The paper presents a thorough analysis of the historical data and results acquired over a period of two years through an on-line real-time monitoring system installed at a combined heat and power (CHP) plant. For gas turbine health and performance assessment, a gas path analysis tool based on the adaptive modeling method is integrated into the system. An engine adapted model built through a semi-automated method is part of a procedure which includes a steam/water cycle simulation module and an economic module used for power plant performance and economic assessment. The adaptive modeling diagnostic method allowed for accurate health assessment during base and part load operation identifying and quantifying compressor recoverable deterioration and the root cause of an engine performance shift. Next, the performance and economic assessment procedure was applied for quantifying the economic benefit accrued by implementing daily on-line washing and for evaluating the financial gains if the off-line washings time intervals are optimized based on actual engine performance deterioration rates. The results demonstrate that this approach allows continuous health and performance monitoring at full and part load operation enhancing decision making capabilities and adding to the information that can be acquired through traditional analysis methods based on heat balance and base load correction curves.
Propulsion diagnostic method evaluation strategy (ProDiMES) offers an aircraft engine diagnostic benchmark problem where the performance of candidate diagnostic methods is evaluated while a fair comparison can be established. In the present paper, the performance evaluation of a number of gas turbine diagnostic methods using the ProDiMES software is presented. All diagnostic methods presented here were developed at the Laboratory of Thermal Turbomachinery of the National Technical University of Athens (LTT/NTUA). Component, sensor, and actuator fault scenarios that occur in a fleet of deteriorated twin-spool turbofan engines are considered. The performance of each diagnostic method is presented through the evaluation metrics introduced in the ProDiMES software. Remarks about each methods performance as well as the detectability and classification rates of each fault scenario are made.
An approach for gas turbine engine modelling using a general purpose object-oriented simulation tool is described. A commercially available such tool that can be adapted to different fields, through the creation of reusable modelling component libraries representing parts or equipment of a physical system, is employed. Libraries are developed using an object-oriented language. The possibility for quick implementation of new models and rapid analysis of results, through the use of a graphical user interface is demonstrated. A turbofan model, developed for both steady state and transient performance simulation, is used to illustrate the advantages offered by this approach. Results are presented and compared to those produced by an industry-accepted model. The flexibility of incorporating particular features into a model is demonstrated by presenting the implementation of adaptive features and a study of engine frequency response.
This paper describes the integration of advanced methods such as component zooming and distributed computing, in an object-oriented simulation environment dedicated to gas turbine engine performance modelling. A 1-D compressor stage stacking method is used to demonstrate three approaches for integrating numerical zooming in an engine model. In the first approach a 1-D compressor model produces a compressor map that is then used in the engine model in place of the default one. In the second approach the results of the 1-D analysis are passed to the 0-D component through appropriate ‘zooming’ scalars. In the final approach the 1-D compressor component directly replaces the 0-D one in the engine model. Distributed computing is realized using Web Services technology. The implementation steps for a distributed scenario are presented. The standalone compressor stage stacking method, in the form of a shared library, is placed in a remote site and can be accessed over the internet through a Web Service Operation (server side). An engine simulation is set up containing a 1-D compressor component which acts as the client for the Web Service operation. Future development of the tool’s advanced capabilities is finally discussed.
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