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GE Power's Record-Breaking Efficiency in Gas Turbine Combined Cycle using Flow Simulator
Technology Category
- Sensors - Flow Meters
- Sensors - Liquid Detection Sensors
Applicable Industries
- Electrical Grids
- Oil & Gas
Use Cases
- Continuous Emission Monitoring Systems
- Leakage & Flood Monitoring
The Challenge
GE Power, a global leader in energy technology, solutions, and services, faced the challenge of maintaining precise understanding of the flow of cooling and leakage air in their gas turbine engines. This precision was crucial for achieving low emissions of NOx and setting world records for gas turbine combined cycle efficiency. The complexity of the internal engine components and their interactions during various operations, from cold start to shut down, required a sophisticated tool. The company needed a solution that could manage the clearances between rotating and stationary components to the width of a few human hairs, understand the transient thermal response of the engine, and track the impact of cooling and leakage air on gas turbine efficiency and emissions.
About The Customer
GE Power is a world energy leader that provides technology, solutions, and services across the entire energy value chain from the point of generation to consumption. The company is transforming the electricity industry by uniting all the resources and scale of the world’s first Digital Industrial company. GE Power's customers operate in more than 150 countries, and together they power more than a third of the world to illuminate cities, build economies and connect the world. The company holds the only two Guinness World Records for Gas Turbine combined cycle efficiency for 50Hz and 60Hz power generation plants in commercial operation.
The Solution
GE Power adopted the Flow Simulator tool, an internally developed 1-D network flow solver, to address these challenges. This tool became their day-to-day workhorse for designing the secondary flow circuit within a gas turbine engine, its bearing system, combustion, and accessory systems. The Flow Simulator's modern user interface made it easy for secondary flow designers to transition to it. The tool presents branches in the flow circuit on an engine cross-section, enabling a more intuitive understanding of the system. One of the greatest attributes of Flow Simulator is its solver speed, which allows designers to run full probabilistic analysis to understand every possible way customers can run their engines and the impact of manufacturing variation on pressures and flow rates. The numerical stability of the solver enables a broader range of parameter exploration than its predecessor. Boundary condition mapping is also easy and accuracy is ensured using an extensive database of peer-reviewed correlations and the facility to incorporate specialized proprietary correlations.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
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