Title of Invention

METHOD FOR OPERATING A COMBINED-CYCLE POWER PLANT AND COMBINED-CYCLE POWER PLANT FOR CARRYING OUT THE METHOD

Abstract In a method for operating a combined—cycle power plant (1) , in which the heat contained in the expanded working medium (AM) of an associated gas turbine (2) operable with both gas and oil as fuel is utilized in order to generate steam for an associated steam turbine (20) comprising at least one high—pressure stage (50), particularly high plant efficiency being capable of being achieved by means of the said method, irrespective of the fuel used for the gas turbine, at a low outlay in terms of apparatus and operational requirements, according to the invention, after a change of the operation of the gas turbine (2) from gas to oil, feed water (S) to be supplied to the high—pressure stage (50) is divided into a first and a second part stream (T1, T2), only one of the part streams (T1, T2) being preheated. In a combined-cycle power plant (1) particularly suitable for carrying out the method, a bypass line (142) is connected in parallel with the feed-water preheater (52) assigned to the high—pressure stage (50).
Full Text Description

The invention relates to a method for operating a
combined-cycle power plant, in which the heatt cantained
in the expanded working medium of an associated gas
turbine operable with both gas and oil as fuel is
utilized in order to generate steam for an associated
steam turbine comprising at least one high-pressure
stage. It is further directed at a combined-cycle power
plant particularly suitable for carrying out the
method, having a gas turbine operable with both gas and
oil as fuel and having a waste-heat steam generator
following the gas turbine on the flue-gas side and
intended for generating steam for an associated steam
turbine comprising at least one high-pressure stage.
In a combined-cycle power plant, the heat
contained in the expanded working medium from the gas
turbine is utilized in order to generate steam for the
steam turbine. Heat transmission takes place in a
waste-heat steam generator which follows the gas
turbine and in which the heating surfaces in the form
of tubes or tube bundles are arranged. These, in turn,
are connected into the water/steam circuit of the steam
turbine. The water/steam circuit comprises one or more,
for example two or three, pressure stages, each
pressure stage conventionally having a preheating
heating surface (economizer), an evaporator heating
surface and a superheater heating surface. Depending on
the pressure conditions prevailing in the water/steam
circuit of the steam turbine, a thermodynamic effici-
ency of about 50% or more is achieved by means of a
combined-cycle power plant of this type which is known,
for example, from EP 0,148,973 B1.
The gas turbine of a combined-cycle power plant
of this type may be designed to operate with different
kinds of fuel. However, the requirements placed on the
waste-heat steam generator following the gas turbine on
the flue-gas side are different, depending on the type
of fuel on which the design is based. For example, gas,
as fuel for the gas turbine, normally has high purity,
so that flue gas flowing out of the gas turbine
contains only small amounts of impurities.
In contrast to this, if the fuel for the gas
turbine is fuel oil, impurities in the flue gas flowing
out of the gas turbine are to be expected. In this
case, in particular, sulphur dioxide (SO2) or sulphur
trioxide (SO3) may occur, which, after reacting with
water in the form of sulphuric acid (H2SO4), may settle
on the heating surfaces in the waste-heat steam
generator and attack these. The requirements placed on
the waste-heat steam generator when oil is used as fuel
for the gas turbine must therefore be different from
those when gas is used as fuel for the latter.
In particular, when oil is used as fuel for the
gas turbine, it is necessary to ensure that the heating
surfaces connected into the water/steam circuit of the
steam turbine and the line components inside the waste-
heat steam generator are at a sufficiently high
temperature, namely a temperature above the dew point
of sulphuric acid. For this purpose, when the gas
turbine operates with oil, the inlet temperature of the
water or condensate flowing into the waste-heat steam
generator is raised, as compared with the gas turbine
operating with the gas, and is set at about 120° to
130°C.
A combined-cycle power plant, in which fuel oil
is provided as fuel for the gas turbine only for a
brief operating period, for example for 500 to
1,500 h/a, as "back-up" to natural gas, is usually
designed and optimized primarily for the gas turbine to
operate with natural gas. In order to ensure that, when
the gas turbine operates with fuel oil, the condensate
flowing into the waste-heat steam generator has a
sufficiently high inlet temperature, the necessary heat
may be extracted from the waste-heat steam generator
itself in various ways.
One possibility is to bypass a conventionally
provided condensate preheater completely or partially
and to heat the condensate by the supply of low-
pressure steam in a feed-water tank connected into the
