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Brayton cycle

The Brayton cycle is a thermodynamic cycle that describes the operation of certain heat engines that have air or some other gas as their working fluid. The original Brayton Ready Motor used a piston compressor and piston expander, but modern gas turbine engines and airbreathing jet engines also follow the Brayton cycle. Although the cycle is usually run as an open system (and indeed must be run as such if internal combustion is used), it is conventionally assumed for the purposes of thermodynamic analysis that the exhaust gases are reused in the intake, enabling analysis as a closed system.

The engine cycle is named after George Brayton (1830–1892), the American engineer who developed it originally for use in piston engines, although it was originally proposed and patented by Englishman John Barber in 1791.[1] It is also sometimes known as the Joule cycle. The reversed Joule cycle uses an external heat source and incorporates the use of a regenerator. One type of Brayton cycle is open to the atmosphere and uses an internal combustion chamber; and another type is closed and uses a heat exchanger.

History edit

In 1872, George Brayton applied for a patent for his "Ready Motor", a reciprocating heat engine operating on a gas power cycle. The engine was a two-stroke and produced power on every revolution. Brayton engines used a separate piston compressor and piston expander, with compressed air heated by internal fire as it entered the expander cylinder. The first versions of the Brayton engine were vapor engines which mixed fuel with air as it entered the compressor town gas was used or a surface carburetor was also used for mobile operation .[2] The fuel / air was contained in a reservoir / tank and then it was admitted to the expansion cylinder and burned. As the fuel/air mixture entered the expansion cylinder, it was ignited by a pilot flame. A screen was used to prevent the fire from entering or returning to the reservoir. In early versions of the engine, this screen sometimes failed and an explosion would occur. In 1874, Brayton solved the explosion problem by adding the fuel just prior to the expander cylinder. The engine now used heavier fuels such as kerosene and fuel oil. Ignition remained a pilot flame.[3] Brayton produced and sold "Ready Motors" to perform a variety of tasks like water pumping, mill operation, running generators, and marine propulsion. The "Ready Motors" were produced from 1872 to sometime in the 1880s; several hundred such motors were likely produced during this time period. Brayton licensed the design to Simone in the UK. Many variations of the layout were used; some were single-acting and some were double-acting. Some had under walking beams; others had overhead walking beams. Both horizontal and vertical models were built. Sizes ranged from less than one to over 40 horsepower. Critics of the time claimed the engines ran smoothly and had a reasonable efficiency.[3]

Brayton-cycle engines were some of the first internal combustion engines used for motive power. In 1875, John Holland used a Brayton engine to power the world's first self-propelled submarine (Holland boat #1). In 1879, a Brayton engine was used to power a second submarine, the Fenian Ram. John Philip Holland's submarines are preserved in the Paterson Museum in the Old Great Falls Historic District of Paterson, New Jersey.[4]

 
George B Selden driving a Brayton-powered automobile in 1905

In 1878, George B. Selden patented the first internal combustion automobile.[5] Inspired by the internal combustion engine invented by Brayton displayed at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1876, Selden patented a four-wheel car working on a smaller, lighter, multicylinder version. He then filed a series of amendments to his application which stretched out the legal process, resulting in a delay of 16 years before the patent[5] was granted on November 5, 1895. In 1903, Selden sued Ford for patent infringement and Henry Ford fought the Selden patent until 1911. Selden had never actually produced a working car, so during the trial, two machines were constructed according to the patent drawings. Ford argued his cars used the four-stroke Alphonse Beau de Rochas cycle or Otto cycle and not the Brayton-cycle engine used in the Selden auto. Ford won the appeal of the original case.[6]

In 1887, Brayton developed and patented a four-stroke direct-injection oil engine.[7] The fuel system used a variable-quantity pump and liquid-fuel, high-pressure, spray-type injection. The liquid was forced through a spring-loaded, relief-type valve (injector) which caused the fuel to become divided into small droplets. Injection was timed to occur at or near the peak of the compression stroke. A platinum igniter provided the source of ignition. Brayton describes the invention as: “I have discovered that heavy oils can be mechanically converted into a finely divided condition within a firing portion of the cylinder, or in a communicating firing chamber.” Another part reads, “I have for the first time, so far as my knowledge extends, regulated speed by variably controlling the direct discharge of liquid fuel into the combustion chamber or cylinder into a finely divided condition highly favorable to immediate combustion.” This was likely the first engine to use a lean-burn system to regulate engine speed and output. In this manner, the engine fired on every power stroke and speed and output were controlled solely by the quantity of fuel injected.

