Mercury vapour turbine
A mercury vapour turbine is a form of heat engine that uses mercury to drive the thermal cycle. A mercury vapour turbine has been used in conjunction with a steam turbine[1] for generating electricity. This example of combined cycle generation does not seem to have been widely adopted, probably because of high capital cost and the obvious toxic hazard if the mercury leaked into the environment.
The mercury cycle offers an efficiency increase compared to a steam-only cycle because energy can be injected into the Rankine Cycle at higher temperature. Metallurgical developments have allowed steam-only plants to increase in efficiency over time, making the mercury vapour turbine obsolete. Modern Combined Cycle Combustion Turbine Generating Stations operate at 61% efficiency, and with none of the safety issues indigenous to a binary mercury Rankine cycle steam power plant
Historical example
The Electrical Year Book, 1937,[2] contained the following description of a mercury vapour turbine operating in commercial use:
The advantage of operating a mercury-vapour turbine in conjunction with a steam power plant lies in the fact that the complete cycle can be worked over a very wide range of temperature without employing any abnormal pressure. The exhaust from the mercury turbine is used to raise steam for the steam turbine. The Hartford Electric Light Co. (U.S.A.) has a 10,000kW turbo-generator driven by mercury vapour, which reaches the turbine at 70 lb. per sq. in. (gauge), 880°F. The mercury vapour is condensed at 445°F and raises 129,000 lb. steam per hr. at 280 lb. per sq. in. pressure. The latter is superheated to 735°F and passed to the steam turbines. During 4 months continuous operation, this plant averaged about 0.715 lb. of coal per kWh of net output, about 43% of the output being from the mercury turbine generator and 57% from the steam plant. On maintained full-load the heat output averages 9800 BTU per net kWh [34.8% efficiency]. It is believed that maintenance costs will be lower than in ordinary steam plant. The back-pressure on the mercury turbine is fixed by the steam boiler pressure; only a small vacuum pump is needed, as there is no air or other gas in the mercury system.
Power plants designed by William Le Roy Emmet were constructed by General Electric and operated between 1923 and 1950. Large plants included:
- Hartford, Connecticut, 1.8 MW, starting in 1922, uprated in stages to 15 MW in 1949
- Kearny Generating Station, New Jersey, 20 MW mercury turbine +30 MW steam, started 1933[3]
- Schenectady, New York[4]
- Portsmouth, New Hampshire, 40 MW, 1950[5][6]
References
- ^ British Thomson Houston Patent GB 191321689(A)
- ^ The Electrical Year Book 1937, published by Emmott and Company Limited, Manchester, England, page 34
- ^ "Mercury as a Working Fluid". www.douglas-self.com. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ^ Robert U. Ayres, Leslie Ayres, Leslie W. Ayres Accounting for Resources, 2: The Life Cycle of Materials, Edward Elgar Publishing, 1999 ISBN 185898923X, page 169
- ^ Nag Power Plant Engineering 3e, Tata McGraw-Hill Education, 2008 ISBN 0070648158 page 107
- ^ Herman Branover, Yeshajahu Unger Metallurgical Technologies, Energy Conversion, and Magnetohydrodynamic FlowsAIAA, 1993 ISBN 1563470195 page 337-338
External links
- Mercury as a Working Fluid
- Time magazine article 1929, Mercury into power
- Time magazine article 1942 Power with Quicksilver
- "Mercury Turbine Now A Success drawing page 40
- "Cheaper Power From Quicksilver" Popular Science Monthly, September 1929