water/steam circuit. However, at low steam pressures,
such a method necessitates a large-volume and possibly
multi-stage heating steam system in the feed-water
tank, and, in the case of long heating-up periods, this
may put at risk a deaeration function which normally
takes place in the feed-water tank.
In order to ensure effective deaeration of the
condensate, the condensate temperature in the feed-
water tank must always be maintained in a temperature
range of between 130° and 160°C, and the heating-up
period of the condensate in the feed-water tank should
be kept as short as possible. This may be carried out,
for example, by preheating the condensate via an
additional preheater heated by means of steam.
In order to provide sufficient heat for this
purpose, in the case of two-pressure or three-pressure
plants it is often necessary to extract hot water from
a high-pressure economizer of the waste-heat steam
generator. The disadvantage of this, however, particu-
larly in the case of three-pressure plants, is that the
delivery of a normally provided high-pressure feed pump
may be influenced, and that the additional condensate
preheater has to be designed in a particularly ineffi-
cient way for the high pressure and large temperature
differences.
Furthermore, in the case of fuel-oil operation,
throttle losses of the or each feed pump occur
adversely. Moreover, the extraction of hot water from
the high-pressure economizer leads to a reduction in
the high-pressure steam quantity due to a lowering of
a so-called high-pressure approach temperature, thus,
in turn, leading to a reduction in plant efficiency.
Another proven method is, when the gas turbine
operates with oil, to assist the heating-up of the
condensate in the feed-water tank or in the deaerator
by means of steam extracted from an intermediate
superheater line. However, this method cannot be
employed in the case of plants without a feed-water
tank or without a deaerator.
The above-mentioned concepts of condensate
preheating when oil is used as fuel for the gas turbine
are complicated in view of the components which are
required and also in view of the operating mode of the
combined-cycle power plant. Moreover, plant efficiency
is only limited when the gas turbine operates with oil.
The object on which the invention is based is,
therefore, to specify a method for operating a
combined-cycle power plant of the above-mentioned type,
by means of which, irrespective of the fuel used for
the gas turbine, particularly high plant efficiency can
be achieved at a low outlay in terms of apparatus and
operation requirements. Moreover, a combined-cycle
power plant particularly suitable for carrying out the
method is to be specified.
With regard to the method, the object mentioned
is achieved, according to the invention, in that, after
a change in the operation of the gas turbine from gas
to oil, feed water to be supplied to the high-pressure
stage of the steam turbine is divided into a first and
a second part stream, only one of the part streams
being preheated.
The invention proceeds from the notion that the
condensate preheating additionally necessary when the
gas turbine operates with oil is ensured by particu-
larly simple means and in a particularly simple way by
transmitting the heat required for this purpose to the
condensate not via the water/steam circuit, but,
instead, via the flue gas from the gas turbine. In this
case, the components, such as, for example, heat
exchangers, mixing preheaters, steam reducing stations
and/or corresponding pipelines, which are necessary in
the transmission of heat via the water/steam circuit,
may be dispensed with. Instead, when a gas turbine
operates with oil, the extraction of heat from the flue
gas of the gas turbine is reduced at a suitable point,
as compared with the operation of the gas turbine with
gas, so that a sufficiently large amount of exhaust-gas
heat is available for condensate preheating.
In this case, for a suitable modification of
the extraction of heat from the flue gas of the gas
turbine, the feed-water preheating for the high-
pressure stage of the steam turbine is provided. In a
combined-cycle power plant designed as a three-pressure
plant, a corresponding modification of the feed-water
preheating for the medium-pressure stage, the said
modification being dependent on the operating mode, may
also be provided alternatively or additionally.
In an advantageous development, after the
change of the operation of the gas turbine from gas to
oil, the operating pressure in a low-pressure stage of
the steam turbine is increased. This ensures that the
heat, which, when the gas turbine operates with oil,
remains in the flue gas due to the comparatively lower
preheating of the feed water for the high-pressure
stage, is not transmitted to the water/steam circuit of
the steam turbine via the low-pressure heating sur-
faces, but, in actual fact, is carried further in the
flue gas and is thus provided reliably for condensate
preheating.
In this case, the operating pressure in the
low-pressure stage may be set in such a way that steam
production in the low-pressure stage comes to a stop.
