화학공학소재연구정보센터
Energy Conversion and Management, Vol.195, 1255-1279, 2019
Work and efficiency optimization of advanced gas turbine cycles
The paper presents a theoretical analysis of advanced gas-turbine cycles. Specifically, three cycles are investigated, that is the intercooled, the reheat, and the intercooled and reheat cycles. The internal irreversibilities, which characterise the compression and expansion processes, are taken into account through the polytropic efficiencies of the compressors and turbines. New analytical formulations for the overall and intermediate pressure-ratios which maximise the net work of the three aforementioned cycles are proposed along with an order relation between these optimum pressure ratios. Moreover, the thermal efficiency of these cycles is also analysed providing, among other findings, the ranges of the intermediate pressure-ratios returning a benefit in the thermal efficiency in comparison with the simple cycle. Finally, for the sole intercooled and reheat cycle, a novel analytical expression for the maximum point of the thermal efficiency is given. It is also shown that, for the intercooled and reheat cycle, there is a unique value of the overall pressure-ratio which simultaneously maximises the net work and the thermal efficiency. To give some quantitative information, consider a maximum to minimum cycle-temperature ratio equal to 1573/300 and a compressor (resp. turbine) polytropic-efficiency equal to 0.8 (resp. 0.88). The net work and the thermal efficiency are maximised by a set of overall pressure-ratios obeying an order relation. The simple, the reheat, the intercooled, and the intercooled and reheat cycles reach the maximum net-work (resp. thermal efficiency) for increasing values of the overall pressure-ratio, that is 8.550 (resp. 18.260), 14.950 (resp. 25.039), 20.846 (resp. 39.984), and 73.109 (resp. 73.109). The reheat cycle achieves a 34.899% (rasp. 6.077%) gain in the net work (resp. thermal efficiency), while the intercooled cycle returns a 31.477% (resp. 15.970%) increment. The maximum net-work of the intercooled and reheat cycle exactly doubles that of the simple cycle. Finally, the maximum thermal efficiency of the intercooled and reheat cycle yields a 24.966% improvement in comparison with the simple one.