In 1890, Brayton developed and patented a four-stroke, air-blast oil engine.[8] The fuel system delivered a variable quantity of vaporized fuel to the center of the cylinder under pressure at or near the peak of the compression stroke. The ignition source was an igniter made from platinum wire. A variable-quantity injection pump provided the fuel to an injector where it was mixed with air as it entered the cylinder. A small crank-driven compressor provided the source for air. This engine also used the lean-burn system.

Rudolf Diesel originally proposed a very high compression, constant-temperature cycle where the heat of compression would exceed the heat of combustion, but after several years of experiments, he realized that the constant-temperature cycle would not work in a piston engine. Early Diesel engines use an air blast system which was pioneered by Brayton in 1890. Consequently, these early engines use the constant-pressure cycle.[9]

Early gas turbine history edit

  • 1791 First patent for a gas turbine (John Barber, United Kingdom)
  • 1904 Unsuccessful gas turbine project by Franz Stolze in Berlin (first axial compressor)
  • 1906 Armengaud-Lemale gas turbine in France (centrifugal compressor, no useful power)
  • 1910 First gas turbine featuring intermittent combustion (Holzwarth, 150 kW, constant volume combustion)
  • 1923 First exhaust-gas turbocharger to increase the power of diesel engines
  • 1939 Turbojet powered Heinkel He 178, world's first jet aircraft, makes first flight. World's first gas turbine for power generation by Brown-Boveri, Neuchâtel, Switzerland

(velox burner, aerodynamics by Stodola)

Models edit

A Brayton-type engine consists of three components: a compressor, a mixing chamber, and an expander.

Modern Brayton engines are almost always a turbine type, although Brayton only made piston engines. In the original 19th-century Brayton engine, ambient air is drawn into a piston compressor, where it is compressed; ideally an isentropic process. The compressed air then passes through a mixing chamber where fuel is added, an isobaric process. The pressurized air and fuel mixture is then ignited in an expansion cylinder and energy is released, causing the heated air and combustion products to expand through a piston/cylinder, another ideally isentropic process. Some of the work extracted by the piston/cylinder is used to drive the compressor through a crankshaft arrangement.

Gas turbine engines are also Brayton engines, with three components: an air compressor, a combustion chamber, and a gas turbine.

Ideal Brayton cycle:

  1. isentropic process – ambient air is drawn into the compressor, where it is pressurized.
  2. isobaric process – the compressed air then passes through a combustion chamber, where fuel is burned, heating that air—a constant-pressure process, since the chamber is open to flow in and out.
  3. isentropic process – the heated, pressurized air then gives up its energy, expanding through a turbine (or series of turbines). Some of the work extracted by the turbine is used to drive the compressor.
  4. isobaric process – heat rejection (in the atmosphere).

Actual Brayton cycle:

  1. adiabatic process – compression
  2. isobaric process – heat addition
  3. adiabatic process – expansion
  4. isobaric process – heat rejection
 
The idealized Brayton cycle where P = pressure, v = volume, T = temperature, s = entropy, and q = the heat added to or rejected by the system.[10]

Since neither the compression nor the expansion can be truly isentropic, losses through the compressor and the expander represent sources of inescapable working inefficiencies. In general, increasing the compression ratio is the most direct way to increase the overall power output of a Brayton system.[11]

The efficiency of the ideal Brayton cycle is  , where   is the heat capacity ratio.[12] Figure 1 indicates how the cycle efficiency changes with an increase in pressure ratio. Figure 2 indicates how the specific power output changes with an increase in the gas turbine inlet temperature for two different pressure ratio values.

The highest gas temperature in the cycle occurs where work transfer to the high pressure turbine (rotor inlet) takes place. This is lower than the highest gas temperature in the engine (combustion zone). The maximum cycle temperature is limited by the turbine materials and required turbine life. This also limits the pressure ratios that can be used in the cycle. For a fixed-turbine inlet temperature, the net work output per cycle increases with the pressure ratio (thus the thermal efficiency) and the net work output. With less work output per cycle, a larger mass flow rate (thus a larger system) is needed to maintain the same power output, which may not be economical. In most common designs, the pressure ratio of a gas turbine ranges from about 11 to 16.[13]

Methods to increase power edit

The power output of a Brayton engine can be improved by:

  • Reheat, wherein the working fluid—in most cases air—expands through a series of turbines, then is passed through a second combustion chamber before expanding to ambient pressure through a final set of turbines, has the advantage of increasing the power output possible for a given compression ratio without exceeding any metallurgical constraints (typically about 1000 °C). The use of an afterburner for jet aircraft engines can also be referred to as "reheat"; it is a different process in that the reheated air is expanded through a thrust nozzle rather than a turbine. The metallurgical constraints are somewhat alleviated, enabling much higher reheat temperatures (about 2000 °C). Reheat is most often used to improve the specific power, and is usually associated with a drop in efficiency; this effect is especially pronounced in afterburners due to the extreme amounts of extra fuel used.
  • In overspray, after the first compressor stage, water is injected into the compressor, thus increasing the mass-flow inside the compressor, increasing the turbine output power significantly and reducing compressor outlet temperatures.[14] In the second compressor stage, the water is completely converted to a gas form, offering some intercooling via its latent heat of vaporization.