Expediently, however, the operating pressure in the
low-pressure stage of the steam turbine is raised, for
example to about 10 to 15 bar, in such a way that only
some minimum steam production for maintaining the
system functions still remains in the low-pressure
stage.
For particularly high efficiency, even in a
transitional phase after a change in the operating mode
of the gas turbine, the branching ratio between the
first and the second part stream is advantageously set
as a function of the temperature of the condensate to
be supplied to the high-pressure stage. In this case,
the temperature of the condensate flowing into the
waste-heat steam generator may be monitored in a
particularly favourable way.
As regards the combined-cycle power plant, the
object mentioned is achieved, according to the
invention, in that a bypass line is connected in
parallel with a feed-water preheater assigned to the
high-pressure stage of the steam turbine.
In this case, particularly favourable
adaptation of feed-water preheating to the respective
operating conditions is made possible preferably by
connecting into the bypass line a valve capable of
being set as a function of the temperature of the
condensate to be supplied to the low-pressure stage.
The advantages achieved by means of the
invention are, in particular, that a water inlet
temperature into the waste-heat steam generator which
is necessary when the gas turbine operates with oil and
which is increased, as compared with the operation of
the gas turbine with gas, is ensured by particularly
simple means. The complicated components, convention-
ally provided in the additional condensate preheating
necessary for this purpose, for transmitting heat from
the water/steam circuit to the condensate, for example
by the supply of low-pressure steam, may be dispensed
with. Instead, sufficient heat transmission to the
condensate is ensured due to the fact that the flue gas
from the gas turbine still contains sufficient heat in
the region of the condensate preheaters. The additional
condensate-preheating heat necessary when the gas
turbine operates with oil is therefore transmitted to
the condensate directly via the flue gas. The outlay in
terms of construction and operational requirements
which is necessary for this purpose is particularly
low.
Furthermore, components of the water/steam
circuit, such as, for example, the high-pressure feed-
water pumps, may be given comparatively small
dimensions, since they do not have to be designed for a
bypass mode, when the gas turbine operates with oil,
with additional water extraction from the economizer.
Moreover, depending on the design of the low-pressure
stage of the steam turbine and of the condensate pump,
water inlet temperatures into the waste-heat steam
generator of up to and above 130°C can be mastered.
Virtually the entire fuel-oil spectrum for this purpose
(back-up fuel) can therefore be covered, so that
standardization is possible.
An exemplary embodiment, of the invention is
explained in more detail with reference to a drawing in
which the figure shows a combined-cycle power plant
diagrammatically.
The combined-cycle power plant 1 according to
the figure comprises a gas-turbine plant la and a
steam-turbine plant 1b. The gas-turbine plant la
comprises a gas turbine 2, with a coupled air
compressor 4, and a combustion chamber 6 which precedes
the gas turbine 2 and which is connected to a fresh-air
line 8 of the air compressor 4 . Into the combustion
chamber 6 of the gas turbine 2 opens a fuel line 10,
via which gas or oil can be selectively supplied to the
combustion chamber 6 as a fuel B for the gas turbine 2.
The gas turbine 2 and air compressor 4 and a generator
12 are seated on a common shaft 14.
The steam-turbine plant lb comprises a steam
turbine 20, with a coupled generator 22, and, in a
water-steam circuit 24, a condenser 26 following the
steam turbine 20 and a waste-heat steam generator 30.
The steam turbine 20 consists of a first pressure stage
or high-pressure part 20a, of a second pressure stage
or medium-pressure part 20b and of a third pressure
stage or low-pressure part 20c which drive the
generator 22 via a common shaft 32.
For supplying working medium AM or flue gas
expanded in the gas turbine 2 into the waste-heat steam
(generator 30,) an exhaust-gas line 34 is connected to an
inlet 30a of the waste-heat steam generator 30. The
expanded working medium AM from the gas turbine 2
leaves the waste-heat steam generator 30, via the
outlet 30b of the latter, in the direction of a chimney
not illustrated in any more detail.
The waste-heat steam generator 30 comprises a
first condensate preheater 40 which can be fed with
condensate K from the condenser 26 on the inlet side
via a condensate line 42, into which a condensate pump
unit 44 is connected. The condensate preheater 40 is
connected on the outlet side to a high-pressure pump
46. Moreover, the condensate line 42 is connected to
the condensate line 45 via a circulating line 48 which
can be shut off by means of a valve 47 and into which a
circulating pump 49 is connected. The circulating line
