121202...
although i may be repeating to some extent the concepts already posted i will try, as usual, to put it in layman's terms...
1. from your posting i understand that you are dealing with a aeroderivative unit... which has a GG and a PT... most of the power generation by Gas Turbines is performed with single shaft units (industrial type, also called heavy duty)
one basic concept...
when the generator IS NOT synchronized to the grid:
the governor adjusts turbine speed
the excitation adjusts generator voltage
when the generator IS synchronized to the grid:
the governor adjusts turbine (generator) load
the excitation adjusts generator vars
2. the load control scheme depicted by CESSNA1 is typical of units connected in DROOP to a big grid... this droop control only very seldom happens, because DROOP is a PARTIAL LOAD CONDITION... in this case the unit is said to be in "SPEED CONTROL"... most operators select nominal/max/base load whatever the denomination is. because otherwise the unit has excess power that is not being utilized...
depending on the contract with the grid, if the operator is compelled to run the unit at partial loads by the dispatch it will not be below the "technical minimum" declared by the operator... and usually at a PRESELECTED LOAD.
Otherwise the dispatch will ask the operator to shut the unit down.
in the case of aeroderivatives the GT control is looking a the speed of the PT. in case of the industrial type units the control is looking at the Unit speed... there is a "called for reference speed" and the actual speed of the unit...
the difference between those two speeds is proportional to the excess fuel required to maintain the nominal speed of the unit as the generator is loaded...
example:
the synchronous speed of the unit is 3600 rpm = 100%, the called for speed or reference speed is 102%
the difference 2% is proportional to the load of the unit.
what is this proportion? well that depends on what DROOP was programmed into the control system... if the droop is 4% then at 102% reference speed the load of the unit would be 50% (102 - 100 = 2, 2/4 = 50%)
this also means that when the called for speed is 104% the load of the unit will be 100%...
when does the unit reach 100% load? that is usually defined as TEMPERATURE CONTROL. this means that the fuel is not limited by the speed control, but by the exhaust temperature of the unit.
in other words...
in speed control... the fuel system says: something is stopping the generator (the load) give more fuel to maintain the speed!!!
what does the temperature control do now? it says: hey, my exhaust temperature is quite low... give me more fuel (more than requested for by the speed control)...
so the control system decides:
though luck, temp control... speed control wins... (always go for the lowest bidder).
the fuel system keeps giving more fuel... at some point (some load) the temperature control system says... hey, hey, hey! hold it bud! if you put more fuel into the unit... we will destroy the combustion system! that's enough!
the control system then says: ok, temp control... you win now.
IF THE OPERATOR SELECTED MAX LOAD, THE UNIT WILL LOAD GOING THRU SPEED CONTROL UNTIL IT REACHES TEMPERATURE CONTROL
IF THE OPERATOR SELECTED PARTIAL LOAD, THE UNIT WILL STAY AT WHATEVER LOAD WAS WHEN THE OPERATOR STOPPED PLAYING WITH THE GOVERNOR... AND WILL INVERSELY FOLLOW THE FREQUENCY CHANGES AS EXPLAINED BY CESSNA1
MOST UNITS ARE OPERATED WITH MAX/NOMINAL/BASE LOAD SELECTED.
when the fuel called for by the temperature control is LOWER than the fuel called for by the speed control...
the unit reached temperature control... the load cannot go any further, that day with that ambient temperature... and the unit stopped reacting actively to the changes in frequency... if the frequency of the grid drops the load will drop a bit... if the frequency of the grid goes up the load will increase a bit... but basically it will not react.
if the frequency changes are big enough it will activate protection relays that will either trip loads (underfrequency) or trip generator breakers (overfrequency)
another operating mode is PRE-SELECTED LOAD. the unit is programmed to achieve a certain load (lower than the nominal load) IN THIS MODE... THE UNIT OPPOSES the droop control... why?
preselected load has a deadband where the speed control controls the unit (remember, load < nominal load means speed control fuel is lower than temp control fuel) and therefore the unit is drooping to the grid frequency...
as soon as a deadband limit is hit... the unit OPPOSES THE DROOP CONTROL... if the grid frequency is decreasing... it will load the unit as explained before... as soon as the load hits the upper limit of load control the control system will say: hey! i've been told not to go above this load! so it will UNLOAD THE UNIT until the load is again within the deadband... JUST THE OPPOSITE OF WHAT THE GRID NEEDS!!! BECAUSE IF THE frequency is dropping... the last thing the grid needs is a unit unloading!
3. in case the unit is the only one in the grid (island mode operation) or is the "isochronous driver"... usually a big steamer or hydro, not a GT) the operating mode selected is usually "isochronous" which means that the unit will maintain the nominal frequency (50Hz or 60Hz) VERY TIGHTLY, NO MATTER WHAT LOAD is required...
this has an inherent danger... that the unit will try to load BEYOND the temperature control...
if you have a couple of units, one in isochronous and the other drooping to the first one, and the droop unit trips...
all the load in the system will go to the isochronous unit... the control system should then reset from isochronous control to droop control, so the system frequency will drop and the unit will only reach temperature control (hopefully) and not trip
the protection switchgear will then detect underfrequency and trip non critical loads until the system is stabilized again... this is to avoid tripping the unit because of external causes.
there are many more interlocks and control schemes... but if i keep going this will turn into small novel...
4. generator control... at the operator's level there is not much to control on the generator... the excitation system will help maintain the voltage of the grid by means of VARS... if the generator puts out positive vars (excitation increase) this will try to increase the line voltage...
if the generator "absorbs" vars (negative vars) it will try to lower the grid voltage...
who decides whether to push or pull vars? the grid dispatcher... they would call the operator and ask to put so many + or - vars to help control the voltage of the grid...
operators are usually reluctant to absorb vars because negative vars may hit the UNDER EXCITATION LIMIT which is dangerous because it may cause the generator to skip a pole (out of step) - not a pretty sight...
most generators are designed to operate between certain power factors and within the capability curves... operating for long periods of time at low power factors may affect the life of the generator.
this by no means pretends to be the ultimate guide to GT-generator control and operation... there are so many other considerations and details involved that it is impossible to list them all here...
if you made it this far... thanks for your patience.
HTH
saludos.
a.