Turbine staging
- Key People:
- Jean-Victor Poncelet
Only a small fraction of the overall pressure drop available in a turbine can be extracted in a single stage consisting of a set of stationary nozzles or vanes and moving blades or buckets. In contrast to water turbines where the total head is extracted in a single runner (see above), the steam velocities obtained from the enthalpy drop between steam generator and condenser would be prohibitively high. In addition, the volume increase of the expanding steam requires a large increase in the annular flow area to keep the axial through-flow velocity nearly constant. To this must be added limitations on blade length and blade-tip velocities to avoid excessive centrifugal stresses. In practice, the steam expansion is therefore broken up into many small segments or stages, each with a range of velocities and an appropriate blade size to permit efficient conversion of the thermal energy in the steam to mechanical energy. In modern turbines, three types of staging are employed, either separately or in combination: (1) pressure (or impulse) staging, (2) reaction staging, and (3) velocity-compound staging.
Pressure staging uses a number of sequential impulse stages similar to those illustrated in capacity from a few to more than 1.3 million kilowatts. Some manufacturers prefer to build units with impulse stages simply to reduce thrust-bearing loads. Such units may have as many as 20 sequential stages.
, except that the stationary passages also become highly curved nozzles. Pressure-staged turbines can range in powerReaction staging is similar to pressure staging, except that a greater number of reaction stages are required. The first turbine stage, however, is often an impulse stage for controlling the steam flow and for rapidly reducing the pressure in stationary nozzles from its high steam generator value, thereby lowering the pressure that the casing has to withstand. Reaction turbines require about twice as many stages as impulse-staged turbines for the same change in steam enthalpy. The cost and size of the turbines, however, are about the same because blading for pressure staging must withstand greater forces and must therefore be more rigidly constructed. Reaction turbines also have large axial thrust and require heavy-duty thrust bearings.
In velocity-compound staging a set of stationary nozzles is followed by two sets of moving blades with a stationary row of impulse blades between them to redirect the flow. Ideally this allows twice as much power to be extracted than from a single impulse stage for a given blade-tip velocity. It also permits a large pressure drop through the stationary nozzles. Velocity-compounding is well suited for small turbines; it is also sometimes used as the first stage in large turbines for control purposes. The inherent high steam velocities, however, tend to result in high losses and poor stage efficiencies.
Power development
The theoretical maximum power produced by a turbine can be computed from the mass flow rate of the steam multiplied by the ideal enthalpy drop per unit mass between the steam generator exit and the condenser conditions. The actual power produced, however, is less because of friction, turbulence, leakage around the blade tips, and other losses. For the same maximum blade-tip velocity, pressure staging produces about twice as much ideal power per stage as reaction staging, while velocity-compound staging produces about four times as much.
The stage efficiency—i.e., the amount of work that is actually produced in each stage as compared to the maximum possible amount—can be higher for reaction stages than for impulse stages due to generally lower flow velocities and associated losses. The greater number of stages required, however, results in an overall turbine efficiency that is about the same for both. Efficient stages also require carefully designed seals along the rotor shaft and opposite the rotating blade tips to avoid leakage past the blades.