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    Natural Cooling and Startup of Steam Turbines: Validity of the Over Conductivity Function

    Source: Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2015:;volume( 137 ):;issue: 011::page 112601
    Author:
    Marinescu, Gabriel
    ,
    Stein, Peter
    ,
    Sell, Michael
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4030411
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: The temperature drop during natural cooling and the way in which the steam turbine restarts have a major impact on the cyclic lifetime of critical parts and on the cyclic life of the whole machine. In order to ensure the fastest startup without reducing the lifetime of the turbine critical parts, the natural cooling must be captured accurately in calculation and the startup procedure optimized. During the cool down and restart, all turbine components interact both thermally and mechanically. For this reason, the thermal analyst has to include, in his numerical model, all turbine significant parts—rotor, casings together with their internal fluid cavities, valves, and pipes. This condition connected with the real phenomenon leadtime—more than 100 hours for natural cooling—makes the analysis timeconsuming and not applicable for routine projects. During the past years, a concept called “overconductivityâ€‌ was introduced by Marinescu et al. (2013, “Experimental Investigation Into Thermal Behavior of Steam Turbine Components—Temperature Measurements With Optical Probes and Natural Cooling Analysis,â€‌ ASME J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power, 136(2), p. 021602) and Marinescu and Ehrsam (2012, “Experimental Investigation on Thermal Behavior of Steam Turbine Components: Part 2—Natural Cooling of Steam Turbines and the Impact on LCF Life,â€‌ ASME Paper No. GT201268759). According to this concept, the effect of the fluid convectivity and radiation is replaced by a scalar function K(T) called overconductivity, which has the same heat transfer effect as the real convection and radiation. K(T) is calibrated against the measured temperature on a Alstom KA261 steam turbine (Ruffino and Mohr, 2012, “Experimental Investigation on Thermal Behavior of Steam Turbine Components: Part 1—Temperature Measurements With Optical Probes,â€‌ ASME Paper No. GT201268703). This concept allows a significant reduction of the calculation time, which makes the method applicable for routine transient analyses. The paper below shows the theoretical background of the overconductivity concept and proves that when applied on other machines than KA261, the accuracy of the calculated temperatures remains within 15–18 آ°C versus measured data. A detailed analysis of the link between the overconductivity and the energy equation is presented as well.
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      Natural Cooling and Startup of Steam Turbines: Validity of the Over Conductivity Function

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    contributor authorMarinescu, Gabriel
    contributor authorStein, Peter
    contributor authorSell, Michael
    date accessioned2017-05-09T01:18:23Z
    date available2017-05-09T01:18:23Z
    date issued2015
    identifier issn1528-8919
    identifier othergtp_137_11_112601.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/158088
    description abstractThe temperature drop during natural cooling and the way in which the steam turbine restarts have a major impact on the cyclic lifetime of critical parts and on the cyclic life of the whole machine. In order to ensure the fastest startup without reducing the lifetime of the turbine critical parts, the natural cooling must be captured accurately in calculation and the startup procedure optimized. During the cool down and restart, all turbine components interact both thermally and mechanically. For this reason, the thermal analyst has to include, in his numerical model, all turbine significant parts—rotor, casings together with their internal fluid cavities, valves, and pipes. This condition connected with the real phenomenon leadtime—more than 100 hours for natural cooling—makes the analysis timeconsuming and not applicable for routine projects. During the past years, a concept called “overconductivityâ€‌ was introduced by Marinescu et al. (2013, “Experimental Investigation Into Thermal Behavior of Steam Turbine Components—Temperature Measurements With Optical Probes and Natural Cooling Analysis,â€‌ ASME J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power, 136(2), p. 021602) and Marinescu and Ehrsam (2012, “Experimental Investigation on Thermal Behavior of Steam Turbine Components: Part 2—Natural Cooling of Steam Turbines and the Impact on LCF Life,â€‌ ASME Paper No. GT201268759). According to this concept, the effect of the fluid convectivity and radiation is replaced by a scalar function K(T) called overconductivity, which has the same heat transfer effect as the real convection and radiation. K(T) is calibrated against the measured temperature on a Alstom KA261 steam turbine (Ruffino and Mohr, 2012, “Experimental Investigation on Thermal Behavior of Steam Turbine Components: Part 1—Temperature Measurements With Optical Probes,â€‌ ASME Paper No. GT201268703). This concept allows a significant reduction of the calculation time, which makes the method applicable for routine transient analyses. The paper below shows the theoretical background of the overconductivity concept and proves that when applied on other machines than KA261, the accuracy of the calculated temperatures remains within 15–18 آ°C versus measured data. A detailed analysis of the link between the overconductivity and the energy equation is presented as well.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleNatural Cooling and Startup of Steam Turbines: Validity of the Over Conductivity Function
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume137
    journal issue11
    journal titleJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4030411
    journal fristpage112601
    journal lastpage112601
    identifier eissn0742-4795
    treeJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2015:;volume( 137 ):;issue: 011
    contenttypeFulltext
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