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A resource for New Zealand Science and Physics students.
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In its first twenty years, the steam
turbine reduced coal consumption of coal-fired electric
generating stations by 75 percent. Part of this
efficiency is due to turbines suiting the high
speed and the constant load of electrical generators.
Today the steam turbine still plays an important
role in generating electricity worldwide.
The
turbine of Generator G9 during an overhaul.
The turbine shaft and blades have been
removed by removing the top half of the
turbine casing. The generator is still
in place in the green housing. The steam
control system is on the left - Image:
Heurisko Ltd.
he
turbine shaft of a Mixed Pressure Turbine
sits in a giant lathe while being rebladed
. Note the 7 stages of blading on the
left and 8 on the right - Image: Heurisko
Ltd.
The Science of Steam Turbines
Fitting
new blades to the central shaft of Mixed
Pressure turbine 11. This end of the shaft
will finally carry 7 stages of blading
- Image: Heurisko Ltd. Panorama.
The earliest use of a steam turbine in a power
station was in 1888 in the North of England.
It is believed that Charles Parsons sketched
the original design of this turbine on the back
of an envelope. It took 25 years and $300, 000
of research for engineers to improve its efficiency
by just 2%, an indication of Parsons true genius.
All
of the turbine designs prior to Parsons' invention
were inefficient, and he realised that this was
because the steam was expanded in a single step.
"I therefore decided to split up the fall
in pressure of the steam into small fractional
expansions over a large number of turbines in
series, so that the velocity of the steam nowhere
should be great" - Charles Parsons.
An
aerial view of the shaft of Mixed Pressure steam turbine 11 which is
being rebladed. Notice the 8 stages on the left and 7 on the right.
The person gives an idea of the scale as does the lathe which occupies
the whole floor -
Image: Heurisko Ltd.
Within Parsons' turbine each succeeding turbine
blade was made larger. This enlargement was done
in three ways by:
- increasing the height of each blade
- increasing the diameter of the succeeding
drums
- altering the angles and openings between
the blades and twisting the blade along its'
length to change its' shape (before this blades
had a constant profile).
Between each set of turbine rotor blades are
diaphragms. The diaphragm has blades that twist
in the opposite direction. Steam expands and
speeds up through the diaphragms. The steam hits
the turbine blades which then rotate.
These principles remain part of modern steam turbine design.
Heat to Kinetic Energy
A
single blade from the low-pressure steam turbine that drives Generator
9. Others are stacked behind - Image: Heurisko Ltd. Panorama.
The conversion of heat to kinetic energy occurs
in the turbines of the Wairakei power station.
Each of the 10 turbines is
- made up of a central shaft with blades around
the outside
- made efficient by careful design of the blade
shape to capture the energy of the expanding
steam
- designed to operate with a specific pressure
of steam
- designed to spin at a precise speed.
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