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Review Thermodynamic Properties of Supercritical Steam

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Jul. 27, 2009 By waynson ray
# One can already purchase simple-cycle combustion turbines achieving 46% thermal efficiency 1Y0-259 exam.
# These are internal-combustion units running on open cycles, requiring neither hot-side nor cold-side heat exchangers.
# A turbine using inert gas as a working fluid is not internal combustion, by definition. The source of heat must be something outside the fluid 642-515 exam. If the heat source is combustion, this requires a hot-side heat exchanger. This is an unnecessary capital expense.
# Preserving the inert working fluid against loss requires a cold-side heat... More > exchanger SY0-101 exam. This is another unnecessary capital expense for a combustion system.
# Reducing the operating temperature from ~1100°C to ~800°C would also reduce the thermal efficiency. If the heat source is combustion, this increases fuel costs.

We can see from a relatively simple analysis that today's absence of inert-gas turbine generators has nothing to do with technical feasibility. It is soley a matter of economics.

How does a nuclear heat source change the economics? Comparing to the points above:

1. One cannot buy a steam turbine operating at 650°C and higher temperatures RH202 exam. The most feasible option for taking advantage of the high temperature of molten-salt and pebble-bed reactors is gas turbines.
2. The hot-side heat exchanger is either inherent (in a gas-cooled reactor) or required to separate the nuclear materials and the working fluid (molten-salt reactor).
3. Nuclear plants do not chemically modify the working fluid of their heat engines, so are the equivalent of "external combustion".
4. The cold-side heat exchanger is required (like the condenser in a steam turbine).
5. The reduced operating temperature is a given, set by the nuclear heat source.
6. Since the gas turbine can operate at a higher source temperature than a steam turbine and can thus achieve greater thermal efficiency 642-453 exam, it improves the return on the capital investment in the rest of the plant. This reduces costs relative to revenue.
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Product Details

ISBN 978-1-4116-8491-1
Copyright Standard Copyright License
Edition First
Publisher SteamCenter.com
Published November 30, 2009
Language English
Pages 164
 
Binding Perfect-bound Paperback
Interior Ink Black & white
Dimensions (inches) 6.0 wide × 9.0 tall

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Engineering