1. Technical Field
[0001] This invention relates to a method of and apparatus for cooling a seal for machinery
including rotating machinery, and more particularly, for cooling the seal of a turbine
shaft.
2. Background of the Invention
[0002] Rotating machinery, such as turbine wheels mounted on a shaft, require rotary seals
in the region where the shaft passes through the pressure chamber that contains the
turbine wheels. Such seals inhibit leakage of working fluid from the pressure chamber
into the seal operating environment and then into the atmosphere. In addition, seals
are also required in other machinery.
[0003] Seals for rotating machinery usually comprise a labyrinth seal followed by a mechanical
seal. Labyrinth seals serve to restrict the rate of flow of working fluid and reduce
its pressure toward atmospheric pressure, but not to prevent or contain the flow.
Typically, labyrinth seals have many compartments positioned very close to the surface
of the shaft for presenting to the working fluid in the pressure chamber a torturous
path that serves to reduce pressure and inhibit, but not halt leakage. A mechanical
seal, on the other hand, serves to contain the working fluid. The extent to which
containment is achieved depends on the design of the seal and the nature of the working
fluid involved.
[0004] When the working fluid is steam, some escape of the working fluid can be tolerated.
Nevertheless, a shaft seal for the steam turbine is a critical item. It is even more
critical when the working fluid is a hydrocarbon, such as pentane or isopentane, and
the turbine operates as part of an organic Rankine cycle power plant. In such case,
the mechanical seals must preclude to as great an extent as possible the loss of working
fluid to the atmosphere.
[0005] Reliable operation of the mechanical seals for turbines, as well as for other types
of equipment where the temperature of the mechanical seal is elevated, requires the
seals to operate under optimum working conditions of pressure, temperature, vibration,
etc. These working conditions have a significant impact on seal leakage rates and
seal life expectancy, for example. By extending seal life, turbine life and hence
reliability is extended.
[0006] Seal life is adversely affected by high operating pressure which tends to distort
seal faces. High operating pressure also increases wear rate, heat generated at the
seal faces which further distorts seal faces and results in increased leakage. In
addition, the high pressure increases power consumption for the turbine sealing system.
[0007] Seal life is adversely affected by high operating temperatures of the seal components.
High seal component temperatures increase wear on the seal faces, and also increase
the likelihood that the barrier fluid when used will boil.
[0008] It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a new and improved
method of and apparatus for cooling the seals for equipment.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0009] A seal heated by hot pressurized vapor is cooled by providing a chamber in which
the seal is located and for containing vapor that leaks thereinto. The pressure in
the chamber is reduced by connecting it to a source of low pressure; and liquid is
supplied to the chamber at a pressure above the reduced pressure of the chamber and
at a temperature below the temperature of vapor leaking into the chamber. The liquid
is introduced into the chamber as droplets for contacting vapor that leaks thereinto
thereby cooling the vapor and thus cooling the seal. The flow rate of the liquid is
adjustable in accordance with the temperature of the liquid in the chamber.
[0010] According to the present invention, apparatus for cooling a hot mechanical seal,
gas seal or other seal heated by hot pressurized vapor and/or friction includes a
chamber for locating therein the seal and for containing vapor and a connection for
connecting the chamber to a source of low pressure thereby reducing the pressure in
the chamber to a level below the pressure of vapor that flows into the chamber. A
further connection is provided for supplying liquid to the chamber at a pressure above
the reduced pressure of the chamber. Finally, apparatus is provided for distributing
the liquid throughout the chamber in the form of droplets that contact and cool vapors
in the chamber, thus cooling the seal.
[0011] The seal may be associated with the turbine of a Rankine cycle power utilizing an
organic working fluid, or a power plant utilizing steam. Preferably, the liquid is
distributed throughout the chamber in the form of droplets which contact vapor leaking
into the chamber through a labyrinth or other seal thus cooling the vapor thereby
indirectly cooling the seal by reducing the temperature of the environment surrounding
or associated with the seal. Indirect cooling of the seal, as distinguished from applying
the liquid directly to the seal, serves to prevent thermal shock to the materials
of the seal.
