stulea
Electrical
- Oct 8, 2003
- 4
Situation:
Investigating the benefits of placing power factor correction capacitors close to the generator upon an offshore platform.
Offshore platform has a system load with a 0.8 pf
Benefit for placing the correction capacitor close to the generator is to reduce the MVAr the generator produces.
Due to safety considerations it is not possible to retrofit PF correction at the load points on the system.
Offshore, the power source is gas turbine driven generators and the platform load is normally met by two main generation units.
I understand that fuel input (KW input) is directly related to load.
I also understand that the efficiency of the generator increases with the pf of the load.
If therefore should you increase the pf of the load you increase the efficiency of the generator and should therefore reduce the input required to drive the generator.
I am interested if you can comment on if power factor correction can reduce the mechanical drive required for a synchronous generator given a fixed MW load?
If there is a reduced drive requirement by the generator and can this translate to a reduced fuel input to the gas turbine and therefore reduced emissions from the turbine?
any comments welcome
Investigating the benefits of placing power factor correction capacitors close to the generator upon an offshore platform.
Offshore platform has a system load with a 0.8 pf
Benefit for placing the correction capacitor close to the generator is to reduce the MVAr the generator produces.
Due to safety considerations it is not possible to retrofit PF correction at the load points on the system.
Offshore, the power source is gas turbine driven generators and the platform load is normally met by two main generation units.
I understand that fuel input (KW input) is directly related to load.
I also understand that the efficiency of the generator increases with the pf of the load.
If therefore should you increase the pf of the load you increase the efficiency of the generator and should therefore reduce the input required to drive the generator.
I am interested if you can comment on if power factor correction can reduce the mechanical drive required for a synchronous generator given a fixed MW load?
If there is a reduced drive requirement by the generator and can this translate to a reduced fuel input to the gas turbine and therefore reduced emissions from the turbine?
any comments welcome