What is it about?

This paper presents the experimental research for the flow of the last stage of a turbine for saturated steam with the nominal output 1090MW. In addition, the flows in 600, 800, and 1070MW output turbines were also measured. Pneumatic probes were used to determine the distribution of static pressures and absolute angles at the outlets from the penultimate and the last stages of the turbine. Optical probes were used to measure wetness distribution and were placed in positions similar to the pneumatic probes. The courses of static pressures, angles, and wetness for all outputs respectively were compared and discussed. The difference between wetness courses on the left and right side of the turbine as well as before and behind last stage was minimal. Absolute angles of steam behind the last stage are strongly influenced by the vacuum level in the condenser. Big difference between the outlet angles from last stage on the left and right side of the turbine is confirmed. The influence of the tie-boss was evident in both pneumatic and wetness measurements. Differences of the flow field on the left and right sides of the turbine behind the penultimate stage are noted and discussed. These differences lead to a dynamic loading of the penultimate rotor blades and could reduce the service life.

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Why is it important?

There is very rare steam turbine on-site research measurement and no measurement from nuclear turbines. This paper presents this kind of results

Perspectives

Future work combining CFD and this measurement is done.

Ph.D. Michal Hoznedl
Doosan Group

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Experimental research on the flow at the last stage of a 1090 MW steam turbine, Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Part A Journal of Power and Energy, January 2018, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/0957650917749692.
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