Methods to improve efficiency edit

The efficiency of a Brayton engine can be improved by:

  • Increasing pressure ratio, as Figure 1 above shows, increasing the pressure ratio increases the efficiency of the Brayton cycle. This is analogous to the increase of efficiency seen in the Otto cycle when the compression ratio is increased. However, practical limits occur when it comes to increasing the pressure ratio. First of all, increasing the pressure ratio increases the compressor discharge temperature. Since the turbine temperature has a limit determined by metallurgical and life constraints the allowable rise in temperature (fuel added) in the combustor becomes smaller. Also, because the length of the compressor blades becomes progressively smaller in the higher pressure stages a constant running gap, through the compressor, between the blade tips and the engine casing becomes a bigger percentage of the compressor blade height increasing air leakage past the tips. This causes a drop in compressor efficiency, and is most likely to occur in smaller gas turbines (since blades are inherently smaller to begin with). Finally, as can be seen in Figure 1, the efficiency levels off as pressure ratio increases. Hence, little gain is expected by increasing the pressure ratio further if it is already at a high level.
  • Recuperator[15] – If the Brayton cycle is run at a low pressure ratio and a high temperature increase in the combustion chamber, the exhaust gas (after the last turbine stage) might still be hotter than the compressed inlet gas (after the last compression stage but before the combustor). In that case, a heat exchanger can be used to transfer thermal energy from the exhaust to the already compressed gas, before it enters the combustion chamber. The thermal energy transferred is effectively reused, thus increasing efficiency. However, this form of heat recycling is only possible if the engine is run in a low-efficiency mode with low pressure ratio in the first place. Transferring heat from the outlet (after the last turbine) to the inlet (before the first compressor stage) would reduce efficiency, as hotter inlet air means more volume, thus more work for the compressor. For engines with liquid cryogenic fuels, namely hydrogen, it might be feasible, though, to use the fuel to cool the inlet air before compression to increase efficiency. This concept is extensively studied for the SABRE engine.
  • A Brayton engine also forms half of the combined cycle system, which combines with a Rankine engine to further increase overall efficiency. However, although this increases overall efficiency, it does not actually increase the efficiency of the Brayton cycle itself.
  • Cogeneration systems make use of the waste heat from Brayton engines, typically for hot water production or space heating.

Variants edit

Closed Brayton cycle edit

 
Closed Brayton cycle

A closed Brayton cycle recirculates the working fluid; the air expelled from the turbine is reintroduced into the compressor, this cycle uses a heat exchanger to heat the working fluid instead of an internal combustion chamber. The closed Brayton cycle is used, for example, in closed-cycle gas turbine and space power generation.

Solar Brayton cycle edit

In 2002, a hybrid open solar Brayton cycle was operated for the first time consistently and effectively with relevant papers published, in the frame of the EU SOLGATE program.[16] The air was heated from 570 to over 1000K into the combustor chamber. Further hybridization was achieved during the EU Solhyco project running a hybridized Brayton cycle with solar energy and biodiesel only.[17] This technology was scaled up to 4.6 MW within the project Solugas located near Seville, where it is currently demonstrated at precommercial scale.[18]

Reverse Brayton cycle edit

A Brayton cycle that is driven in reverse, via net work input, and when air is the working fluid, is the gas refrigeration cycle or Bell Coleman cycle. Its purpose is to move heat, rather than produce work. This air-cooling technique is used widely in jet aircraft for air conditioning systems using bleed air tapped from the engine compressors. It is also used in the LNG industry where the largest reverse Brayton cycle is for subcooling LNG using 86 MW of power from a gas turbine-driven compressor and nitrogen refrigerant.[19]