[0012] In the preferred form of the invention, where the seal is part of a turbine that
receives vaporized working fluid from a vaporizer and within which the vaporized working
fluid expands producing expanded working fluid, and where the expanded working fluid
is condensed in a condenser to produce condensate that is returned to a vaporizer
by a cycle pump, the chamber containing the seal is connected to the condenser, and
the liquid supplied to the chamber is furnished by the cycle pump.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] Embodiments of the present invention are described by way of example with reference
to the accompanying drawings wherein:
Fig. 1 is a block diagram of a power plant into which the present invention is incorporated;
Fig. 2 is a pressure enthalpy diagram showing the sources of fluid that contribute
to heating and cooling the seal;
Fig. 3 is a side view, partially in section, showing one embodiment of the present
invention;
Fig. 4 is a block diagram of a modification of the embodiment shown in Fig. 3.
Fig. 5 is a further embodiment of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0014] Referring now to the drawings, reference numeral 10 of Fig. 1 designates a power
plant into which the present invention is incorporated. Power plant 10 includes vaporizer
12 for vaporizing a working fluid, such as water, or an organic fluid (e.g., pentane,
or isopentane), and producing vaporized working fluid that is supplied to turbine
14. Usually, turbine 14 will be a multistage turbine, but the principle of the invention
is applicable to a single stage turbine as well.
[0015] Vaporized working fluid supplied to turbine 14 expands in the turbine and produces
work which is converted into electricity by a generator (not shown). The cooled, expanded
working fluid is exhausted into indirect condenser 16 wherein the vaporized working
fluid is condensed by the extraction of heat in the coolant supplied to the condenser.
The condensate, at a relatively low pressure and temperature, as compared to the conditions
at the outlet of the vaporizer, is pressurized by cycle pump 18 and returned to the
vaporizer, completing the working fluid cycle.
[0016] Seal 20, which is the seal between the atmosphere and the pressure chamber (not shown)
containing the inlet stage of the turbine, is contained in a seal operating environment
that is isolated from the pressure chamber by a labyrinth seal (not shown) and a mechanical
seal (not shown) which is to be cooled. As shown, condensate is supplied to the seal
operating environment by pump 18 through valve 22 in connection 19, and the seal operating
environment is connected to condenser 16 by connection 17.
[0017] When power plant 10 is an organic fluid Rankine cycle power plant, operating with
pentane, for example, as the working fluid, the conditions in the condenser typically
will be about 100
oF. at about 20 psia, and the conditions at the outlet of the cycle pump typically
will be about 100
oF. at about 300 psia. Connection 17, by which the seal operating environment is connected
to the condenser, maintains this environment at the condenser pressure conditions.
[0018] The actual conditions in the seal operating environment can be controlled by valve
22 by regulating the flow of condensate to the environment. Typically, the leakage
of working fluid vapor through the labyrinth seal into the seal operating environment
will produce vaporized working fluid at about 150 psia and about 270
oF. Under these conditions, the cooler liquid, which preferably will be distributed
throughout the seal operating environment by converting the liquid supplied by the
pump into droplets, will interact with the leakage vapor and cool the same by directly
transferring heat to the liquid in the droplets and partially evaporating the liquid
thus preventing the heating of the seal operating environment. This has the beneficial
effect of reducing the temperature of the seal itself without directly cooling the
seal with the condensate.
