Power Plant Engineering
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Power-Plant-Engineering
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- ( c ) Direct Cooling.
- 12.2.4 HIGH-VOLTAGE GENERATORS
- Fig. 12.12.
Fig. 12.11. Arrangement of Hydrogen-Cooling
System. 392 POWER PLANT ENGINEERING Hydrogen cooling results in substantial increase in mW, rating for a given temperature-rise, and the reduction in windage may add 0.5–1.0 percent to the efficiency of a 100 mW, machine. Fig. 12.11 gives a diagram of the auxiliary equipment required for a hydrogen -cooled machine. (c) Direct Cooling. Direct cooling of stator windings is applied at ratings rather higher than that which makes the method necessary for rotors. Tubular conductors like those of Fig. 12.3 can be used, or thin-walled metal ducts lightly insulated from normal stator conductors. A similar design serves for water-cooling a stator. Here arrangements are required in the overhang for the parallel flow of coolant as well as for the series connection of successive coil-sides. Insulating tubes convey the liquid to and from the water “headers,” and the water itself must have adequate resistivity to limit conduction loss. Water- cooling has obvious disadvantages for rotors. 12.2.4 HIGH-VOLTAGE GENERATORS Although it is usual to combine a generator with a transformer to develop an output at high voltage, machines have been built for feeding a 33 kV network direct. In one design, the stator has three circular rows of staggered round slots, having narrow radial slot openings to the stator bore, and provided with triple-concentric circular slot conductors. The insula- tion between conductors, and between the outer conductors and slot walls, is flexible micanite. The electric stress imposed on the insulation is no greater than in a machine built for normal voltage. The innermost (or “bull”) conductor in every slot forms that third of the winding connected to the line terminals, while the “outer” conductors are at the star-point end. The conditions for heat dissipation from the central “bull” conductor are rather unfavorable, and a low current density is necessary. The slot reactance tends to be high. Fig. 12.12 shows the slot of a 33 kV machine of more orthodox design. Three completely sepa- rate windings insulated respectively for 11, 22 and 33 kV, (line) are used, the 11 kV, section being at the bottom of the slots. Each conductor is made in the form of a capaci-tor bushing, with conducting shields buried in the insulation to control radial electric stress. The thicker insulation of the higher- voltage windings requires the copper to be deeper and more extensively laminated. The grading shields facili- tate longitudinal stress control at the ends of the conductor outside the core. Bakelite strip Fireproof conductor insulation and bakelized asbestos wrap Slip-plane here for thermal expansion Micanite cell Fireproof separator Grading shields Bakelite wedge Fig. 12.12. Slots for 33 kV Generator. The machines discussed are generators designed for water wheel and internal-combustion en- gine or gas-turbine drives, and salient-pole synchronous motors. Synchronous capacitors may resemble either turbo or salient-pole machines, usually the former. Download 3.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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