Inlet Air Chillers Inlet Air Chillers: Turbine Performance Chart

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During hot weather, combustion

turbine (CT) operators are posed a


significant problem by the degradation
of turbine generation capacity. The
typical CT on a hot summer day, for
instance, produces up to 20% less
power than on a cold winter day. As a
result, a number of cooling techniques
have evolved over the years to
maximize turbine output.
1.25
1.20
Correction Factor

1.15
1.10

TURBINE
PERFORMANCE
CHART

1.05
1.00
0.95
0.90
0.85

There is, however, a limitation on


the amount of inlet air cooling that can
safely be accomplished. If the temperature is allowed to go too low, ice can
form on the bell-mouth or inlet guide
vanes, with the risk of this ice flaking
off and doing mechanical damage to
the compressor blades. This phenomenon can occur even when the inlet air
temperature is above freezing, because
suction at the turbine inlet creates a low
pressure cool zone at the bell-mouth.
To avoid this problem, most turbine
manufacturers recommend that inlet air
be kept at or above 45F.
Traditionally, either mechanical
chillers or media-type evaporative coolers have been used to cool combustion
turbine inlet air.

Gas turbines typically


operate at as little as
80% of their rated
capacity on hot days
due to the lower air
density and higher
temperatures. Inlet air
cooling helps to make
up the difference by
increasing the air mass
flow through the turbine
and by cooling the air,
which reduces the work
of compression.

INLET AIR CHILLERS


Various refrigerant-type air chilling
systems have been successfully
employed for combustion turbine inlet
air cooling. These range from
compressor-type chillers to absorption
chillers, which utilize waste heat as an
energy source for the chilling process.
Thermal storage systems have also
been successfully applied to CTs.
These use relatively small chiller plants,
running off-peak, to make ice or coldbrine solutions which are stored in an
insulated tank and used to cool the
inlet air during peak-power demand.
Such systems have proven to be a costeffective way to overcome power loss
during peak-demand periods, while
reducing the high costs normally
associated with chiller plants.

Inlet Air
Chillers

0.80
0.75
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120
Compressor Inlet Temperature - F

The basic theory of inlet air cooling


for gas turbines is simple enough.
Combustion turbines are constant volume machines at a given shaft speed
they always move the same volume of
air but the power output of a turbine
depends on the flow of mass through
it. Thats why on hot days, when air is
less dense, power output falls off. By
feeding cooler air into the CT, mass
flow is increased, resulting in higher
output. Another factor is the power
consumed by the CTs compressor.
The work required to compress air is
directly proportional to the temperature
of the air, so reducing the inlet air temperature reduces the work of compression and there is more work available
at the turbine output shaft.

The most powerful


method of inlet air cooling,
chillers are capable of
keeping inlet air at 45F
throughout the year,
though costs can be
higher than with other
approaches.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

Overall, chillers are capable of


achieving a greater drop in inlet air
temperature than other methods of
inlet air cooling. The most powerful
chillers, for example, are capable of
keeping the inlet air at 45F throughout the year, if desired. This compares
well to its competing technologies
which can manage temperature drops
of anywhere from 15 to 25F in
temperate climates and as much as
40F of cooling in arid, desert climates.
There are drawbacks to chillers,
however, including high first costs, and
high operating and maintenance costs.
These factors may explain why few
turbine operators have taken advantage
of inlet air chillers.

Evaporative
Coolers
The most widely used CT
inlet air cooling system,
media-type evaporative
cooling is less effective in
hot, humid conditions. In
low humidity environments, though, it can
boost power output by
10% or more, depending
on ambient conditions.

EVAPORATIVE COOLERS
Evaporation is a natural process that
results in the conversion of water from
a liquid to a vapor. This conversion is
called a phase change. When water
changes phase, it either absorbs or
releases heat. For instance, when a
pound of water changes from the liquid
phase to vapor phase it consumes 1160
BTUs of heat. A good example of
evaporation is the cooling effect of a
breeze on a summer day. Even if the
air is hotter than body temperature,
the breeze feels cooler because it
evaporates perspiration off the skin.
Media-type evaporative coolers
make use of this principle and are the
most common cooling system
employed in combustion turbine inlet
air cooling. They generally consist of a

