It is a good discussion. Unless you are careful, D&S steam is an oxymoron. But it can be had. The quality issue is not necessarily limited to the issue of drainable (via traps, etc) water, but the moisture in steam due to low quality. You can have moisture in the steam, and be seeing little flow from the traps, because it is entrained in the vapor. This entrained moisture will cut turbine parts to ribbons.
In addition to the proper trapping recommended above, a good moisture separator is mandatory if the steam is suspected to be wet.
Let me pause and say that I have clients in an industry that uses lots of turbine drivers, and in one plant, the steam will be superheated, and in one down the road doing exactly the same job in the same way, there won't be a superheater in the plant. Who is right and who is wrong? Neither.
The key, to my way of thinking is good piping design. When the steam leaves the boiler, assuming good moisture separation in the steam drum, it is D&S. As it travels along the piping, it loses heat to the surroundings, and cools off, and the quality suffers. However, at the same time, the steam loses pressure, which tends to superheat the steam, offsetting the moisture formation due to the temperature loss.
Therefore, a well designed piping system can minimize quality problems, assuming that we are talking about a fairly constant steam flow for 50 MW.
I am not totally knowledgable about Terry, Elliot, or even Dresser Rand's capability to build machines in this power range, but I think that you are in the realm of GE, Siemens, Mitsubishi, Hitachi, et al.
A machine to produce that much power with that low of a inlet pressure might be a bridge too far. I could not get the conditions to run at
and that may be the reason why. I did not play with it long enough to see how low the power input would have to be to get it to run. Using Katmar's steam flow estimation tool at
and assuming 50% efficiency, and 3"/hg back pressure, shows a steam flow of over 1 million lb/hr.
Do you really have that much steam available at that low pressure?
rmw