EddyWirbelstrom
Electrical
- Feb 17, 2002
- 216
An islanded powerhouse has 3 off steam-turbine generators of 25 MVA and 1 only gas-turbine 50 MVA generator. All generators are connected to a common 22 kV bus via generator transformers.
All of the steam leaving the steam turbines feeds into a refining process. Similarly, the GT’s waste heat is converted to steam in a heat recovery steam generator which also feeds into the refining process.
We are unsure of the existing governor control modes for these machines. We do know that an automatic frequency controller is used, but only on the steam-turbine generators, to correct for frequency droop due to load changes. The controller restores frequency to 50 Hz but we are advised that it has a time delay of approximately one minute. The gas-turbine is not controlled by this system.
What governor control modes must have been selected to result in the following characteristics exhibited by the attached traces:
• The steam-turbine generators supply the load variations,
• The gas-turbine generator supplies a constant MW base load.
One anomaly to this pattern exists. At approximately half way through the recording period, in response to a 3 MW plant load increase, the GT responds by taking up most of the load increase. However, after a minute or two the three steam generators increase their MW outputs to take up all of the increased plant load and the GT returns to the same base load MW output it was delivering prior to the plant load increase.
The questions are:
1. Why is it only in one isolated event that the GT responds to a change in plant MW load?
2. If one of the Turboalternators experiences an unexpected electrical trip will the GT continue to output constant MW at a lower speed or will its governor, on sensing the lower speed, automatically switch to droop control and increase MW output in accordance with its droop setting? Or do other possible GT governor responses exist?
In the attached file the plot colors represent :
Dark Blue Plant load in MW
Blue Frequency in Hz
Pink Sum of the 3 steam turbine generator outputs in MW
Yellow Gas-turbine generator output in MW
All of the steam leaving the steam turbines feeds into a refining process. Similarly, the GT’s waste heat is converted to steam in a heat recovery steam generator which also feeds into the refining process.
We are unsure of the existing governor control modes for these machines. We do know that an automatic frequency controller is used, but only on the steam-turbine generators, to correct for frequency droop due to load changes. The controller restores frequency to 50 Hz but we are advised that it has a time delay of approximately one minute. The gas-turbine is not controlled by this system.
What governor control modes must have been selected to result in the following characteristics exhibited by the attached traces:
• The steam-turbine generators supply the load variations,
• The gas-turbine generator supplies a constant MW base load.
One anomaly to this pattern exists. At approximately half way through the recording period, in response to a 3 MW plant load increase, the GT responds by taking up most of the load increase. However, after a minute or two the three steam generators increase their MW outputs to take up all of the increased plant load and the GT returns to the same base load MW output it was delivering prior to the plant load increase.
The questions are:
1. Why is it only in one isolated event that the GT responds to a change in plant MW load?
2. If one of the Turboalternators experiences an unexpected electrical trip will the GT continue to output constant MW at a lower speed or will its governor, on sensing the lower speed, automatically switch to droop control and increase MW output in accordance with its droop setting? Or do other possible GT governor responses exist?
In the attached file the plot colors represent :
Dark Blue Plant load in MW
Blue Frequency in Hz
Pink Sum of the 3 steam turbine generator outputs in MW
Yellow Gas-turbine generator output in MW