BluSTi
Mechanical
- Jan 12, 2011
- 6
Hello,
I recently had an opportunity to look at a project at a natural gas-fired generation plant's desuperheater. Neat bit of engineering, but the question I had that nobody seemed to have an answer for is; why? What is the benefit of taking 1800F steam at 2200psi (or so) and injecting cool water? I get that there's a phase change involved, but why not take steam at the desired pressure/temp/quality from the turbine where those conditions exist? Is there some aspect I'm missing?
Thanks in advance!
I recently had an opportunity to look at a project at a natural gas-fired generation plant's desuperheater. Neat bit of engineering, but the question I had that nobody seemed to have an answer for is; why? What is the benefit of taking 1800F steam at 2200psi (or so) and injecting cool water? I get that there's a phase change involved, but why not take steam at the desired pressure/temp/quality from the turbine where those conditions exist? Is there some aspect I'm missing?
Thanks in advance!