wetted honeycomb-like pad of cellulose


fiber material (the medium). When air
is pulled through, it evaporates water
off the convoluted surfaces of the wetted media, thereby cooling the inlet air.
Evaporative coolers are limited by
the amount of moisture present in the
air. Once saturation (i.e., 100% relative
humidity) is reached, evaporative cooling systems are unable to evaporate
more water into the air stream. For this
reason, in hot, humid regions, it often
isnt possible to accomplish more than
about 10 to 15F of cooling. Chillers
dont have this problem. They are not
restricted by high ambient humidity
and are therefore capable of giving a
larger power boost than evaporative
coolers.
Another factor to be considered
with evaporative coolers is the cost of
retrofitting and installing them. Although
the units themselves are generally fairly
inexpensive, installation usually calls for
duct enlargement, as evaporative coolers
require relatively low air velocities. If the
air velocity across the wetted media is
too high, it can strip water from the
media, cause excessive wetting of the
ducts and even fouling of the compressor blades. For these reasons, evaporative coolers are sometimes ruled out as
a retrofit option. Overall though, if
retrofitting or installation costs are not
prohibitive, evaporative coolers work
well. In low-humidity environments they
are capable of increasing power output
by as much as 15%, while in highhumidity areas, the power boost tends
to be 10% or less.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

HIGH PRESSURE FOGGING


High pressure fogging is a more
recent addition to the roster of technologies employed for inlet air cooling.
Fogging systems are similar to mediatype evaporative cooling systems in that
they cool by evaporating water, but
instead of using an evaporative medium, the water is atomized into billions
of super-small fog droplets.
Fog systems use high pressure
water pumps to pressurize demineralized water to between 1000 and 3000
psi. The water then flows through a
network of stainless steel tubes to fog
nozzle manifolds that are installed in
the air stream. These nozzles atomize
the water into micro-fine fog droplets
which evaporate quickly.
Other factors being equal, the
speed of evaporation of water depends
on the surface area of water exposed to
the air. This is why media-type evaporative coolers use convoluted honeycomb type media to maximize the
surface area of water exposed to the
air. In high pressure fogging, however,
the evaporative surfaces are the fog
droplets themselves. For this reason,
the size of droplet generated by the
fog system is a critical factor. For
instance, because of the geometry of
spheres, a given amount of water
atomized into 10-micron droplets yields
ten times more surface area than the
same amount of water atomized into
100-micron droplets.

Fog systems have been installed on


both base-loaded and peaking gas turbines and are used in both simple-cycle
and combined-cycle plants. In most
cases, turbine operators opt to install
the fog nozzle manifolds downstream
of the air filters and just upstream of the
silencers. This form of installation usually requires one to two outage days
and calls for minor modifications to the
turbine inlet structures. Fog systems
can also be positioned upstream of air
filters, resulting in no outage time. This
type of installation, however, requires
the use of fog droplet eliminators to
prevent wetting of the air filters. When
fog nozzles are installed inside the air
ducts, special attention must be given
to the nozzle manifolds. They must be
correctly designed to avoid the possibility of small parts breaking off and
being ingested by the turbine.
One advantage of high pressure
fogging is its efficiency level in hot,
humid areas. As a comparison, take
Houston, TX at 96F in high humidity.
In this climate, a fog system can
achieve as much as 19 to 20F of cooling, while a media-type evaporative
cooler can get only about 15 to 17F of
cooling. A chiller takes the temperature
far lower, but energy demands and
installation costs are much higher.

High Pressure
Fogging
In high humidity
conditions, high pressure
fogging usually can
provide more cooling than
media-type evaporative
coolers. Chillers take the
temperature lower yet,
but with much higher
installation and operating
costs.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

Fog
Intercooling
While the limits of this
technology have not been
fully studied, fog intercooling shows tremendous
promise in providing large
power boosts even in
very humid environments

FOG INTERCOOLING
An innovative application of high
pressure fogging, known as fog
intercooling, is showing great promise
as a means of increasing the power
boost gained from traditional inlet air
cooling fog systems. The basic concept
is to inject more fog into an air stream
than will evaporate with the given
climate conditions. Unevaporated fog
droplets are carried by the air stream
into the compressor where they
evaporate when the air is heated by
compression. Since the compressor is
consuming as much as half of the output of the turbine, and the work
required to compress the air is directly
proportional to the temperature of the
air, the evaporation of fog inside the
compressor results in a substantial
increase in the net output of the turbine.
Its interesting to note that the higher output associated with intercooling is
not due to the mass of the injected fog.
In fact, water vapor is less dense than
air at the same temperature. So
increasing the water vapor content of
the air, without also cooling the air,
would decrease the density of the mix.
However, with a fogging system, the
water is added to the air in the liquid
phase, so it cools the air when it evapo-

rates and the cooling effect outweighs


the addition of the inherently less
dense water vapor.
The limits of fog intercooling have
not been fully investigated. Several
turbine manufacturers are looking into
the idea as the benefits are substantial.
Theoretically, its possible to inject
enough fog to cause a power boost
that is as high as that obtained by inlet
air chilling, and at a tiny fraction of the
cost.
If the water droplets are too large,
one possible drawback of intercooling is
the potential for erosion of the compressor section. Liquid impaction erosion is a term applied to this phenomenon. The bombardment of a metal
surface with water droplets can lead to
the development of micro-fractures in
the crystalline surface of the metal and
can eventually cause surface pitting.
But experience has shown, and most
experts agree, that compressor blades
would not be subjected to damage
unless the average droplet size exceeds
about 20 to 30 microns. (The mean
diameter of fog droplets is less than 5
microns.) To date, over 60 fog systems
with fog intercooling capacity have
been installed on turbines in the USA.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