[0019] The operation described above is illustrated by Fig. 2. As indicated, leakage of
vapors from the pressure chamber of the turbine whose conditions are indicated by
point 22 to the seal operating environment whose conditions are indicated by point
24 result in a pressure reduction inside the seal operating environment which is held
at the conditions of the condenser indicated by point 26. Condensate furnished by
the pump to the seal operating environment, at the conditions indicated by point 28,
changes state from point 28 to point 26. Based on this schematic showing, the heat
balance is as follows:
where
- mliq =
- cold liquid flow rate
- hliq =
- enthalpy of cold liquid
- mvapor =
- vapor leakage flow rate
- hvapor =
- vapor enthalpy
- mmix =
- mliq + mvapor
- hmix =
- enthalpy of mixture at condenser pressure and required mixture temperature.
[0020] Specific details of one embodiment of the invention is shown in Fig. 3 to which reference
is now made where reference numeral 30 designates apparatus according to the present
invention incorporated into turbine 14A. Apparatus 30 includes seal operating environment
20A in the form of chamber 32, defined by housing 34 rigidly attached to stationary
mounting 36 containing bearing 38 on which shaft 40 of first stage turbine wheel 41
is mounted by a suitable key arrangement. Wheel 41 is contained by a housing that
defines a high pressure housing or chamber 43 containing hot pressurized and vaporized
working fluid.
[0021] Labyrinth seal 42 mounted in face 44 of housing 34 provides the initial resistance
to leakage of the hot vaporized working fluid in chamber 43 into seal chamber 34.
Such leakage is indicated by chain arrows A and B. Normally, this leakage would heat
mechanical seal 46 having sealing faces carried by, and rotating with, shaft 40. This
face is in contact with a stationary sealing face carried by hub 48 rigidly attached
to housing 36. Normally, both stationary and rotating or dynamic seal faces are cooled
by a barrier fluid, e.g., pressurized mineral oil pressurized to about 1.5 to 2 times
the reduced chamber pressure (e.g., about 30 to 40 psia in the present embodiment).
[0022] Chamber 32 is connected by connection 50 to a source of low pressure, and particularly,
to the condenser of the power plant with which turbine 14A is associated. This chamber
is also connected via connection 52 to the output of the cycle pump as shown in Fig.
1. Pressurized condensate at the temperature substantially of the condenser is supplied
via connection 52 to spray head nozzles 54 that open to the interior of chamber 32,
and relatively cold liquid working fluid is sprayed onto cylindrical shield 56 further
converting the liquid into fine droplets that form a mist inside chamber 32. This
mist interacts with hot vapor leakage B thereby cooling this hot vapor by means of
direct contact heat transfer of heat in the vapor to liquid contained in the droplets
and partial evaporation of the liquid in the droplets and thus forming a mixture of
working fluid that is vented and drained by connection 50 into the condenser. As a
result, the temperature of mechanical seal 46 can be maintained at a desired temperature
by regulating the amount of liquid supplied to connection 52. Shield 56 shields mechanical
seal 46 from direct contact with cool liquid from the condenser and thus protects
the seal against thermal shock.
[0023] A second embodiment of the invention is shown in Fig. 4 and designated by reference
numeral 60. This embodiment includes turbine wheel 41A rigidly attached to shaft 40A
which passes though housing 34A, and mechanical seal 46A inside chamber 32A. Instead
of labyrinth seal 42A engaging shaft 40A directly, as in the embodiment of Fig. 3,
seal 42A engages hub 62 rigidly attached to the shaft. However, the labyrinth seal
may engage the shaft if preferred. Hub 62 includes flange 64 that lies inside chamber
32A close to face 44A of housing 34A and thus rotates together with shaft 40A. Conduit
52A in face 44A carries liquid working fluid from the cycle pump to nozzle 54A opening
to chamber 32A and facing flange 64.
[0024] Pressurized cold working fluid condensate from the condenser is sprayed into contact
with flange 64 producing a spray of fine droplets which are carried by centrifugal
force into chamber 32A by reason of the rotational speed of the flange. In addition,
leakage of vaporized working fluid A through seal 42A encounters the spray of cold
liquid as soon as the vaporized working fluid passes through seal 42A so that most
of leakage B is cooled before entering chamber 34A. This embodiment provides rapid
engagement of the hot vapor leaking into chamber 32A with cold working fluid, and
the rotational movement of flange 64 ensures intimate mixing of the spray of cold
liquid with leakage vapors.
