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A brief review of power generation thermodynamics

The discussion here is restricted to plants in which the flow is steady, since virtually all the plants (and their components) with which the book is concerned have a steady flow. [Pg.1]

It is important first to distinguish between a closed cyclic power plant (or heat engine) and an open circuit power plant. In the former, fluid passes continuously round a closed circuit, through a thermodynamic cycle in which heat ((2b) is received from a source at a high temperature, heat (Qa) s rejected to a sink at low temperature and work output (IT) is delivered, usually to drive an electric generator. [Pg.1]

Usually, a gas turbine plant operates on open circuit , with internal combustion (Fig. 1.3). Air and fuel pass across the single control surface into the compressor and combustion chamber, respectively, and the combustion products leave the control surface after expansion through the turbine. The open circuit plant cannot be said to operate on a thermodynamic cycle however, its performance is often assessed by treating it as equivalent to a closed cyclic power plant, but care must be taken in such an approach. [Pg.1]

The Joule-Brayton (JB) constant pressure closed cycle is the basis of the cyclic gas turbine power plant, with steady flow of air (or gas) through a compressor, heater, turbine, cooler within a closed circuit (Fig. 1.4). The turbine drives the compressor and a generator delivering the electrical power, heat is supplied at a constant pressure and is also rejected at constant pressure. The temperature-entropy diagram for this cycle is also [Pg.1]

An important field of study for power plants is that of the combinedplant [ 1 ]. A broad definition of the combined power plant (Fig. 1.5) is one in which a higher (upper or topping) thermodynamic cycle produces power, but part or all of its heat rejection is used in supplying heat to a lower or bottoming cycle. The upper plant is frequently an open circuit gas turbine while the lower plant is a closed circuit steam turbine together they form a combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) plant. [Pg.2]


Chapter 1. A brief review of power generation thermodynamics... [Pg.3]


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