+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 -...

Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 -...

Date post: 13-Mar-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 10 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
45
Increased Flexibility of Turbo-Compressors in Natural Gas Transmission Through Direct Surge Control Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of Southwest Research Institute ®
Transcript
Page 1: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Increased Flexibility of Turbo-Compressors in Natural Gas Transmission Through

Direct Surge Control

Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan

October 2001 - December 2004

Prepared by Robert McKee

Shane SiebenalerDanny Deffenbaugh

of Southwest Research Institute®

Page 2: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Project Identification

This DOE project was directed and funded by DOE’s Office of Fossil Energy, the National Energy Technology Laboratory, and theStrategic Center for Natural Gas and Oil, in the Delivery Reliability Program, as part of the Natural Gas Infrastructure Program.

The Co-funders are the Gas Machinery Research Council and Siemens Energy and Automation Other participants were Duke and El Paso Energy and Solar Turbines. Conducted by Southwest Research Institute

Page 3: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Centrifugal Compressor Operating Map

1.2

1.24

1.28

1.32

15 30 45 60

Inlet Volume Flow

Dis

char

ge P

ress

ure

Rat

io

1 0 0 % RPM9 5 % RPM9 0 % RPM8 5 % RPM Surge LineSurge Cont rol

Compressor Curve Showing Surge Line and Operational Boundaries

SUR

GE

LIN

E

STONEWALL

MAX SPEED/ MAOP/ POWER LIMIT

MINIMUM SPEED LIMIT LIMIT

Surge is a potentially damaging instability. Surge limits low flow operations. Current controls results in unnecessary recycle flow.

Page 4: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Objectives

To develop an internal surge control sensor and an associated surge control system that will allow reduced surge margins, increased range and flexibility of operation, and safe minimization of the energy and costs of avoiding surge in pipeline centrifugal compressors.To meet the needs of the natural gas industry for improved surge control.

Page 5: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

What happens before and during surge?

In some, but not all cases, surge is preceded by unsteady pulsation and vibrations due to stall. In other cases, there are no vibrations, pulsation, or warnings and surge occurs suddenly. Surge is a complete collapse of compressor flow and results in gas travelling backwards through a forward spinning impeller.Surge is energetic and can cause damage to thrust bearings, seals, impellers, etc. A flow re-circulation occurs at the impeller inlet as

identified by previous GMRC research

Page 6: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Industry Specifications - General

The sensor is to be simple, rugged, sensitive, cost effective, manufacturable, installable, and able to detect the nearness of surge in a useful manner. The controller is to use the nearness to surge signal and incorporate algorithms to control the compressor in a flexible manner, with a minimum safe surge margin, and increased efficiency in response to the operating requirements.

Page 7: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Design Process and Typical Drag Probe

• Size probe for max and min velocity & force

• Size bending beam for support & strain sensitivity

• Predict & avoid vortex & mech. natural frequencies

• Design probe holder & wire way

• Iterate on design until all is OK

Page 8: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Flow Test Results for a Drag Probe

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700

Flow Rate ACFM

Stra

in m

icro

inch

es

Base84 Repeat Rep2 130

Flow Test of Long Probe in 1-3 Direction at 84 and 130 Degrees

One Direction Flow at Two Temperatures

Page 9: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Flow Test Results as Force vs. Strain

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Force (Calculated)

Stra

in m

icro

inch

es

Base 84 Repeat Rep2 130

Flow Test of Long Probe in 1-3 Direction at 84 and 130 Degrees

Flow calibrations are not necessary for every probe

Page 10: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

A Finding from the Test Program

Direct Surge Control in the present implementation with a probe at the impeller inlet is applicable for modern 3D impellers and not for older units with 2D impellers where the blades are recessed from the inlet. It is estimated that between 66 and 80 percent of pipeline centrifugal compressors in use are of the modern 3D design.

Page 11: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Laboratory Compressor Test at Low Speed Axial & Tangential Strain with Scaled Flow

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

2:26 2:34 2:41 2:48 2:55 3:02 3:10 3:17 3:24

Time

Stra

in A

xial

AxialStr ScFlow TangSt4

Second Lab Test 13,100 RPM

Page 12: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Laboratory Compressor Test at High Speed Axial & Tangential Strain with Scaled Flow

-2 0

-1 5

-1 0

-5

0

5

1 0

1 5

2 0

2 5

3 0

10:45 10:46 10:47 10:48 10:48 10:49 10:50

Time During Test

Stra

in

AxialStr ScFlow TangSt4

Second Lab Test 19,200 RPM

Page 13: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Increased Range on the Laboratory Unit Map with Use of Direct Surge Detection

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

8000

9000

10000

0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000

Inlet Flow Q

Head

ft-

lbf/l

bm

LowS p

Me dS p

De signS p

HighS p

13,100

16,020

19,240

21,865

S urgeLine

Turndown by Surge Line = 47%, by Surge Probe = 68%

Page 14: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Plot of Axial Strain Changes as a Function of Flow Coefficient for Laboratory Tests

-25

-20

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6

Flow Coefficient

Axia

l Stra

in

13.1K 16.0K 19.2K

Strain vs. Flow Coefficient

Page 15: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Diagram of Flow Vectors as Surge is Approached with a Drag Probe Location

1 2

3 4

Page 16: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Requirements for Direct Surge Detection

The route of the wire within and leaving the compressor must be protected and secure. Solid core wires in a quality compression fitting are needed.The output of the strain gauge bridge from the probe must be stable and repeatable. The strain gauge circuit should automatically balance when a compressor is shut down for a period of time.