48, condensate line 42, condensate preheater 40 and
condensate line 45 thus form a circulating loop for the
condensate K, so that there is no need for a feed-water
tank. Moreover, in order, if required, to bypass the
high-pressure preheater 40, the condensate line 42 can
be connected directly to the high-pressure pump 46 via
a bypass line which is not illustrated.
The high-pressure pump 4 6 brings the preheated
condensate K, flowing out of the condensate preheater
40, to a pressure level suitable for a high-pressure
stage 50 of the water/steam circuit 24, the said high-
pressure stage being assigned to the steam turbine 20.
The condensate, which is under high pressure, can be
supplied to the high-pressure stage 50 as feed water S
via a feed-water preheater 52 which is connected on the
outlet side to a high-pressure drum 58 via a feed-water
line 56 capable of being shut off by means of a valve
54 . The high-pressure drum 58 is connected to a high-
pressure evaporator 60, arranged in the waste-heat
steam generator 30, so as to form a water-steam cycle
62. For the discharge of fresh steam F, the high-
pressure drum 58 is connected to a high-pressure
superheater 64 which is arranged in the waste-heat
steam generator 30 and which is connected on the outlet
side to the steam inlet 66 of the high-pressure part
20a of the steam turbine 20.
The steam outlet 68 of the high-pressure part
20a of the steam turbine 20 is connected to the steam
inlet 72 of the medium-pressure part 20b of the steam
turbine 20 via an intermediate superheater 70. The
steam outlet 74 of the said medium-pressure part is
connected via an overflow line 76 to the steam inlet 78
of the low-pressure part 20c of the steam turbine 20.
The steam outlet 80 of the low-pressure part 20c of the
steam turbine 20 is connected to . the condenser 26 via a
steam line 82, so that a closed water/steam circuit 24
is obtained.
Moreover, a branch line 84 branches off from
the high-pressure pump 4 6 at a point at which the
condensate K has reached a medium pressure. The said
branch line is connected via a second feed-water
preheater 86 to a medium-pressure stage 90 of the
water/steam circuit, the said medium-pressure stage
being assigned to the steam turbine 20. The second
feed-water preheater 86 is connected on the outlet side
to a medium-pressure drum 96 of the medium-pressure
stage 90 via a feed-water line 94 capable of being shut
off by means of a valve 92. The medium-pressure drum 96
is connected to a medium-pressure evaporator 98,
arranged in the waste-heat steam generator 30, so as to
form a water-steam cycle. For the discharge of medium-
pressure fresh steam F", the medium-pressure drum 96 is
connected via a steam line 102 to the intermediate
superheater and therefore to the steam inlet 72 of the
medium-pressure part 20b of the steam turbine 20.
Downstream of the condensate pump unit 44, as
seen in the direction of flow of the condensate K,
moreover, a further condensate line 104 branches off
from the condensate line 42 and opens into a second
condensate preheater 106 arranged in the waste-heat
steam generator 30. The second condensate preheater 106
is connected on the outlet side, via a condensate line
110 capable of being shut off by means of a valve 108,
to a low-pressure stage 120 of the water/steam circuit
24, the said low-pressure stage being assigned to the
steam turbine 20.
The low-pressure stage 120 comprises a low-
pressure drum 122 which is connected to a low-pressure
evaporator 124, arranged in the waste-heat steam
generator 30, so as to form a water/steam cycle 126.
For the discharge of low-pressure fresh steam F", the
low-pressure drum 122 is connected to the overflow line
76 via a steam line 128. Moreover, the condensate line
110 is connected to the condensate line 104 via a
circulating line 132 which is capable of being shut off
by means of a valve 130 and into which a circulating
pump 184 is connected. By means of the circulating pump
184 condensate K can be circulated in a circulating
loop formed by the circulating line 132, condensate
line 104, condensate preheater 106 and condensate line
110, so that there is no need for a feed-water tank.
Moreover, in order, if required, to bypass the
condensate preheater 106, the condensate line 104 can
be connected directly to the condensate line 110 via a
bypass line which is not illustrated.
A bypass line 142 capable of being shut off by
means of a valve 140 is connected in parallel with the
feed-water preheater 52 assigned to the high-pressure
stage 50. In this case, the valve 140 can be set as a
function of the temperature of the condensate K to be
supplied to the high-pressure stage 50 or to the
medium-pressure stage 90. For this purpose, the valve
140 is connected, in a way not illustrated in any more
detail, to a controller unit, to which an input signal
characteristic of the temperature of the condensate K
to be supplied to the low-pressure stage 50 or to the
medium-pressure stage 90 can be delivered.
A bypass line 146 capable of being shut off by
means of a valve 144 is likewise connected in parallel
with the feed-water preheater 86 assigned to the