CaseChiller
Study:
Installation
Ripon Cogeneration, near Modesto,
CA, is a good example of how
compressor-type chilling is used for
inlet air cooling. The company runs a
GE LM 5000 gas turbine for power
generation and supplies steam to the
nearby Fox River paper mill. Producing
22,000 tons of paper annually, the
200-acre mill demands over 45,000 lbs
of steam/hr when operating at full
capacity. Power is also distributed to
the public utility grid in Californias
Central Valley.
Ripon chose a Kohlenbergerpatented 2000-ton, multi-temperature
chilling system. It features Frick
ammonia screw compressors, 3 Imeco
evaporative condensers and Frigid Coil
cooling coils. Two coils are set at different temperatures to provide stages,
enabling the system providing higher
thermodynamic efficiency.
Because Californias temperatures
rarely dip below 60 degrees F, the
chillers are capable of making the
system believe its a cool 44 degrees
outside, says Plant Manager Steve
Bates. On a really hot day, though,
the chillers dont get the temperature
below 50 degrees.
The system works using ammonia
compression, similar to a home air
conditioner. A compressor draws
ammonia vapor from a recirculation
tank, compresses it and discharges it to
the evaporative condensers. These

remove the heat of compression and


liquefy the ammonia vapors. Liquid
ammonia then returns to the recirculation tank, and from there it is pumped
to the coils (situated in the air inlet
duct, after the filters). Hot inlet air is
fed past the coils, resulting in thermal
energy absorption and vaporized
ammonia. These vapors and a small
percentage of liquid return to the
recirculation tank.
Power consumption is higher with
this type of system, says Bates. It
varies from 1 to 1.4 MW per hour
depending on the load. To keep
consumption to a minimum, the screw
compressors have slide valves, which
regulate the amount of compression
performed according to system needs.
Ripon bought the chiller unit to
increase peaking capacity, improve fuel
efficiency and generate additional
steam power. The result: power output
rose from 42 to 48 MW on hot days.

Case
Study:
Evaporative Cooling
Nevada Powers Clark Generating
Station in Las Vegas operates 4
Westinghouse 501B6 gas turbines, each
producing 80 to 82 MW per hour. It is
a combined cycle plant, with the heat
from the gas turbines being utilized to
drive an additional steam turbine. This
provides another 90 MW of power.
Three of the utilities gas turbines
have been retrofitted with Premier

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

Industries evaporative coolers. The


fourth cooling system is due to be installed in the last turbine later this year,
says control room operator Ron Moore.
The capital has been allocated and
work should begin after the summer.
These units consist of a stainless
steel, grade 304 housing, a sump
section and the cooling media. The
sump section includes a recirculating
water distribution system with pump,
flow adjustment controls and flow
meters to pump water from the sump
to header pipes over each level of the
cooling media. The cooling media is a
rigid media manufactured by GlacierCor. It is made of a cellulose fiber construction with 45/15 degree transverse
flutes. Media thickness is 16 inches,
provided in two eight-inch sections to
reduce replacement costs without loss
of cooling efficiency. Moisture drift
eliminators are also included to trap
raw moisture entrained in the air flow
and return it to the sump. Demineralized
water is used. After Premier Industries
installed the units, Nevada Power measured MW output for the entirety of
1998 and compared it to 1997 figures
when no evaporative cooling system
existed. July provided the highest
monthly increase of 12.32 percent.
The average power boost per month is
7 percent.

