Week 2 Power Plants
Week 2 Power Plants
Week 2 Power Plants
Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 1
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Rankine Cycle:
(i) Steam of high temperature
& pressure is produced in
Boiler using fossil fuels
and then expanded in
Turbine to spin it, which in
turn spins Generator to
produce electricity.
(ii) Rejected steam of low temperature & pressure is condensed using
Condenser.
(iii) Condensed steam of low pressure & temperature is fed to a Feed
Pump.
(iv) Feed Pump increases pressure of condensed steam and feeds to
Boiler.
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 2
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Advantages of Steam P/P: (i) Cheap fossil fuel, (ii) Low initial cost, (iii)
Can be installed anywhere, (iv) Requires less space compared to hydel P/P,
(v) Less generation cost compared to diesel P/P.
Disadvantages: (i) Smoke & fumes pollute atmosphere, (ii) High running
cost compared to hydel P/P.
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 4
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Boiler
- Heat of combustion of coal in boiler is utilized to convert water into
steam at high temperature & pressure.
- The flue gases from boiler pass through super-heater, economizer, air
pre-heater, and finally exhausted to atmosphere through chimney.
Super-heater
- Wet steam of boiler is dried and superheated in super-heater.
- Super-heating of wet steam increases overall efficiency and avoids
corrosion of turbine blades.
Economizer
- Economizer extracts some heat from flue gases and increases
temperature of water coming from feed water heater before supplying
to boiler.
Air Pre-heater
- It increases temperature of air supplied to boiler for coal burning by
deriving heat from flue gases.
- Air is drawn from atmosphere using forced draught fan.
- Air pre-heater increases overall thermal efficiency and steam capacity.
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 5
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Steam Turbine
- Dry and super-heated steam from super-heater expands on turbine
blades to spin them.
- After giving heat energy to turbine blades, steam is exhausted to
condenser which condenses this steam to water by means of cold-water
circulation.
Alternator
- Alternator, coupled to turbine, converts mechanical energy of turbine to
electrical energy.
Feed Water
- The condensate from condenser is used as feed water to boiler.
- Feed water is heated by feed water heater and economizer before
feeding to boiler.
- This increases thermal efficiency of steam power plant.
Cooling Arrangement
- Water is drawn from natural sources (river, canal, lake) and fed to
condenser to condensate turbine steam.
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 6
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 7
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 8
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Units of Energy
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 9
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 10
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 11
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 12
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Lignite Coal:
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 13
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Bituminous Coal:
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 14
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 15
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 16
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 17
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 18
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 19
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 20
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dam:
- Dam is a barrier which stores water and creates water-
head.
- Dams are generally built of concrete or stone masonry,
earth or rock fill, or timber.
- Dam raises water- head & diverts flow of water from
river/lake (reservoir) to turbines to convert potential
energy of water to mechanical energy, which in turn
rotates generator to generate electricity.
Penstocks:
- Open or closed conduits which carry water from dam
to turbines.
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 22
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 23
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Buried penstock:
- These are preferred where land slide, snow slide or
falling rocks may take place.
- In very cold climates where freezing is expected,
buried pen stocks are used. However, corrosion is more
and life is less.
Surge Tank:
- Storage reservoir at downstream end of dam to absorb
sudden changes in water requirements and reduce
water hammer and negative pressure in penstock.
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 24
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Draft Tube:
- Located at outlet of turbines
- Reduces velocity of discharged water
Tailrace:
Water channel that takes water
out of turbine.
Gate & Butterfly Valves:
- Used to open and close
inlets and outlets to
adjust pressure, flow and
direction of water.
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 26
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Hydraulic turbines:
• Hydraulic means operated,
moved, or effected by water.
• Convert potential energy,
kinetic energy & pressure
energy of water into
mechanical energy
• ME of hydro turbine rotates generator
• Generator provides electrical power
• Water contains:
- Potential energy at height
- Pressure energy in a pipe
- Kinetic energy in motion
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 27
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 28
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Trash-Racks:
- Installed at intake of HE plants
- Prevent entrance of large debris
which can damage turbine parts
- Prevent fish species from
entering the intake system
Low Head/run-of-river Power Plant
- Water head < 30 m
- Uses vertical shaft Francis/Kaplan turbines.
- Turbine is installed at narrow side of river.
- Penstock not needed
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 29
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 30
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
IMPULSE TURBINE
- Water creates some impulsive
force on turbine to get it to
move, so called as impulse
turbine.
- The entire pressure of water is
converted into kinetic energy
in a nozzle and velocity of jet drives the wheel.
- Suited for high head and low discharge (high velocity) of
water. This means that it is used when the amount of
water flow is small, and there is high pressure due to the
high location of the water head.
• Examples: Pelton, Turgo & Cross-flow.
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 31
WEEK-2, LEC-3 & 4 Electrical Power Systems M.Sc. Electrical Engineering
REACTION TURBINES
- Almost 60% of turbines are
reaction turbines.
- When water passes over rotating
blades, both pressure and
velocity of water are reduced
compared to bottom side of
blades. This pressure difference causes a reaction force
which drives turbine.
- Runner blades are completely dipped in water.
- Water after moving over runner blades enters into draft
tube and finally to the trail race.
- Water flows over blades instead of striking each
individually. Examples: Francis, Kaplan, Propeller
Dr. Riaz Ahmad Rana _ Electrical Engineering Department, FOE, UCP Lahore Page 32