medium-pressure stage 90. In a similar way to the valve
140, the valve 144 can be set as a function of the
temperature of the condensate K to be supplied to the
high-pressure stage 50 or to the medium-pressure stage
90.
The gas turbine 2a of the combined-cycle power
plant 1 can be operated with both gas and fuel oil as
fuel B. When the gas turbine 2 operates with the gas,
the working medium AM supplied to the waste-heat steam
generator 30 has comparatively high purity, so that, in
this operating stage, the efficiency of the water/steam
circuit 24 can be optimized. In this operating state,
the valves 140, 144 are closed, so that the entire feed
water S conveyed by the high-pressure pump 46 is led
through the feed-water preheaters 52 or 86 and is
preheated there.
When the gas turbine 2a operates with oil, the
working medium AM supplied to the waste-heat steam
generator 30 may contain impurities, in particular with
sulphur dioxide SO2 and with sulphuric acid H2SO4. In
order reliably to avoid damage to structural parts
within the waste-heat steam generator 30 in this
operating state, all the heating surfaces arranged in
the waste-heat steam generator 30, that is to say, in
particular, also the condensate preheater 40 and the
condensate preheater 106, are operated at a temperature
of more than the dew point of sulphuric acid. For this
purpose, it is necessary to have an increased water
inlet temperature for the condensate K flowing into the
waste-heat steam generator 30 and, consequently,
comparatively higher condensate preheating, as compared
with the operation of the gas turbine 2 with gas.
This comparatively higher condensate preheating
is not achieved by transmitting heat from the
water/steam circuit 24 to the condensate K, but,
instead, by transmitting heat from the working medium
AM directly to the condensate K. For this purpose,
after a change of the operation of the gas turbine 2
from gas to oil, the feed water S to be supplied to the
high-pressure stage 50 and that to be supplied to the
medium-pressure stage 90 are in each case divided into
a first part stream Tl and a second part stream T2, in
each case only one of the part streams Tl, T2 being
preheated.
In order to achieve this, the valves 140 and
144 are in each case partially opened, so that the
feed-water stream to be supplied to the high-pressure
stage 50 is distributed to the feed-water preheater 52
and to the bypass line 142. The feed-water stream to be
supplied to the medium-pressure stage 90 is likewise
distributed to the feed-water preheater 86 and the
bypass line 146. As a result, less heat is extracted
from the working medium AM in the region of the feed-
water preheaters 52, 86, as compared with the operation
of the gas turbine 2 with gas.
In order to ensure reliable transmission of
this heat remaining in the working medium AM to the
condensate K, moreover, the operating pressure in the
low-pressure stage 120 is raised to about 10 to 15 bar.
This prevents the heat which has additionally remained
in the working medium AM from being absorbed via the
low-pressure evaporators 124. Reliable additional
heating-up of the condensate K via the condensate
preheaters 40, 106 is thereby ensured.
The combined-cycle power plant 1 can be
operated at inlet temperatures of the condensate K into
the waste-heat steam generator 30 of up to and above
130°C. A broad spectrum of fuel oils (back-up fuel) can
therefore be used for the gas turbine 2, so that
standardization of the combined-cycle power plant 1,
irrespective of fuel oil, is also possible.
WE CLAIM
1 • Method for operating a combined-cycle power
plant (1), in which the heat contained in the expanded
working medium (AM) of an associated gas turbine (2)
operable with both gas and oil as fuel is utilized in
order to generate steam for an associated steam turbine
(20) comprising at least one high-pressure stage (50) ,
and in which, after a change of the operation of the
gas turbine (2) from gas to oil, feed water (S) to be
supplied to the high-pressure stage (50) is divided
into a first and a second part stream (T1, T2), only
one of the part streams, (.Tl, T2) being preheated.
as claimed in
2. Method according to Claim 1, wherein, after the
change of the operation of the gas turbine (2) from gas
to oil, the operating pressure in a low-pressure stage
(120) of the steam turbine (20) is increased.
as claimed in
3. Method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the
branching ratio between the first part stream (Tl) and
the second part stream (T2) is set as a function of the
temperature of the condensate (K) to be supplied to the
high-pressure stage (50).
4. Combined-cycle power plant (1) having a gas
turbine (2) operable with both gas and oil as fuel and
having a waste-heat steam generator (30) following the
gas turbine (2) on the flue-gas side and intended for
generating steam for an associated steam turbine (20)
comprising at least one low-pressure stage (120) and
one high-pressure stage (50), wherein a bypass line
(142) is connected in parallel with a feed-water
preheater (52) assigned to the high-pressure stage
(50).
5. Combined-cycle power plant (1) as clamid in

