About DOE Button Organization Button News Button Contact Us Button
Search  
US Department of Energy Seal and Header Photo
Science and Technology Button Energy Sources Button Energy Efficiency Button The Environment Button Prices and Trends Button National Security Button Safety and Health Button
_DOE Office of Fossil Energy Web Site

Fossil Energy

-

Clean Coal & Natural Gas Power Systems

-

Carbon Sequestration

-

Hydrogen & Other Clean Fuels

-

Oil & Natural Gas Supply & Delivery

-

Natural Gas Regulation

-

U.S. Petroleum Reserves

-

IN YOUR STATE

OFFICES & FACILITIES

STAY CONNECTED

Join Us on FacebookFollow Us on TwitterSign Up for NewsAlertsSubscribe to our RSS Feeds

QUICK REFERENCE

You are here:  Clean Coal & Natural Gas Power Systems > Turbine Technology R&D > Turbine Successes

DOE Technology Successes -
"Breakthrough" Gas Turbines

For years, gas turbine manufacturers faced a barrier that, for all practical purposes, capped power generating efficiencies for turbine-based power generating systems.

The barrier was temperature. Above 2300 degrees F, available cooling technologies were insufficient to protect the turbine blades and other internal components from heat degradation. Since higher temperatures are the key to higher efficiencies, this effectively limited the generating efficiency at which a turbine power plant could convert the energy in the fuel into electricity.

The Department of Energy's Office of Fossil Energy took on the challenge of turbine temperatures in 1992, and nine years later, its private sector partners produced "breakthrough" turbine systems that pushed firing temperatures to 2,600 degrees F and permitted combined cycle efficiencies that surpassed the 60 percent mark - setting the current world record for turbine efficiency.

Moreover, the advanced turbines achieved the higher firing temperatures while reducing the amount of nitrogen oxides formed to less than 10 parts per million (NOx is a product of high temperature combustion), without any post-combustion cleanup.

Among the innovations that emerged from the Department's Advanced Turbine Systems program were single-crystal turbine blades and thermal barrier coatings (TBC) that could withstand the high inlet temperatures, along with new firing techniques to stabilize combustion and minimize nitrogen oxide formation.

The GE H System Turbine


GE's H System? Turbine at Rollout Ceremony
GE's H System Turbine
On February 18, 2000, GE Power Systems unveiled the first gas turbine slated for the U.S. market that would break through the temperature barrier and push efficiencies to unprecedented levels. Using advanced materials and revolutionary new steam-cooling technology, the new turbine is capable of operating at 2600 degrees F.

The H System is GE's most efficient gas turbine combined cycle product and is the first platform designed with the capability to reach 60 percent thermal efficiency. The H System's higher fuel efficiency provides power producers and end users lower cost of electricity through fuel conservation while adhering to strict environmental requirements for natural gas fired power plants. The revolutionary H System was funded in part through the U.S. Department of Energy's Advanced Turbine System Program.

The innovative, closed-loop steam cooling system and advanced coating materials are key technology enablers to achieving the higher firing temperatures required for its increased efficiency. Higher efficiency also translates into improved environmental performance. For every unit of electricity produced, the H System uses less fuel and produces fewer greenhouse gases and other emissions when compared to other large gas turbine combined-cycle systems.

Baglan Bay Power Station in Cardiff, Wales, U.K., is the site of the world's first installation of H technology. The plant is capable of producing 480 megawatts of electricity, enough to meet the needs of half a million households. It is supplying power to the Baglan Energy Park, with the remaining electricity going to the U.K. national grid. The H System, has surpassed 9,000 hours. Reaching this milestone, the equivalent of more than one full year of operation, demonstrates the ability of the H System to use gas turbine steam cooling to achieve increased combined-cycle efficiency with exceptional emissions performance.

While Baglan Bay is the first global application of the H System, the North American launch site for the technology will be Calpine Corporation's Inland Empire Energy Center in Southern California. This 775-megawatt project will be based on two 60-hertz, GE S107H combined cycle systems. Licensed by the California Energy Commission, the Inland Empire project will be capable of meeting the energy needs of nearly 600,000 households in one of the fastest growing regions in California. It is scheduled to be in operation by a point in time when state energy officials have predicted that energy supplies may not be sufficient to meet demand.

In addition to the Baglan Bay and Inland Empire projects, GE also has a confirmed order from the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) for three 50-hertz H systems, to be installed at TEPCO's Futtsu Thermal Power Station. The combined output of the three systems will be 1,520 megawatts.

The Siemens Westinghouse Advanced W501G Turbine


Siemens Westinghouse Advanced Gas Turbine
Siemens Westinghouse W501G Advanced Gas Turbine

The partnership between the Department of Energy and Siemens Westinghouse, under the Advanced Turbine Program, has resulted in a suite of advanced gas turbine technologies that today are operating in over 165 gas turbines in North America and helping them to be more efficient, more environmentally friendly, and more reliable.

The suite of technologies that have been developed and commercialized under the program include the following:

    • High Efficiency Compressor
    • Advanced Low NOx Combustion Technology
    • First Application of Closed Loop Steam Cooling in an Industrial Gas Turbine
    • Advanced Turbine Blade and Vane Materials
    • High Temperature TBC and Abradable Coatings
    • Advanced Row 4 Turbine Blades
    • 3-D Aero Technology
    • Advanced Brush Seals

 


RELATED NEWS

>

DOE Taps Universities for Turbine Technology Science



PROJECT INFO


PROGRAM CONTACTS

>

Richard Dennis
National Energy Technology Laboratory
PO Box 880
U.S. Dept. of Energy
Morgantown, WV 26507
304-285-4515


>

Pete Rozelle
Office of Fossil Energy
(FE-22)
U.S. Department of Energy
Washington, DC 20585
301-903-2338


 Page owner:  Fossil Energy Office of Communications
Page updated on: July 08, 2009 

The White House USA.gov E-gov IQ FOIA Privacy Program
U.S. Department of Energy | 1000 Independence Ave., SW | Washington, DC 20585
1-800-dial-DOE | f/202-586-4403 | e/General Contact

Web Policies | No Fear Act | Site Map | Privacy | Phone Book | Employment