Abstract
The article presents the results from putting a new automated flow traversing measurement system (AFTMS) in an experimental turbine intended for testing steam paths of the low-pressure cylinders (LPC) of large-capacity steam turbines into use. Modern computerized facilities have been used in developing the system. Such an approach has been implemented for the first time in the full-scale test bench available at PJSC Power Machines in carrying out experimental investigations of an LPC double stage compartment (on a 1 : 1 scale) equipped with a new, ultimately long last stage blade (LSB) developed for a steam turbine plant for ultrasupercritical steam conditions. The investigations were aimed at confirming the effectiveness of the developed system in measuring the flow parameters in the last LPC stage. The necessity of making a shift from nonautomated and semiautomatic systems to the use of automated measurement systems is substantiated. The article describes a system that makes it possible, with automated setting of the gas dynamic probe head position on the traversing line, to determine the steam flow direction; to measure the stagnation pressure, static pressure, and stagnation temperature; and to record the measures indicators with exactly assigned time tags. The results from measurements of flow parameters upstream of the last LPC stage in a partial load mode are given. A comparison between the experimental and calculated flow parameter distribution data over the stage radius in the control section is shown.
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