[0025] In the preferred embodiment of the present invention described with reference to
Fig. 5, power plant 10A comprises high pressure turbine 14A serially connected to
low pressure turbine 14B. In this arrangement, vapor from vaporizer 12 is supplied
to the inlet of turbine 14A and the exhaust therefrom is supplied to the inlet of
turbine 14B. High pressure seal environments 70A and 70B, respectively associated
with the turbines, are each supplied with cool condensate from condenser 16 by pump
18 via flow conditioning apparatus 19A and 19B, respectively. Apparatus 19A and 19B
serves both to the properly regulate the flow of condensate to the seal environments,
to isolate the flow of cool condensate to the seal environments of the two turbines,
and to allow maintenance to the apparatus without interrupting the operation of the
turbines.
[0026] Apparatus 19A includes manually operated, infinitely variable, flow control valve
22A, fixed orifice device 23A, filter 24A, and on/off, or shut-off valve 25A serially
connected together, and temperature indicator 26A; and apparatus 19B includes corresponding
components 22B, 23B, 24B, 25B, and 26B. The size of the fixed orifices of each of
devices 23A and 23B, together with the setting of valves 22A and 22B respectively,
determines the flow rate of cool condensate to the seal environments. Filters 24A
and 24B serve to filter from the condensate supplied to the seal environments any
contaminants whose presence would adversely affect the the operation of the seal environments.
Valves 25A and 25B are preferably manually operated ball-valves that can be selectively
operated to disconnect the seal environments from pump 18 when filter replacement
or other maintenance operations are necessary allowing the turbines to run for a short
time without operation of the seal environments and until these maintenance operations
are completed. Furthermore, maintenance operations, when the turbines or power plant
is shut down or stopped, are also simplified by this aspect of the present invention.
Finally, temperature indicators 26A and 26B provide an indication of the temperature
of the fluid exhausted from seal environments 70A and 70B, respectively.
[0027] Valves 22A and 22B are manually operated, preferably in accordance with the temperature
of the fluid in lines 17A and 17B connected to seal operating environments. That is
to say, the amount of cooling condensate applied to a seal operating environment can
be adjusted by an operator by changing the setting of valves 22A and 22B in response
to the temperature indicated by indicators 26A and 26B. Optionally, the temperature
indicators can be replaced by temperature sensors or transducers that produce control
signals in accordance with the temperature of the cooling liquid leaving the seal
environment. In such case, valves 22A and 22B could be replaced with valves which
are responsive to such control signals for maintaining the proper flow rate of cooling
liquid to the seal environments.
[0028] Modifications of the arrangement shown in Fig. 5 include connecting the turbines
in parallel to the vaporizer instead of in series, or connecting several turbines
in series or in parallel. This is suggested by the dashed lines extending from the
output of the vaporizer, and extending to the inputs to the condenser. Furthermore,
the invention is applicable to configurations in which separate vaporizers, feed pumps,
and condensers are used. In such case, the flow rate to each seal environment can
be controlled individually as a function of the temperature of the cooling liquid
to take account of the specific operating conditions encountered by each seal environment.
In addition, as shown in Fig. 5, turbines 14A and 14B preferably are directly connected
to and drive a single, interposed, low speed (e.g., 1500 or 1800 RPM, depending upon
the grid frequency) electric generator. Finally, if the prevailing conditions warrant,
less than all of the turbines in a multiple turbine system may require a system for
cooling the seals; and in such case, the seal cooling arrangement of the present invention
would be used only as needed.
[0029] The present invention, while shown in connection with an organic vapor turbine is
also applicable to cooling seals in a steam turbine, gas/vapor compressors, gas/vapor
turbines, gas turbines, gas expanders and other types of rotary machines that employ
seals for rotating shafts. In addition, the present invention may be used to cool
seals in other machinery or engines including non-rotary machinery or engines, e.g.,
reciprocating machinery such as diesel engines and internal combustion engines, etc.
