steam turbine boiler Articles
-
Bucknell University - 6 MW CHP Application - Case Study
Quick Facts Location: Lewisburg, PA Campus Size: 450 acre campus with > 150 buildings, totaling 2.4 MM sq. ft. Student population over 3,300 Campus Loads: 42,000 MWh per yr 7.5 MW peak demand 70,000 lbs per hr steam Prime Movers: Solar Taurus 60 combustion turbine 70k lb/hr HRSG with redundancy Murray KG4 steam turbine Annual Energy Savings: $1.25 MM between 2003 and 2006 Installed System ...
-
University of Texas Medical Branch - 15 MW CHP System - Case Study
Quick Facts LOCATION: Galveston, TX MARKET SECTOR: University/Hospital FACILITY SIZE: 45+ buildings, 2+ million gross square feet FACILITY PEAK LOAD: 45 MW FACILITY AVERAGE LOAD: 30 MW EQUIPMENT: East Plant: Solar Taurus 60 5.5 MW gas combustion turbine, a 2 MW condensing extraction steam turbine, heat recovery steam boiler, one 1 MW diesel engine West Plant: Solar Taurus 60 5.5 MW gas ...
-
Exergoeconomic analysis of a Kalina cycle coupled coal–fired steam power plant
This paper presents exergoeconomic analysis of a Kalina cycle coupled coal–fired steam power plant using specific exergy costing (SPECO) methodology. Cost–balance and auxiliary equations are developed and solved. The results indicate that in the topping cycle, the boiler and the turbine contribute maximum to the formation of product cost. High value of exergoeconomic factor for the boiler ...
-
Saint Mary’s Hospital - 7.75 MW CHP System - Case Study
Quick Facts LOCATION: Rochester, Minnesota MARKET SECTOR: Healthcare FACILITY SIZE: 3 Million Square Feet, 960 Licensed Beds FACILITY PEAK LOADS: Electric: 12.0 Megawatts Heating: 130,000 lb/hr Steam Cooling: 7,500 Tons TOTAL CHP GENERATING CAPACITY: 7.75 Megawatts HEAT RECOVERY RATE: 24,000 lb/hr of 250 psig Steam HEAT RECOVERY UTILIZATION: Building heating or cooling, medical equipment ...
-
Cleaning Up Gasification Syngas
Documento sin título Introduction By definition, gasification is the art of changing a non-gaseous substance, such as a liquid or a solid, into a gas. By this definition, processes such as combustion, anaerobic digestion and pyrolysis would be classified as gasification. However, in today’s world, gasification is defined as any process, which produces a “synthesis gas” or a ...
Need help finding the right suppliers? Try XPRT Sourcing. Let the XPRTs do the work for you