Sheps75
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 18, 2008
- 13
A project has been funded to rescue a somewhat dilapidated mid-60s ship (once a car ferry) now 'sunk' (only in about six foot of water) at the North-east of England port.
The main points of the power engineering are that the ship is to remain at least part 'steam' but refitted to 21st century standards. A very well known, international turbine engineering/power firm are pencilled in to supply up-to-date electrically-coupled steam turbines as part of an exercise for their apprentices, and some PR.
The initial idea was to fire the boilers (keeping the original units, I believe) with a green 'bio-oil' for her demonstrator journeys around the English Channel.
But, due to a number of factors (and 'politics'), a more involved design using a number of half-MW gensets (bio-diesel, 4-stroke) is being developed with an HRSG being integrated to form a
Our company is to supply the gensets, but we need to provide estimates of how much heat recovery is possible from each unit, as a whole integrated system can then be designed in one go.
The original ship was fitted out with a strange combination of around a dozen or so smallish diesels, with each one dedicated to a particular ancillary purpose on the ferry, whilst two large boilers fed two pairs of steam turbines, each pair on a gearbox to each of the two props.
The idea now is to have instead, a single electrical backplane that all prime movers tie on to, and distributed electric machines where mech work is required. Ideally, only two of the four ST's will be replaces and our diesel units will create part of a 'smart micro-grid' where the waste heat will be a great enough asset to provide saturated steam for the new turbines, prior to the superheater(s).
For a kick-off I was wondering if there is a good rule of thumb for the amount of saturated steam that can be raised for each kW(shaft power) installed in gensets?
Thanks kindly!
The main points of the power engineering are that the ship is to remain at least part 'steam' but refitted to 21st century standards. A very well known, international turbine engineering/power firm are pencilled in to supply up-to-date electrically-coupled steam turbines as part of an exercise for their apprentices, and some PR.
The initial idea was to fire the boilers (keeping the original units, I believe) with a green 'bio-oil' for her demonstrator journeys around the English Channel.
But, due to a number of factors (and 'politics'), a more involved design using a number of half-MW gensets (bio-diesel, 4-stroke) is being developed with an HRSG being integrated to form a
Our company is to supply the gensets, but we need to provide estimates of how much heat recovery is possible from each unit, as a whole integrated system can then be designed in one go.
The original ship was fitted out with a strange combination of around a dozen or so smallish diesels, with each one dedicated to a particular ancillary purpose on the ferry, whilst two large boilers fed two pairs of steam turbines, each pair on a gearbox to each of the two props.
The idea now is to have instead, a single electrical backplane that all prime movers tie on to, and distributed electric machines where mech work is required. Ideally, only two of the four ST's will be replaces and our diesel units will create part of a 'smart micro-grid' where the waste heat will be a great enough asset to provide saturated steam for the new turbines, prior to the superheater(s).
For a kick-off I was wondering if there is a good rule of thumb for the amount of saturated steam that can be raised for each kW(shaft power) installed in gensets?
Thanks kindly!