Page 17: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Long-Term Stability of Strain Signals with Operational Changes

-1.5

-1

-0.5

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

8/ 10/ 04 0:00 8/ 12/ 04 0:00 8/ 14/ 04 0:00 8/ 16/ 04 0:00 8/ 18/ 04 0:00 8/ 20/ 04 0:00 8/ 22/ 04 0:00 8/ 24/ 04 0:00

Time During Monitoring

Axi

al &

Tan

g St

rain

Vol

ts

Axia l

Ta nge nt

Flow

Page 18: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Field Test B - Axial and Tangential Strain at Low Pressure & Low Speed

-40

-20

0

20

40

60

80

14:05 14:12 14:19 14:26 14:34 14:41 14:48

Time

Stra

ins

& F

low

Rel

ated

Axial Tang Flow

Test B, approaching surge at low pressure & low speed

Page 19: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Field Test C - Axial and Tangential Strain at Low Pressure & Low Speed

-40

-20

0

20

40

60

80

16:26 16:33 16:40 16:48 16:55 17:02 17:09 17:16

Time

Stra

ins

& F

low

Rel

ated

Axial

Tang

Flow

Test C, approaching surge at low pressure & low speed

Page 20: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Field Test E - Axial and Tangential Strain at Low Pressure & Low Speed

-40

-20

0

20

40

60

80

15:00 15:07 15:14 15:21 15:28 15:36 15:43 15:50

Time

Surg

e Pa

ram

eter

s

Flow DP Axial St

Tangent St

Approach Into Surge at Low Pressure (200 psia) and Low Speed

Page 21: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Plot of Strain Difference as a Function of Nominal Flow for Lab and Field Tests

-50

-40

-30

-20

-10

0

10

20

30

40

2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

Flow

Stra

in D

iff

13,100RPM16,000RPM19,200RPMNG Test B NG Test CNG Test E

Page 22: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Axial and Tangential Strain Changes During a Rapid Approach to Surge

-10

0

10

20

30

14:57 14:58 14:59 15:00 15:00 15:01

Time

Varia

ble Axial

Tangent Flow Scal

Rapid Approach to Surge July 29, 2004

Page 23: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

-100

-50

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

13:50 13:52 13:53 13:54 13:56 13:57

Time

Axi

al S

trai

n

Tangential Strain

Axial Strain

Scaled Flow Rate

Axial and Tangential Strain During a Moderate Pressure Approach to Surge

Page 24: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Axial and Tangential Strain During a High Pressure High Speed Approach to Surge

-100

-50

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

16:06 16:07 16:09 16:10 16:12 16:13 16:14 16:16 16:17 16:19 16:20

Time During High Speed Test

Stra

ins

and

Flow

Scaled Flow Rate

Axial Strain

Tangential Strain

Page 25: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Trends is Strain as the Field Compressor Approached Surge

-100

-80

-60

-40

-20

0

20

40

60

80

100

100 150 200 250 300 350 400

Flow DP

Stra

ins

Axia l S t

Tangent S t

Appro ximate Vo lumetric F lo w Ra tes

Page 26: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Field Compressor Performance Map with Direct Surge Control

1.06

1.07

1.08

1.09

1.1

1.11

1.12

1.13

1.14

1.15

1.16

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000

Inlet Flow ACFM\

Pres

sure

Rat

io

16K

17K

18K

19K

20K

Surge Limit

Data Points

SurgeControl

New Control

Data Points

Page 27: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

CFD Modeling of Impeller Inlet Flows

To determine if CFD analysis can be used to predict re-circulation zones. To explain the differences between 2D and 3D impeller results. Undertaken as a result of improved modeling capability and better understanding of geometric and operational flow effects on re-circulation.

Page 28: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Cross-Section of the Modeled Impeller Inlet Flow Path

Page 29: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

CFD Models of 3D and 2D Impellers

Page 30: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

CFD Results at Design Flow (1037 ACFM)

Page 31: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

CFD Results at Surge Line (685 ACFM)

Page 32: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

CFD Results at Near Actual Surge

Page 33: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

CFD Results for 2D Impeller at Low Flow

Page 34: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Steps for Implementation of Direct Surge Control - Part 1

1. Determine that the compressor is a modern, single-stage machine with a 3D impeller.

2. Calculate the flow velocity and gas density ranges at the impeller inlet (area required).

3. Size the drag body (start of an iteration).4. Calculate the forces acting on the drag body

for the full range of flows. (CD = 0.5)5. Determine the probe’s bending beam width

(square) and length for strength and sensitivity.

