Thermal Power Station
Thermal Power Station
Thermal Power Station
Efficiency
The energy efficiency of a conventional thermal power
station, considered salable energy produced as a percent
of the heating value of the fuel consumed, is typically 33%
to 48%. As with all heat engines, their efficiency is limited,
and governed by the laws of thermodynamics. By
comparison, most hydropower stations in the United
States are about 90 percent efficient in converting the
energy of falling water into electricity.
Electricity cost
The direct cost of electric energy produced by a thermal
power station is the result of cost of fuel, capital cost for
the plant, operator labour, maintenance, and such factors
as ash handling and disposal. Indirect, social or
environmental costs such as the economic value of
environmental impacts, or environmental and health
effects of the complete fuel cycle and plant
decommissioning, are not usually assigned to generation
costs for thermal stations in utility practice, but may form
part of an environmental impact assessment.
Boiler operation
The boiler is a rectangular furnace about 50 feet (15 m) on
a side and 130 feet (40 m) tall. Its walls are made of a web
of high pressure steel tubes about 2.3 inches (58 mm) in
diameter.
Pulverized coal is air-blown into the furnace through
burners located at the four corners, or along one wall, or
two opposite walls, and it is ignited to rapidly burn, forming
a large fireball at the center. The thermal radiation of the
fireball heats the water that circulates through the boiler
tubes near the boiler perimeter. The water circulation rate
in the boiler is three to four times the throughput. As the
water in the boiler circulates it absorbs heat and changes
into steam. It is separated from the water inside a drum at
the top of the furnace. The saturated steam is introduced
into superheat pendant tubes that hang in the hottest part
of the combustion gases as they exit the furnace. Here the
separators and dryers that remove water droplets from the steam.
The dry steam then flows into the superheater coils.
The boiler furnace auxiliary equipment includes coal feed nozzles
and igniter guns, soot blowers, water lancing and observation ports
(in the furnace walls) for observation of the furnace interior.
Furnace explosions due to any accumulation of combustible gases
after a trip-out are avoided by flushing out such gases from the
combustion zone before igniting the coal.
The steam drum (as well as the super heater coils and headers)
have air vents and drains needed for initial start up.
Superheater
Fossil fuel power plants often have a superheater section in the
steam generating furnace. The steam passes through drying
equipment inside the steam drum on to the superheater, a set of
tubes in the furnace. Here the steam picks up more energy from
hot flue gases outside the tubing and its temperature is now
superheated above the saturation temperature. The superheated
steam is then piped through the main steam lines to the valves
before the high pressure turbine.
Nuclear-powered steam plants do not have such sections but
produce steam at essentially saturated conditions. Experimental
nuclear plants were equipped with fossil-fired super heaters in an
attempt to improve overall plant operating cost.
Steam condensing
The condenser condenses the steam from the exhaust of the
turbine into liquid to allow it to be pumped. If the condenser can be
made cooler, the pressure of the exhaust steam is reduced and
efficiency of the cycle increases.
The surface condenser is a shell and tube heat exchanger in which
cooling water is circulated through the tubes The exhaust steam
from the low pressure turbine enters the shell where it is cooled
and converted to condensate (water) by flowing over the tubes as
shown in the adjacent diagram. Such condensers use steam
ejectors or rotary motor-driven exhausters for continuous removal
of air and gases from the steam side to maintain vacuum.
Reheater
Power plant furnaces may have a reheater section containing
tubes heated by hot flue gases outside the tubes. Exhaust steam
from the high pressure turbine is passed through these heated
tubes to collect more energy before driving the intermediate and
then low pressure turbines.
Air path
External fans are provided to give sufficient air for
combustion. The Primary air fan takes air from the
atmosphere and, first warming it in the air preheater for
better combustion, injects it via the air nozzles on the
furnace wall.
The induced draft fan assists the FD fan by drawing out
combustible gases from the furnace, maintaining a slightly
negative pressure in the furnace to avoid backfiring
through any closing.
References
1.
2.
Electricity
The early days of the power station industry,
Cambridge University Press Archive, pages 174-175
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