CaseHigh
Study:
Pressure
Fogging Installation
In 1997, Portland General Electric
Co. (PGE) built a new combined cycle
plant at Boardman, Oregon, using a
GE Frame 7-FA gas turbine (159 MW).
After investigating several cooling
options, the utility found that most
were expensive to implement and
required structural modifications to
buildings and air inlet housing. Mediatype evaporative cooling, for instance,
worked out to be 250 percent more
costly to install than inlet fogging, says
Cheryl Bryant, the mechanical engineer
in charge of specifying and implementing the cooling system. After factoring
in maintenance and running costs, PG&E
decided to install a Mee Industries high
pressure fogging system.
At this facility, 1120 fog nozzles are
installed downstream of air filters/
upstream of silencers and trash screens,
by far the most common location.
Operating pressure is 2,000 psi and
pressure drop is virtually nil.
Demineralized water is used.
Two pump skids are required, each
containing four FM-630-B1057 pumps.
These pumps manage eight stages of
cooling, which can be controlled by
ambient temperature and humidity
sensors, as well as manually.
The only reported problem at
Coyote Springs was water collecting in
the inlet duct. A drain line, installed
downstream of the fog nozzles,
eliminated this situation.
The result: 30F of inlet air cooling,
a 16 MW output and a significant
improvement in heat rate.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

CaseChiller
Study:
& High

Pressure Fogging #1

Calpine Gilroy Cogen, LP of Gilroy,


CA, operates a GE Frame 7-EA cogeneration plant which supplies 120 MW
to PG & E and provides steam to a
nearby garlic plant. The plant uses
chillers to cool turbine air regardless of
ambient temperature. But running
costs make it desirable at certain times
to add a cheaper supplemental system.
At first, Calpine Gilroy tried mediatype evaporative cooling. But water
entered the air stream and fouled the
compressor. As a result, turbines had
to be washed regularly. Also, water
pumps required additional maintenance
and media needed frequent replacement. In 1994, the company decided
to drop evaporative coolers, retain
chillers and supplement them with high
pressure fogging.
Gilroy was one of the first to install
inlet fogging and the system was not
without its problems. Water would
sometimes stagnate in the supply lines
to the fog pump units, causing bacteria
to grow, which plugged the fog nozzles
and water filters. The lesson learned
here is that a fog system which is left
shutdown for extended periods of time
must be drained, even when demineralized water is used. Other initial
problems involved the design and
installation of the system, such as the
use of PVC pipes to supply the water
to the fogging pumps, and vibrations in
the discharge pipes causing mechanical

fatigue. Calpine Gilroy now uses stainless steel supply pipes and has installed
pulsation dampeners to cure pump
vibration both standard features on
todays fog systems.
The company currently operates its
thermal energy chillers during periods
of peak power demand and otherwise
relies on the fogging system. Result: a
significant reduction in cooling costs
since switching to high pressure fog
and an additional 3 to 6 MW power
increase.

CaseChiller
Study:
& High

Pressure Fogging #2

Las Vegas Cogen operates a peaking plant, which starts up 560 times
per year using a GE LM 6000 turbine.
The electricity is sold to Nevada Power
and thermal energy is used to heat a
12-acre hydroponic greenhouse owned
by the company.
Because it takes time for the
chillers to get online, the cogeneration
facility uses high pressure inlet fogging
to provide maximum power right away.
The Mee Industries fog system is used
exclusively when its below 70F outside. If temperatures rise above 70, a
steam absorption chiller is added.
Although the fog system was
installed upstream of air filters, the final
barrier filters remain dry and the filters
stay cleaner due to the scrubbing
effects of the mist. The facility achieves
around 15F of cooling, which represents a 500 kW power increase.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

Case Evaporative
Study:

Coolers & High


Pressure Fogging

The UtiliCorp United plant in


Greenwood, MO has standard mediatype evaporative coolers installed on
four of its Frame 7001B units. However,
the companys GE MS-7001E gas turbine (85.4 MW at ISO conditions) uses a
Mee Industries fog system to provide
evaporative cooling and intercooling.
Eight fog-cooling stages a total of
1,196 nozzles deliver a temperature
drop of 20 to 32F, depending on
ambient conditions.
After two summers, company
officials have found that the fog system
is easier to clean and maintain than the
evaporative coolers. The evaporative
coolers carry-over untreated water,
resulting in compressor fouling, while
the fog, which is demineralized water,
helps to clean the compressor. In
addition, the fog system takes about
three minutes from startup to full
power boost, compared to 30 minutes
with the media-type systems. The
company plant manager said that even
on a 100F day with humidity in the
range of 45-50%, the fog system
provides a power boost of approximately 4 MW or nearly 7%.

CHOOSING THE RIGHT SYSTEM


When considering which cooling
system to implement, its important to
study the existing situation at the plant,
climatic conditions, budget limitations,
power output expectations and project
economics. There are no simple answers,
correct in all cases, and sometimes a
combination of systems may be best.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

MEE INDUSTRIES, INC.

Are you talking to Mee?