Page 35: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Steps for Implementation of Direct Surge Control - Part 2

6. Calculate the strain expected from gauges due to maximum and near surge flows.

7. Calculate the mechanical natural and vortex shedding frequencies. Check that these do not coincide with compressor or other frequencies.

8. Design the probe holder to secure the probe in the correct location at the impeller inlet. Check the location relative to the expected re-circulation using a CFD analysis.

9. Check that the final design is properly sized, rugged (strong), sensitive, and vibration free. If it is not, return to Step 3 to adjust variables.

Page 36: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

A Drag Probe Resulting from Design Steps and Ready for Installation

Page 37: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Steps for Implementation of Direct Surge Control - Part 3

10. Arrange for the signal wires to pass through internal dividers, in conduits, and a pressure fitting to the outside of the compressor case.

11. Connect the probe wires to an amplifier and a surge controller to monitor axial and tangential strain signals, filter (avg.), and process the strain indications of approaching surge.

12. Tune the balance, gain, filter, and algorithms to control the compressor to minimize recycle flow and achieve stable, wider, and efficient operation.

Page 38: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

The Surge Controller should;

Accommodate two half bridge amplifiers for the strain signals with ±5 volt outputs. Sample data at 80 to 240 Hz to follow flow changes but not high frequency noise or disturbances. Satisfy Class I, Div. 2, Group D in a NEMA panel.Monitor compressor speed, pressure, temperature, & flow as a convenience for display and recording.Filter by short averaging and process the strain signals through a selected algorithm such as the difference of axial and tangential strain and provide an output when the signal drops below a set limit.

Page 39: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Conclusions

Surge is a potentially damaging flow instability that limits the low-flow operation of centrifugal compressors and is usually avoided by wasteful and inefficient recycling of flow. Early GMRC research identified flow recirculation along the outer wall of a compressor inlet as a surge precursor and a potential control signal that can be sensed with a drag type probe. A step-by-step design procedure for direct surge control drag probes and controllers is defined by this research and given in the report.

Page 40: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Conclusions - continued a

Surge probes designed per the procedures and fabricated per specifications need to be checked functionally but not calibrated or flow tested. Test results show that for sensitive near surge detection, with the current methods the impellers must be a modern 3D design. Flow changes along the outer wall of a centrifugal impeller inlet do produce re-circulating flows, which cause axial and tangential strain changes on a drag probe that indicate the approach of surge.

Page 41: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Conclusions – continued b

A control algorithm based on comparing the difference between the axial and tangential strains is less sensitive in installation details and can be used as a surge control method. Operational tests show an increase in low flow range of up to 25 percent for compressors with direct surge control. A potential savings of 10 to 24 MSCF or $50 to $120 per hour of operation is expected. The possible industry wide saving is $50 to $85 million per year. CFD modeling can be used to check the location of a direct surge control probe in the re-circulation.

Page 42: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Demonstration and Commercialization of Direct Surge ControlThe direct surge control system is successful as a prototype but needs to be demonstrated as a commercial product in a pipeline compressor. SwRI, along with the GMRC advisors, will identify and interview a number of potential application contractors and will help to select one. The interest of all parties, DOE, Siemens Energy & Automation, Solar Turbines, others, and particularly the user companies, will be considered. A demonstration project led by an application contractor will install a system in a member’s pipeline compressor & operate it for all to see.

Page 43: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Tasks in the Demonstration and Commercialization Project

Task A. Identify and select an application contractor or contractor alliance. Task B. Transfer the technology for design and installation of direct surge probes and controller interfaces to the application contactor. Task C. Conduct a field demonstration of the commercial direct surge control system led by the contractor with oversight from SwRI & GMRC.

Page 44: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

Companies to Consider as Potential Application Contractors

Demag Delaval – A compressor division of Siemens.Petrotech Inc. – An experienced control system supplier. Alotronic - An experienced control system supplier.Cooper Compressor – A manufacturer of integral geared compressors. Solar Turbines – A manufacturer of pipeline compressors.Metrix – An instrument manufacturer.Compressor Controls Corp. – A controls supplier.Rosemount – An instrument company.Many Others

Page 45: Final Direct Surge Control Report & GMRC Project Plan · & GMRC Project Plan October 2001 - December 2004 Prepared by Robert McKee Shane Siebenaler Danny Deffenbaugh of ... -5 0 5

SwRI’s Actions at the Start of the Project

Contact each company to discuss the technology and needs and to determine who is interested With the oversight committee, develop a selection criteria and what we need from the contractor.Request a proposal from the interested parties.Evaluate the proposal and with industry select one.Start the transfer of technology to the contractor.Plan for and monitor the demonstration test. Report to the GMRC at all stages in the project and on the final report.


Recommended