Brayton Cycle
Brayton Cycle
Brayton Cycle
Fuel
Combustio
n chamber
Turbine
Shaft
Wnet
Compressor
Combustion
products
Air
Working
Principal
Fresh air enters the compressor at ambient temperature where its pressure and
temperature are increased.
The high pressure air enters the combustion chamber where the fuel is burned at constant
pressure.
The high temperature (and pressure) gas enters the turbine where it expands to ambient
pressure and produces work.
Features:
Gas-turbine is used in aircraft propulsion and electric power generation.
High thermal efficiencies up to 44%.
Suitable for combined cycles (with steam power plant)
High power to weight ratio, high reliability, long life
Fast start up time, about 2 min, compared to 4 hr for steam-propulsion
systems
High back work ratio (ratio of compressor work to the turbine work), up to 50%,
compared to few percent in steam power plants.
Brayton
Cycle
Brayton cycle is the ideal cycle for gas-turbine engines in which the working
fluid undergoes a closed loop. That is the combustion and exhaust processes are
modeled by constant-pressure heat addition and rejection, respectively.
1
2-3
3-4
4-1
3
QH
QH
P= Const.
Isentropic
2
4
Isentropic
QL
P = Const.
QL
s
Fig. 2: T-s and P-v diagrams for ideal Brayton cycle.
Thermal efficiency for the Brayton cycle is:
q
out
th,Brayto
n
T2 P2
T1 P1
thus
th,Brayto
n
P2
T1
T T / T 1
1 1 4 1
T3 T2
qi
k 1 / k
T4
P
3
P
4
T2 T3 / T2 1
k 1 / k
T43
1
rPk 1 / k
P1
P4
where rP is called the pressure ration and k = cp /cv is the specific heat ratio.
4
v
Maximum
Pressure Ratio
Given that the maximum and minimum temperature can be prescribed for the
Brayton cycle, a change in the pressure ratio can result in a change in the work output
from the cycle.
Fig. 3: An optimum pressure ratio exists for a given max., min. temperature ratio that
maximized the net work output.
Actual Brayton
Cycle
Irreversibilities exist in actual cycle. Most important differences are deviations of actual
compressor and turbine from idealized isentropic compression/expansion, and pressure
drop in combustion chamber.
Pressure drop
3
Pressure drop
4a
2s
4s
2a
s
Fig. 4: Actual Brayton cycle.
ws
wa
h2 s
h1
h2a
wa
h3 h4a
ws
h4 s
h3
Combustion
chamber
Q
2
3
5
Wnet
Shaft
Turbine
Air
Combustion
products
C
o
m
p
r
e
s
s
o
r
1
Fig. 5: Schematic for a Brayton cycle with regenerator.
3
QH
5
Qregen
Regeneration Qregen
6
2
QL
s
Likewise utilizing multistage expansion with reheat (in a multi-turbine arrangement) will
increase the work produced by turbines.
Regenerator
10
5
1
Compressor 1
QReheater
QH
Reheater
Combustion
chamber
8
Wnet
Turbine 1
Compressor 2
2
Turbine 2
3
Intercooler
QIntercooler
Qin
6
Qin
8
9
5
Qregen. 7
2
10
4
1
3
Qout
Qout
s
Fig. 8: T-s diagram for an ideal gas-turbine cycle with intercooling, reheating, and
regeneration.
As shown in Fig. 8:
T1 = T3, T2 = T4
In an ideal regenerator, T5 = T9. In practice (actual regenerator), T5 < T9.
T8 = T6, T7 = T9
The net work input to a two-stage compressor is minimized when equal pressure ratios
are maintained across each stage. That is:
P2
P4 P1
P3
P9
P8 P7