Corporate Headquarters
204 West Pomona Avenue
Monrovia, California 91016
626.359.4550
Fax: 626.359.4660
E-mail: [email protected]

www.meefog.com
800.732.5364

During hot weather, combustion


turbine (CT) operators are posed a
significant problem by the degradation
of turbine generation capacity. The
typical CT on a hot summer day, for
instance, produces up to 20% less
power than on a cold winter day. As a
result, a number of cooling techniques
have evolved over the years to
maximize turbine output.
1.25
1.20
Correction Factor

1.15
1.10

TURBINE
PERFORMANCE
CHART

1.05
1.00
0.95
0.90
0.85

There is, however, a limitation on


the amount of inlet air cooling that can
safely be accomplished. If the temperature is allowed to go too low, ice can
form on the bell-mouth or inlet guide
vanes, with the risk of this ice flaking
off and doing mechanical damage to
the compressor blades. This phenomenon can occur even when the inlet air
temperature is above freezing, because
suction at the turbine inlet creates a low
pressure cool zone at the bell-mouth.
To avoid this problem, most turbine
manufacturers recommend that inlet air
be kept at or above 45F.
Traditionally, either mechanical
chillers or media-type evaporative coolers have been used to cool combustion
turbine inlet air.

Gas turbines typically


operate at as little as
80% of their rated
capacity on hot days
due to the lower air
density and higher
temperatures. Inlet air
cooling helps to make
up the difference by
increasing the air mass
flow through the turbine
and by cooling the air,
which reduces the work
of compression.

INLET AIR CHILLERS


Various refrigerant-type air chilling
systems have been successfully
employed for combustion turbine inlet
air cooling. These range from
compressor-type chillers to absorption
chillers, which utilize waste heat as an
energy source for the chilling process.
Thermal storage systems have also
been successfully applied to CTs.
These use relatively small chiller plants,
running off-peak, to make ice or coldbrine solutions which are stored in an
insulated tank and used to cool the
inlet air during peak-power demand.
Such systems have proven to be a costeffective way to overcome power loss
during peak-demand periods, while
reducing the high costs normally
associated with chiller plants.

Inlet Air
Chillers

0.80
0.75
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120
Compressor Inlet Temperature - F

The basic theory of inlet air cooling


for gas turbines is simple enough.
Combustion turbines are constant volume machines at a given shaft speed
they always move the same volume of
air but the power output of a turbine
depends on the flow of mass through
it. Thats why on hot days, when air is
less dense, power output falls off. By
feeding cooler air into the CT, mass
flow is increased, resulting in higher
output. Another factor is the power
consumed by the CTs compressor.
The work required to compress air is
directly proportional to the temperature
of the air, so reducing the inlet air temperature reduces the work of compression and there is more work available
at the turbine output shaft.

The most powerful


method of inlet air cooling,
chillers are capable of
keeping inlet air at 45F
throughout the year,
though costs can be
higher than with other
approaches.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

Overall, chillers are capable of


achieving a greater drop in inlet air
temperature than other methods of
inlet air cooling. The most powerful
chillers, for example, are capable of
keeping the inlet air at 45F throughout the year, if desired. This compares
well to its competing technologies
which can manage temperature drops
of anywhere from 15 to 25F in
temperate climates and as much as
40F of cooling in arid, desert climates.
There are drawbacks to chillers,
however, including high first costs, and
high operating and maintenance costs.
These factors may explain why few
turbine operators have taken advantage
of inlet air chillers.

Evaporative
Coolers
The most widely used CT
inlet air cooling system,
media-type evaporative
cooling is less effective in
hot, humid conditions. In
low humidity environments, though, it can
boost power output by
10% or more, depending
on ambient conditions.

EVAPORATIVE COOLERS
Evaporation is a natural process that
results in the conversion of water from
a liquid to a vapor. This conversion is
called a phase change. When water
changes phase, it either absorbs or
releases heat. For instance, when a
pound of water changes from the liquid
phase to vapor phase it consumes 1160
BTUs of heat. A good example of
evaporation is the cooling effect of a
breeze on a summer day. Even if the
air is hotter than body temperature,
the breeze feels cooler because it
evaporates perspiration off the skin.
Media-type evaporative coolers
make use of this principle and are the
most common cooling system
employed in combustion turbine inlet
air cooling. They generally consist of a

