controlled manner and this is industrial practice. However, the block diagram from the IOM indicate to close both the governor and steam inlet valve concurrently during a normal shutdown sequence.
I could not understand what the rationale is for closing the governor valve first and ramping down in a controlled manner.
Does anyone have any experience on this?
What is the industrial practice on this?
Thanks
This is regarding normal shutdown of a steam turbine.
For one of our steam turbines, for a normal shutdown, once it reaches minimum governor speed, the logic will close the governor valve first to 500 rpm before sending a signal to close the steam inlet valve. And according to the engineer on site, he said the turbine will slowly be ramped down in a controlled manner and this is industrial practice. However, the block diagram from the IOM indicate to close both the governor and steam inlet valve concurrently during a normal shutdown sequence.
I could not understand what the rationale is for closing the governor valve first and ramping down in a controlled manner.
Does anyone have any experience on this?
What is the industrial practice on this?
Thanks