Gas turbine minimum environmental load extension with compressed air extraction for storage

Date

2020-08-14

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

1359-4311

Format

Free to read from

2021-08-15

Citation

Abudu K, Igie U, Minervino O, Hamilton R. (2020) Gas turbine minimum environmental load extension with compressed air extraction for storage. Applied Thermal Engineering, Volume 180, November 2020, Article number 115869

Abstract

The fact that most renewable forms of energy are not available on-demand and are typically characterised by intermittent generation currently makes gas turbine engines an important source of back-up power. This study focuses on one of the capabilities that ensure that gas turbines are more flexible on the electric power grid. The capability here is the minimum environmental load that makes it possible to keep a gas turbine engine on the grid without a shut-down, to offer grid stability, adding inertia to the grid in periods when there is no demand for peak power from the engine. It is then desirable to operate the engine at the lowest possible load, without infringing on carbon monoxide emissions that becomes dominant. This paper demonstrates this potential through the extraction of the pressurised air from the back end of the compressor into an assumed energy storage system. The simulation of the engine performance using an in-house tool shows the additional reduction of the power output when the maximum closing of variable inlet guide vane is complemented with air extractions. However, the identified key strategy for achieving a lower environmental load (with same carbon monoxide emission limit) is to always maintain the design flame temperature. This is contrary to the conventional approach that involves a decrease in such temperatures. Here, a 34% reduction in load was achieved with 24% of flow extraction. This is shown to vary with ambient temperatures, in favour of lower temperatures when the combustor inlet pressures are higher. The emission models applied were based on empirical correlations and shows that higher combustor inlet pressures, high but constant flame temperatures with core flow reduction is crucial to obtaining a low environmentally compliant load. The compressor analysis shows that choking is a noticeable effect at a higher rate of extractions; this is found to occur at the stages closest to the extraction location

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

emissions, turndown, gas turbine, flexibility

DOI

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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