wetted honeycomb-like pad of cellulose


fiber material (the medium). When air
is pulled through, it evaporates water
off the convoluted surfaces of the wetted media, thereby cooling the inlet air.
Evaporative coolers are limited by
the amount of moisture present in the
air. Once saturation (i.e., 100% relative
humidity) is reached, evaporative cooling systems are unable to evaporate
more water into the air stream. For this
reason, in hot, humid regions, it often
isnt possible to accomplish more than
about 10 to 15F of cooling. Chillers
dont have this problem. They are not
restricted by high ambient humidity
and are therefore capable of giving a
larger power boost than evaporative
coolers.
Another factor to be considered
with evaporative coolers is the cost of
retrofitting and installing them. Although
the units themselves are generally fairly
inexpensive, installation usually calls for
duct enlargement, as evaporative coolers
require relatively low air velocities. If the
air velocity across the wetted media is
too high, it can strip water from the
media, cause excessive wetting of the
ducts and even fouling of the compressor blades. For these reasons, evaporative coolers are sometimes ruled out as
a retrofit option. Overall though, if
retrofitting or installation costs are not
prohibitive, evaporative coolers work
well. In low-humidity environments they
are capable of increasing power output
by as much as 15%, while in highhumidity areas, the power boost tends
to be 10% or less.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

HIGH PRESSURE FOGGING


High pressure fogging is a more
recent addition to the roster of technologies employed for inlet air cooling.
Fogging systems are similar to mediatype evaporative cooling systems in that
they cool by evaporating water, but
instead of using an evaporative medium, the water is atomized into billions
of super-small fog droplets.
Fog systems use high pressure
water pumps to pressurize demineralized water to between 1000 and 3000
psi. The water then flows through a
network of stainless steel tubes to fog
nozzle manifolds that are installed in
the air stream. These nozzles atomize
the water into micro-fine fog droplets
which evaporate quickly.
Other factors being equal, the
speed of evaporation of water depends
on the surface area of water exposed to
the air. This is why media-type evaporative coolers use convoluted honeycomb type media to maximize the
surface area of water exposed to the
air. In high pressure fogging, however,
the evaporative surfaces are the fog
droplets themselves. For this reason,
the size of droplet generated by the
fog system is a critical factor. For
instance, because of the geometry of
spheres, a given amount of water
atomized into 10-micron droplets yields
ten times more surface area than the
same amount of water atomized into
100-micron droplets.

Fog systems have been installed on


both base-loaded and peaking gas turbines and are used in both simple-cycle
and combined-cycle plants. In most
cases, turbine operators opt to install
the fog nozzle manifolds downstream
of the air filters and just upstream of the
silencers. This form of installation usually requires one to two outage days
and calls for minor modifications to the
turbine inlet structures. Fog systems
can also be positioned upstream of air
filters, resulting in no outage time. This
type of installation, however, requires
the use of fog droplet eliminators to
prevent wetting of the air filters. When
fog nozzles are installed inside the air
ducts, special attention must be given
to the nozzle manifolds. They must be
correctly designed to avoid the possibility of small parts breaking off and
being ingested by the turbine.
One advantage of high pressure
fogging is its efficiency level in hot,
humid areas. As a comparison, take
Houston, TX at 96F in high humidity.
In this climate, a fog system can
achieve as much as 19 to 20F of cooling, while a media-type evaporative
cooler can get only about 15 to 17F of
cooling. A chiller takes the temperature
far lower, but energy demands and
installation costs are much higher.

High Pressure
Fogging
In high humidity
conditions, high pressure
fogging usually can
provide more cooling than
media-type evaporative
coolers. Chillers take the
temperature lower yet,
but with much higher
installation and operating
costs.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

Fog
Intercooling
While the limits of this
technology have not been
fully studied, fog intercooling shows tremendous
promise in providing large
power boosts even in
very humid environments

FOG INTERCOOLING
An innovative application of high
pressure fogging, known as fog
intercooling, is showing great promise
as a means of increasing the power
boost gained from traditional inlet air
cooling fog systems. The basic concept
is to inject more fog into an air stream
than will evaporate with the given
climate conditions. Unevaporated fog
droplets are carried by the air stream
into the compressor where they
evaporate when the air is heated by
compression. Since the compressor is
consuming as much as half of the output of the turbine, and the work
required to compress the air is directly
proportional to the temperature of the
air, the evaporation of fog inside the
compressor results in a substantial
increase in the net output of the turbine.
Its interesting to note that the higher output associated with intercooling is
not due to the mass of the injected fog.
In fact, water vapor is less dense than
air at the same temperature. So
increasing the water vapor content of
the air, without also cooling the air,
would decrease the density of the mix.
However, with a fogging system, the
water is added to the air in the liquid
phase, so it cools the air when it evapo-

rates and the cooling effect outweighs


the addition of the inherently less
dense water vapor.
The limits of fog intercooling have
not been fully investigated. Several
turbine manufacturers are looking into
the idea as the benefits are substantial.
Theoretically, its possible to inject
enough fog to cause a power boost
that is as high as that obtained by inlet
air chilling, and at a tiny fraction of the
cost.
If the water droplets are too large,
one possible drawback of intercooling is
the potential for erosion of the compressor section. Liquid impaction erosion is a term applied to this phenomenon. The bombardment of a metal
surface with water droplets can lead to
the development of micro-fractures in
the crystalline surface of the metal and
can eventually cause surface pitting.
But experience has shown, and most
experts agree, that compressor blades
would not be subjected to damage
unless the average droplet size exceeds
about 20 to 30 microns. (The mean
diameter of fog droplets is less than 5
microns.) To date, over 60 fog systems
with fog intercooling capacity have
been installed on turbines in the USA.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

