Performance Evaluation of Control Compatibility for an OTEC Pump Shutdown Condition
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. OTEC System Performance Analysis
2.1. Closed-Cycle OTEC System
2.1.1. Cycle Physical Theory of the OTEC System
2.1.2. Physical Theory of the OTEC System Pumps
2.1.3. Material Balance
2.1.4. Energy Balance
2.2. Design of the MW-Scale OTEC System
2.2.1. Construction of the OTEC System
2.2.2. Specifications of the Working Fluid Pump
2.3. Dynamic Cycle Simulation
Dynamic Cycle Performance Simulation
- (1)
- Seawater pump (surface and deep seawater) stops: aging of pump, electric leakage, system blackout, damage to key components, external impact, unskilled operation technique, immersion in seawater, clogged impeller, biofouling, seawater leakage, etc.;
- (2)
- Refrigerant pump stops: aging of pump, electric leakage, external impact, damage to key components, refrigerant leakage, unskilled operation technique, clogged impeller, etc.
Situation | How to Apply the Situation | Expected Result | Control Element |
---|---|---|---|
Sea water pump stops (surface seawater) | Rapid decrease in surface seawater flow | Separator liquid rise, turbine liquid inflow, turbine output decrease | Refrigerant pump flow control, second surface seawater pump |
Sea water pump stops (deep seawater) | Rapid decrease in deep seawater flow | Separator liquid rise, turbine liquid inflow, turbine output decrease | Refrigerant pump flow control, second deep seawater pump |
Refrigerant pump stops | Rapid decrease in refrigerant flow rate | Reduce turbine power | Refrigerant pump flow control, emergency stop |
3. Risk Simulation and Improvement Plan Development
3.1. Change in Performance with Respect to Pump Shutdowns
3.1.1. Standard Conditions
3.1.2. Shutdown of Surface Seawater Pump
3.1.3. Shutdown of Deep Seawater Pump
3.1.4. Shutdown of Refrigerant Pump
3.2. Analysis of Pump Control Solutions in MW OTEC
3.2.1. Control for Surface Seawater Pump
3.2.2. Control for Deep Seawater Pump
3.2.3. Control for Refrigerant Pump
4. Results of OTEC Simulation with Improved Operation and Control System
4.1. Simulation Results
4.1.1. Shutdown of Surface Seawater Pump
4.1.2. Shutdown of Deep Seawater Pump
4.1.3. Shutdown of Working Fluid Pump
4.2. Improvement Evaluation of Simulation Results
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Preliminary Hazard List Analysis | |||
---|---|---|---|
No. | System Item | Hazard | Hazard Effects |
1 | Buoyant Structures | -Unbalanced buoyancy -Damage by external force -Change in marine environment -Weather phenomena | -Sinking -Loss of buoyancy -Instability |
2 | Mooring System | -Damage by external force -Long-term exposure to seawater -Maintenance of deep seawater connection parts -Vulnerable parts | -Fracture -Loss of structure -Instability -Corrosion -Defects |
3 | Foundation Structures | -Insufficient date on deep seawater -Ground fluctuation (e.g., earthquake) -Damage by external force | -Fracture, defects -Structural fluctuation |
4 | Riser System | -Vibration caused by long-term exposure to marine environment -Damage by external force -Abnormal operation -Fracture of junction with floating structure | -Fracture -Structural fluctuation -Overflow of mooring, buoyancy, and riser systems -Generation efficiency decline |
5 | Generation Facilities | -Electric converting disability -Damage by external force | -Generation efficiency decline -Refrigerant leakage -Refrigerant Pump shutdown |
6 | Seawater Intake Facility | -Unstable electric supply -Inflow of particles -Damage by external force | -Pump shutdown -Pump efficiency decline -Seawater leakage |
Design Conditions | ||
---|---|---|
Surface seawater temperature | 31 | °C |
Deep seawater temperature | 5 | °C |
Surface seawater flow rate | 1236 | kg/s |
Deep seawater flow rate | 1004 | kg/s |
Refrigerant flow rate | 112.2 | kg/s |
Surface seawater head loss | 5.5 | m |
Deep seawater head loss | 8.5 | m |
Surface seawater pump efficiency | 75 | % |
Deep seawater pump efficiency | 75 | % |
Working fluid | R32 | - |
Parameter | Value | Unit |
---|---|---|
Operating Condition Design | ||
Refrigerant pump RPM range | 950~1150 | RPM |
Working time | 600 | s |
First change time | 290 | s |
Liquid volume in reservoir tank | 4.54 | m3 |
Normal operation output | 980 | kW |
Normal warm water pump output | 105 | kW |
Normal cold water pump output | 111 | kW |
Normal refrigerant pump output | 66 | kW |
Pump Shutdown Condition Design | ||
Decreased time in surface seawater flow | 120 | s |
Decreased time in deep seawater flow | 120 | s |
Decreased time in refrigerant flow | 120 | s |
Situation | Effects on System | Control Module | Achievements | Improvement |
---|---|---|---|---|
Surface seawater pump shutdown | -Liquid inflow to turbine -System output decrease -System shutdown | Installation of 3 pumps (2 in parallel operation, 1 spare, and alarm when pump shuts down) | -Hazard solved | High |
Deep seawater pump shutdown | High | |||
Refrigerant pump shutdown | -System shutdown -System output decrease | Parallel operation of 2 pumps (alarm when pump shuts down) | -Prevention of system shutdown | Medium |
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Lim, S.; Yoon, J.; Lee, H.; Kim, H. Performance Evaluation of Control Compatibility for an OTEC Pump Shutdown Condition. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2023, 11, 155. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11010155
Lim S, Yoon J, Lee H, Kim H. Performance Evaluation of Control Compatibility for an OTEC Pump Shutdown Condition. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2023; 11(1):155. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11010155
Chicago/Turabian StyleLim, Seungtaek, Jiwon Yoon, Hosaeng Lee, and Hyeonju Kim. 2023. "Performance Evaluation of Control Compatibility for an OTEC Pump Shutdown Condition" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 11, no. 1: 155. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11010155
APA StyleLim, S., Yoon, J., Lee, H., & Kim, H. (2023). Performance Evaluation of Control Compatibility for an OTEC Pump Shutdown Condition. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 11(1), 155. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11010155