Chandrakanth_balusa
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Hoow can one estimate the amount of steam required to generate certain amount of electical power mathematicaly?
Broad answer to broad question: From the energy content of the steam and the efficiency of the turbine.Chandrakanth_balusa said:Hoow can one estimate the amount of steam required to generate certain amount of electical power mathematicaly?
Hello Russ Watters,russ_watters said:Broad answer to broad question: From the energy content of the steam and the efficiency of the turbine.
Again, the question is very broad, so the response is a basic conservation of energy statement:Chandrakanth_balusa said:thanks for your response!
do u have any mathematical formulae concernig my question?
to be specific , I have some knowledge of how the turbine generators sets work in a steam power plant.russ_watters said:Again, the question is very broad, so the response is a basic conservation of energy statement:
Eout = Ein * Efficiency
If what you really want to know is the details of how a turbine works, I suggest starting with some of your own reading and then asking specific questions about that.
That's an oddly worded question. There should not be a "how long" or rather the answer is: as long as you keep providing it with fuel.Chandrakanth_balusa said:to be specific , I have some knowledge of how the turbine generators sets work in a steam power plant.
i have seen some threads regarding the calculation of turbine output power.
but i wanted to know if there is any possibility to estimate if how long a boiler can serve particular turbine generator set to produce power continously depending on the steam available...
Any introductory thermodynamics book will put considerable emphasis on this. I keep the textbook by Cengel and Boles at my desk (for HVAC)....if possible can anyone suggest me a nice platform or books regarding steam turbines with calculations and some examples!
ok thank you for valuable responses.russ_watters said:That's an oddly worded question. There should not be a "how long" or rather the answer is: as long as you keep providing it with fuel.
Any introductory thermodynamics book will put considerable emphasis on this. I keep the textbook by Cengel and Boles at my desk (for HVAC).
There's lots of online resources that look good too, googling "steam turbine thermodynamics".