As indicated, the present invention, which utilizes the working fluid itself for the
coolant, does not require a separate recirculation system. However, if preferred,
a separate auxiliary system can be used for the coolant which may use a fluid different
from the working fluid.
[0030] While the description mentions the use of oil cooled seals, the present invention
is useful for seals cooled by other fluids or even dry seals where no such cooling
fluid is used. While the embodiments described above refer to a chamber as a form
of the operating seal environment, any suitable enclosure may be used. The advantages
and improved results furnished by the method and apparatus of the present invention
are apparent from the foregoing description of the preferred embodiment of the invention.
Various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and
scope of the invention as described in the appended claims.
1. A method for cooling a seal located in a wall of a chamber and through which a movable
shaft passes, said seal being heated by hot pressurized vapor that leaks through the
seal into the chamber CHARACTERIZED BY:
(a) reducing the pressure in the chamber;
(b) supplying liquid to the chamber at a pressure above the reduced pressure of the
chamber and at a temperature below the temperature of vapor leaking into the chamber;
and
(c) adding liquid to said chamber in the form of droplets and distributing such droplets
throughout the chamber for contacting vapor therein thereby cooling the vapor and
thus cooling the seal.
2. A method according to claim 1 CHARACTERIZED IN THAT the hot pressurized vapor is contained
in a pressure chamber within which a turbine wheel is mounted on said shaft, and vapor
leaks past a labyrinth mounted on the shaft between the turbine wheel and the seal.
3. A method according to claim 2 CHARACTERIZED IN THAT the liquid is added to the chamber
by spraying the liquid onto a disc mounted in the chamber, said disc being mounted
on, and rotatable with, said shaft.
4. A method according to claim 1 for use in a power plant that includes a vaporizer for
vaporizing a working fluid, a turbine mounted on said shaft for expanding the working
fluid, a condenser for condensing expanded working fluid, and a cycle pump for returning
condensate from the condenser to the vaporizer, and CHARACTERIZED IN THAT said chamber
is connected to said condenser.
5. A method according to claim 4 CHARACTERIZED IN THAT the liquid added to the chamber
is derived from the output of the cycle pump.
6. Apparatus for cooling a seal located in a wall of a chamber and through which a movable
shaft passes, said seal being heated by hot pressurized vapor that leaks through the
seal into the chamber, said apparatus being CHARACTERIZED BY:
(a) means for connecting the chamber to a source of low pressure thereby reducing
the pressure in the chamber to a level below the pressure of vapor that leaks into
the chamber;
(b) means for supplying liquid to the chamber at a pressure above the reduced pressure
of the chamber; and
(c) means for distributing the liquid throughout the chamber in the form of droplets
that contact and cool vapors in the chamber, thus cooling the seal.
7. Apparatus according to claim 6 CHARACTERIZED IN THAT a turbine wheel is mounted on
said shaft in a pressure chamber containing hot pressurized, vaporized working fluid,
and said shaft passes through a labyrinth seal mounted on the shaft.
8. Apparatus according to claim 7 CHARACTERIZED IN THAT the means for distributing the
liquid throughout the chamber includes a disc in the chamber mounted on the shaft
and rotatable therewith, and said means for supplying said liquid to said chamber
causes said liquid to impinge on said disc and produce droplets.
9. Apparatus according to claim 6 CHARACTERIZED IN THE PROVISION OF a vaporizer for vaporizing
a working fluid, a turbine mounted on said shaft for expanding the working fluid,
a condenser for condensing expanded working fluid, and a cycle pump for returning
condensate from the condenser to the vaporizer, said chamber being connected to said
condenser.
10. Apparatus according to claim 9 CHARACTERIZED IN THAT the cycle pump is connected to
said chamber.