ESO 201A: Thermodynamics: Vapor and Combined Power Cycles
ESO 201A: Thermodynamics: Vapor and Combined Power Cycles
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Energy Analysis of the Ideal Rankine Cycle
Steady-flow energy equation
(a) Deviation of actual vapor power cycle from the ideal Rankine cycle.
(b) The effect of pump and turbine irreversibilities on the ideal Rankine cycle. 6
HOW CAN WE INCREASE THE
EFFICIENCY OF THE RANKINE CYCLE?
The basic idea behind all the modifications to increase the thermal efficiency
of a power cycle is the same: Increase the average temperature at which heat is
transferred to the working fluid in the boiler, or decrease the average
temperature at which heat is rejected from the working fluid in the condenser.
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Superheating the Steam to High Temperatures
(Increases Thigh,avg)
Both the net work and heat input
increase as a result of
superheating the steam to a higher
temperature. The overall effect is
an increase in thermal efficiency
since the average temperature at
which heat is added increases.
Superheating to higher
temperatures decreases the
moisture content of the steam at
the turbine exit, which is desirable.
The temperature is limited by
metallurgical considerations.
Presently the highest steam
temperature allowed at the turbine
inlet is about 620°C.
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Increasing the Boiler Pressure Today many modern steam power
(Increases Thigh,avg) plants operate at supercritical
For a fixed turbine inlet temperature, the cycle pressures (P > 22.06 MPa) and
shifts to the left and the moisture content of have thermal efficiencies of about
steam at the turbine exit increases. This side 40% for fossil-fuel plants and 34%
effect can be corrected by reheating the steam. for nuclear plants.
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THE IDEAL REHEAT RANKINE CYCLE
How can we take advantage of the increased efficiencies at higher boiler pressures
without facing the problem of excessive moisture at the final stages of the turbine?
1. Superheat the steam to very high temperatures. It is limited metallurgically.
2. Expand the steam in the turbine in two stages, and reheat it in between (reheat)
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The single reheat in a modern power
plant improves the cycle efficiency by 4 to
5% by increasing the average
temperature at which heat is transferred
to the steam.
The average temperature during the
reheat process can be increased by
increasing the number of expansion and
reheat stages. As the number of stages is
increased, the expansion and reheat
processes approach an isothermal
process at the maximum temperature.
The use of more than two reheat stages
is not practical. The theoretical
improvement in efficiency from the
second reheat is about half of that which
results from a single reheat.
The reheat temperatures are very close
or equal to the turbine inlet temperature.
The optimum reheat pressure is about
one-fourth of the maximum cycle
pressure. 11
THE IDEAL REGENERATIVE RANKINE CYCLE
Heat is transferred to the working fluid
during process 2-2 at a relatively low
temperature. This lowers the average
heat-addition temperature and thus the
cycle efficiency.
In steam power plants, steam is extracted
from the turbine at various points. This
steam, which could have produced more
work by expanding further in the turbine, is
used to heat the feedwater instead. The
device where the feedwater is heated by
regeneration is called a regenerator, or a
feedwater heater (FWH).
A feedwater heater is basically a heat
exchanger where heat is transferred from
the steam to the feedwater either by
mixing the two fluid streams (open
feedwater heaters) or without mixing
them (closed feedwater heaters).
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Open Feedwater Heaters
An open (or direct-contact) feedwater
heater is basically a mixing chamber,
where the steam extracted from the
turbine mixes with the feedwater exiting
the pump. Ideally, the mixture leaves
the heater as a saturated liquid at the
heater pressure.
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Closed Feedwater Heaters
Another type of feedwater heater frequently used in steam power plants is
the closed feedwater heater, in which heat is transferred from the
extracted steam to the feedwater without any mixing taking place. The two
streams now can be at different pressures, since they do not mix.
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The closed feedwater heaters are more complex because of the
internal tubing network, and thus they are more expensive. Heat
transfer in closed feedwater heaters is less effective since the
two streams are not allowed to be in direct contact. However,
closed feedwater heaters do not require a separate pump for
each heater since the extracted steam and the feedwater can Open feedwater
be at different pressures. heaters are simple
and inexpensive and
have good heat
transfer
characteristics. For
each heater, however,
a pump is required to
handle the feedwater.
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SECOND-LAW ANALYSIS OF
VAPOR POWER CYCLES
Exergy destruction for a steady-flow system
Steady-flow, one-
inlet, one-exit
Stream exergy
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At times of high demand for process heat, all
the steam is routed to the process-heating units
and none to the condenser (m7= 0). The waste
heat is zero in this mode.
If this is not sufficient, some steam leaving the
boiler is throttled by an expansion or pressure-
reducing valve to the extraction pressure P6
and is directed to the process-heating unit.
Maximum process heating is realized when all
the steam leaving the boiler passes through the
PRV (m5= m4). No power is produced in this
mode.
When there is no demand for process heat, all
the steam passes through the turbine and the
condenser (m5=m6=0), and the cogeneration
plant operates as an ordinary steam power
plant.
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COMBINED GAS–VAPOR POWER CYCLES
• The continued quest for higher thermal efficiencies has resulted in rather
innovative modifications to conventional power plants.
• A popular modification involves a gas power cycle topping a vapor power cycle,
which is called the combined gas–vapor cycle, or just the combined cycle.
• The combined cycle of greatest interest is the gas-turbine (Brayton) cycle topping
a steam-turbine (Rankine) cycle, which has a higher thermal efficiency than
either of the cycles executed individually.
• It makes engineering sense to take advantage of the very desirable
characteristics of the gas-turbine cycle at high temperatures and to use the high-
temperature exhaust gases as the energy source for the bottoming cycle such as
a steam power cycle. The result is a combined gas–steam cycle.
• Recent developments in gas-turbine technology have made the combined gas–
steam cycle economically very attractive.
• The combined cycle increases the efficiency without increasing the initial cost
greatly. Consequently, many new power plants operate on combined cycles, and
many more existing steam- or gas-turbine plants are being converted to
combined-cycle power plants.
• Thermal efficiencies over 50% are reported.
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Summary
• The Carnot vapor cycle
• Rankine cycle: The ideal cycle for vapor power cycles
Energy analysis of the ideal Rankine cycle
• Deviation of actual vapor power cycles from idealized ones
• How can we increase the efficiency of the Rankine cycle?
Lowering the condenser pressure (Lowers Tlow,avg)
Superheating the steam to high temperatures (Increases Thigh,avg)
Increasing the boiler pressure (Increases Thigh,avg)
• The ideal reheat Rankine cycle
• The ideal regenerative Rankine cycle
Open feedwater heaters
Closed feedwater heaters
• Second-law analysis of vapor power cycles
• Cogeneration
• Combined gas–vapor power cycles
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