Claim 4,wherein said bypass line (142) is provided with
a valve (140) capable of being set as a function of the
temperature of the condensate (K) to be supplied to the
high-pressure stage (50).
Method for operating a combined-cycle power plant and
combined-cycle power plant for carrying out the method
In a method for operating a combined-cycle power plant
(1), in which the heat contained in the expanded
working medium (AM) of an associated gas turbine (2)
operable with both gas and oil as fuel is utilized in
order to generate steam for an associated steam turbine
(20) comprising at least one high-pressure stage (50),
particularly high plant efficiency being capable of
being achieved by means of the said method, irrespec-
tive of the fuel used for the gas turbine, at a low
outlay in terms of apparatus and operational require-
ments, according to the invention, after a change of
the operation of the gas turbine (2) from gas to oil,
feed water (S) to be supplied to the high-pressure
stage (50) is divided into a first and a second part
stream (T1, T2), only one of the part streams (T1, T2)
being preheated. In a combined-cycle power plant (1)
particularly suitable for carrying out the method, a
bypass line (142) is connected in parallel with the
feed-water preheater (52) assigned to the high-pressure
stage (50).

Documents:

01461-cal-1998-abstract.pdf

01461-cal-1998-claims.pdf

01461-cal-1998-correspondence.pdf

01461-cal-1998-description (complete).pdf

01461-cal-1998-drawings.pdf

01461-cal-1998-form 1.pdf

01461-cal-1998-form 2.pdf

01461-cal-1998-form 3.pdf

01461-cal-1998-form 5.pdf

01461-cal-1998-gpa.pdf

01461-cal-1998-letter patent.pdf

01461-cal-1998-priority document others.pdf

01461-cal-1998-priority document.pdf

1461-CAL-1998-(12-10-2012)-FORM-27.pdf

1461-CAL-1998-FORM-27.pdf

1461-CAL-1998-OTHER PATENT DOCUMENT.pdf


Patent Number 211016
Indian Patent Application Number 1461/CAL/1998
PG Journal Number 42/2007
Publication Date 19-Oct-2007
Grant Date 16-Oct-2007
Date of Filing 17-Aug-1998
Name of Patentee SIEMENS AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT
Applicant Address WITTELSBACHERPLATZ 2, 80333 MUENCHEN
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 ERICH SCHMID AM ZIEGELACKER 18, D-91080 MARLOFFSTEIN
2 HELMUT STIERSTORFER SCHILLERSTR. 61, D-91054 ERLANGEN
PCT International Classification Number F 01 K 23/10
PCT International Application Number N/A
PCT International Filing date
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 19736889.1 1997-08-25 Germany