CaseChiller
Study:
Installation
Ripon Cogeneration, near Modesto,
CA, is a good example of how
compressor-type chilling is used for
inlet air cooling. The company runs a
GE LM 5000 gas turbine for power
generation and supplies steam to the
nearby Fox River paper mill. Producing
22,000 tons of paper annually, the
200-acre mill demands over 45,000 lbs
of steam/hr when operating at full
capacity. Power is also distributed to
the public utility grid in Californias
Central Valley.
Ripon chose a Kohlenbergerpatented 2000-ton, multi-temperature
chilling system. It features Frick
ammonia screw compressors, 3 Imeco
evaporative condensers and Frigid Coil
cooling coils. Two coils are set at different temperatures to provide stages,
enabling the system providing higher
thermodynamic efficiency.
Because Californias temperatures
rarely dip below 60 degrees F, the
chillers are capable of making the
system believe its a cool 44 degrees
outside, says Plant Manager Steve
Bates. On a really hot day, though,
the chillers dont get the temperature
below 50 degrees.
The system works using ammonia
compression, similar to a home air
conditioner. A compressor draws
ammonia vapor from a recirculation
tank, compresses it and discharges it to
the evaporative condensers. These

remove the heat of compression and


liquefy the ammonia vapors. Liquid
ammonia then returns to the recirculation tank, and from there it is pumped
to the coils (situated in the air inlet
duct, after the filters). Hot inlet air is
fed past the coils, resulting in thermal
energy absorption and vaporized
ammonia. These vapors and a small
percentage of liquid return to the
recirculation tank.
Power consumption is higher with
this type of system, says Bates. It
varies from 1 to 1.4 MW per hour
depending on the load. To keep
consumption to a minimum, the screw
compressors have slide valves, which
regulate the amount of compression
performed according to system needs.
Ripon bought the chiller unit to
increase peaking capacity, improve fuel
efficiency and generate additional
steam power. The result: power output
rose from 42 to 48 MW on hot days.

Case
Study:
Evaporative Cooling
Nevada Powers Clark Generating
Station in Las Vegas operates 4
Westinghouse 501B6 gas turbines, each
producing 80 to 82 MW per hour. It is
a combined cycle plant, with the heat
from the gas turbines being utilized to
drive an additional steam turbine. This
provides another 90 MW of power.
Three of the utilities gas turbines
have been retrofitted with Premier

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

Industries evaporative coolers. The


fourth cooling system is due to be installed in the last turbine later this year,
says control room operator Ron Moore.
The capital has been allocated and
work should begin after the summer.
These units consist of a stainless
steel, grade 304 housing, a sump
section and the cooling media. The
sump section includes a recirculating
water distribution system with pump,
flow adjustment controls and flow
meters to pump water from the sump
to header pipes over each level of the
cooling media. The cooling media is a
rigid media manufactured by GlacierCor. It is made of a cellulose fiber construction with 45/15 degree transverse
flutes. Media thickness is 16 inches,
provided in two eight-inch sections to
reduce replacement costs without loss
of cooling efficiency. Moisture drift
eliminators are also included to trap
raw moisture entrained in the air flow
and return it to the sump. Demineralized
water is used. After Premier Industries
installed the units, Nevada Power measured MW output for the entirety of
1998 and compared it to 1997 figures
when no evaporative cooling system
existed. July provided the highest
monthly increase of 12.32 percent.
The average power boost per month is
7 percent.

CaseHigh
Study:
Pressure
Fogging Installation
In 1997, Portland General Electric
Co. (PGE) built a new combined cycle
plant at Boardman, Oregon, using a
GE Frame 7-FA gas turbine (159 MW).
After investigating several cooling
options, the utility found that most
were expensive to implement and
required structural modifications to
buildings and air inlet housing. Mediatype evaporative cooling, for instance,
worked out to be 250 percent more
costly to install than inlet fogging, says
Cheryl Bryant, the mechanical engineer
in charge of specifying and implementing the cooling system. After factoring
in maintenance and running costs, PG&E
decided to install a Mee Industries high
pressure fogging system.
At this facility, 1120 fog nozzles are
installed downstream of air filters/
upstream of silencers and trash screens,
by far the most common location.
Operating pressure is 2,000 psi and
pressure drop is virtually nil.
Demineralized water is used.
Two pump skids are required, each
containing four FM-630-B1057 pumps.
These pumps manage eight stages of
cooling, which can be controlled by
ambient temperature and humidity
sensors, as well as manually.
The only reported problem at
Coyote Springs was water collecting in
the inlet duct. A drain line, installed
downstream of the fog nozzles,
eliminated this situation.
The result: 30F of inlet air cooling,
a 16 MW output and a significant
improvement in heat rate.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

