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Let the fun begin…

Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

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Page 1: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

Let the fun begin…

Page 2: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

IntroductionIntroduction

• Parts of the Main Steam Cycle• Four Phases of the cycle

• Definitions of each phase• Components involved with

phases• Press-temp relationships

Page 3: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

Parts of Main Steam Parts of Main Steam CycleCycle

• Steam Generator (nuclear) or Boiler (conventional)

• Turbines• Condenser• Main Condensate Pumps• Deaerating Feed Tank /

Reserve Feed Tanks• Main Feed Pumps

Page 4: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

Main Steam CycleMain Steam Cycle

Page 5: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

BackgroundBackground

• Cycle used is a Rankine cycle• P-v and T-s Diagrams

• Trace the points of cycle• Provide graphical understanding

of cycle• Four phases of cycle• Conventional vs. Nuclear

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Rankine CycleRankine Cycle

1-2: Feed Phase (Q=0, S=0), Win 2-3: Generation Phase (P=0), Qin

3-4: Expansion Phase (Q=0, S=0), Wout

4-1: Condensation Phase (P=0), Qout

T-s Diagram P-v Diagram

Page 7: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

Generation Phase - Generation Phase - ConventionalConventional

• Boiler (1200 # steam)• Fuel burned to produce heat ->

transferred to water which boils to steam• Steam collects in steam drum (saturated)

• Superheater• Increase temp of steam and dries steam• Three reasons for superheating?

• Minimize erosion (dry steam better for blading)

• Minimize corrosion (less chemicals entrained)• Maximize T (Carnot efficiency)

Page 8: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

Boiler and SuperheaterBoiler and Superheater

Page 9: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

Generation Phase - Generation Phase - NuclearNuclear

• Reactor (Rx) Plant• Fission in Rx core transforms

nuclear energy to thermal energy• Steam Generator

• Water Space• U-tubes• Steam Space• Moisture Separators

Page 10: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

Reactor PlantReactor Plant

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Expansion PhaseExpansion Phase

• Steam travels down main steam piping• Turbines convert thermal energy ->

mechanical energy (nozzles) and then work (blading) -> turn rotor/shaft

• Pressure drops as steam goes through• Work performed on turbine blading

• Main Engines (ME) -> propulsion• Ship’s Service Turbine Generators (SSTG) -

> electricity

Page 12: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle
Page 13: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

CondensationCondensation• Vacuum 26-29” Hg

• Air Ejectors - use 150# steam to establish initial vacuum and remove air

• Maintained by condensation • volume of water << volume of steam ->

contraction• Why vacuum?

• Ease of steam recovery (“pulls” steam into MC)

• More work out of turbines (larger P and T)

• Ease of conversion to water

Page 14: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

CondensationCondensation

• Main Condenser• Large, indirect, cross-flow, shell-and-tube HX• Seawater used to condense steam

• Hotwell - holding area for condensate water at 80-100 F (lowest temp in cycle)

• Main Condensate Pumps - send condensate to the DFT at 20-30 psi (suction side is lowest pressure in cycle)

Page 15: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

Main CondenserMain Condenser

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Feed PhaseFeed Phase

• Deaerating Feed Tank (DFT)• Direct-type HX (Aux Steam used)• Purposes

• preheats feed • storage/surge volume• removes dissolved oxygen to minimize

corrosion• FYI: RFT’s often used instead

• Main Feed Pump• Supplies feed water to Steam

Generator (must be high pressure to overcome pressure)

Page 17: Lesson 05 - Main Steam Cycle

Deaerating Feed TankDeaerating Feed Tank

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Putting It All TogetherPutting It All Together

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Your DrawingYour Drawing

• Boiler/Steam Generator• Superheater• Turbine• Condenser• Main Condensate Pumps• Main Feed Pumps• DFT/RFT• Economizer

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QuestionsQuestions??