CaseChiller
Study:
& High

Pressure Fogging #1

Calpine Gilroy Cogen, LP of Gilroy,


CA, operates a GE Frame 7-EA cogeneration plant which supplies 120 MW
to PG & E and provides steam to a
nearby garlic plant. The plant uses
chillers to cool turbine air regardless of
ambient temperature. But running
costs make it desirable at certain times
to add a cheaper supplemental system.
At first, Calpine Gilroy tried mediatype evaporative cooling. But water
entered the air stream and fouled the
compressor. As a result, turbines had
to be washed regularly. Also, water
pumps required additional maintenance
and media needed frequent replacement. In 1994, the company decided
to drop evaporative coolers, retain
chillers and supplement them with high
pressure fogging.
Gilroy was one of the first to install
inlet fogging and the system was not
without its problems. Water would
sometimes stagnate in the supply lines
to the fog pump units, causing bacteria
to grow, which plugged the fog nozzles
and water filters. The lesson learned
here is that a fog system which is left
shutdown for extended periods of time
must be drained, even when demineralized water is used. Other initial
problems involved the design and
installation of the system, such as the
use of PVC pipes to supply the water
to the fogging pumps, and vibrations in
the discharge pipes causing mechanical

fatigue. Calpine Gilroy now uses stainless steel supply pipes and has installed
pulsation dampeners to cure pump
vibration both standard features on
todays fog systems.
The company currently operates its
thermal energy chillers during periods
of peak power demand and otherwise
relies on the fogging system. Result: a
significant reduction in cooling costs
since switching to high pressure fog
and an additional 3 to 6 MW power
increase.

CaseChiller
Study:
& High

Pressure Fogging #2

Las Vegas Cogen operates a peaking plant, which starts up 560 times
per year using a GE LM 6000 turbine.
The electricity is sold to Nevada Power
and thermal energy is used to heat a
12-acre hydroponic greenhouse owned
by the company.
Because it takes time for the
chillers to get online, the cogeneration
facility uses high pressure inlet fogging
to provide maximum power right away.
The Mee Industries fog system is used
exclusively when its below 70F outside. If temperatures rise above 70, a
steam absorption chiller is added.
Although the fog system was
installed upstream of air filters, the final
barrier filters remain dry and the filters
stay cleaner due to the scrubbing
effects of the mist. The facility achieves
around 15F of cooling, which represents a 500 kW power increase.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

Case Evaporative
Study:

Coolers & High


Pressure Fogging

The UtiliCorp United plant in


Greenwood, MO has standard mediatype evaporative coolers installed on
four of its Frame 7001B units. However,
the companys GE MS-7001E gas turbine (85.4 MW at ISO conditions) uses a
Mee Industries fog system to provide
evaporative cooling and intercooling.
Eight fog-cooling stages a total of
1,196 nozzles deliver a temperature
drop of 20 to 32F, depending on
ambient conditions.
After two summers, company
officials have found that the fog system
is easier to clean and maintain than the
evaporative coolers. The evaporative
coolers carry-over untreated water,
resulting in compressor fouling, while
the fog, which is demineralized water,
helps to clean the compressor. In
addition, the fog system takes about
three minutes from startup to full
power boost, compared to 30 minutes
with the media-type systems. The
company plant manager said that even
on a 100F day with humidity in the
range of 45-50%, the fog system
provides a power boost of approximately 4 MW or nearly 7%.

CHOOSING THE RIGHT SYSTEM


When considering which cooling
system to implement, its important to
study the existing situation at the plant,
climatic conditions, budget limitations,
power output expectations and project
economics. There are no simple answers,
correct in all cases, and sometimes a
combination of systems may be best.

Mee Industries Inc. 204 West Pomona Avenue Monrovia, California 91016 626.359.4550 Fax 626.359.4660 800.732.5364

MEE INDUSTRIES, INC.

Are you talking to Mee?


Corporate Headquarters
204 West Pomona Avenue
Monrovia, California 91016
626.359.4550
Fax: 626.359.4660
E-mail: [email protected]

www.meefog.com
800.732.5364

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