Inverted Brayton cycle edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ according to Gas Turbine History June 3, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Frank A. Taylor (1939), "Catalog of the Mechanical Collections Of The Division Of Engineering", United States National Museum Bulletin 173, United States Government Printing Office, p. 147
  3. ^ a b US 125166, Brayton, George B., "Improvement in gas-engines", published 1872-04-02 
  4. ^ . Paterson Friends of the Great Falls. Archived from the original on 2007-08-12. Retrieved 2007-07-29.
  5. ^ a b US 549160, Selden, George B., "Road-engine", published 1895-11-05 
  6. ^ "Weird & Wonderful Patents - Selden Patent". www.bpmlegal.com.
  7. ^ US 432114, Brayton, George B., "Gas and air engine", published 1890-07-15 
  8. ^ US 432260, Brayton, George B., "Hydrocarbon-engine", published 1890-07-15 
  9. ^ "Diesel Engines". www.dieselnet.com.
  10. ^ NASA/Glenn Research Center (May 5, 2015). "PV and TS Diagrams". www.grc.nasa.gov.
  11. ^ Lester C. Lichty, Combustion Engine Processes, 1967, McGraw-Hill, Inc., Library of Congress 67-10876
  12. ^ http://web.mit.edu/16.unified/www/SPRING/propulsion/notes/node27.html Ideal cycle equations, MIT lecture notes
  13. ^ Çengel, Yunus A., and Michael A. Boles. "9-8." Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach. 7th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2011. 508-09. Print.
  14. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-11-02. Retrieved 2011-01-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-12-15. Retrieved 2012-12-07.
  16. ^ "Research" (PDF). europa.eu.
  17. ^ Solhyco.com 2011-12-29 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2012-01-09
  18. ^ Solugas.EU 2014-12-25 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2014-11-09
  19. ^ "Login". www.ogj.com.

External links edit

brayton, cycle, thermodynamic, cycle, that, describes, operation, certain, heat, engines, that, have, some, other, their, working, fluid, original, brayton, ready, motor, used, piston, compressor, piston, expander, modern, turbine, engines, airbreathing, engin. The Brayton cycle is a thermodynamic cycle that describes the operation of certain heat engines that have air or some other gas as their working fluid The original Brayton Ready Motor used a piston compressor and piston expander but modern gas turbine engines and airbreathing jet engines also follow the Brayton cycle Although the cycle is usually run as an open system and indeed must be run as such if internal combustion is used it is conventionally assumed for the purposes of thermodynamic analysis that the exhaust gases are reused in the intake enabling analysis as a closed system The engine cycle is named after George Brayton 1830 1892 the American engineer who developed it originally for use in piston engines although it was originally proposed and patented by Englishman John Barber in 1791 1 It is also sometimes known as the Joule cycle The reversed Joule cycle uses an external heat source and incorporates the use of a regenerator One type of Brayton cycle is open to the atmosphere and uses an internal combustion chamber and another type is closed and uses a heat exchanger Contents 1 History 2 Early gas turbine history 3 Models 4 Methods to increase power 5 Methods to improve efficiency 6 Variants 6 1 Closed Brayton cycle 6 2 Solar Brayton cycle 6 3 Reverse Brayton cycle 6 4 Inverted Brayton cycle 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editIn 1872 George Brayton applied for a patent for his Ready Motor a reciprocating heat engine operating on a gas power cycle The engine was a two stroke and produced power on every revolution Brayton engines used a separate piston compressor and piston expander with compressed air heated by internal fire as it entered the expander cylinder The first versions of the Brayton engine were vapor engines which mixed fuel with air as it entered the compressor town gas was used or a surface carburetor was also used for mobile operation 2 The fuel air was contained in a reservoir tank and then it was admitted to the expansion cylinder and burned As the fuel air mixture entered the expansion cylinder it was ignited by a pilot flame A screen was used to prevent the fire from entering or returning to the reservoir In early versions of the engine this screen sometimes failed and an explosion would occur In 1874 Brayton solved the explosion problem by adding the fuel just prior to the expander cylinder The engine now used heavier fuels such as kerosene and fuel oil Ignition remained a pilot flame 3 Brayton produced and sold Ready Motors to perform a variety of tasks like water pumping mill operation running generators and marine propulsion The Ready Motors were produced from 1872 to sometime in the 1880s several hundred such motors were likely produced during this time period Brayton licensed the design to Simone in the UK Many variations of the layout were used some were single acting and some were double acting Some had under walking beams others had overhead walking beams Both horizontal and vertical models were built Sizes ranged from less than one to over 40 horsepower Critics of the time claimed the engines ran smoothly and had a reasonable efficiency 3 Brayton cycle engines were some of the first internal combustion engines used for motive power In 1875 John Holland used a Brayton engine to power the world s first self propelled submarine Holland boat 1 In 1879 a Brayton engine was used to power a second submarine the Fenian Ram John Philip Holland s submarines are preserved in the Paterson Museum in the Old Great Falls Historic District of Paterson New Jersey 4 nbsp George B Selden driving a Brayton powered automobile in 1905In 1878 George B Selden patented the first internal combustion automobile 5 Inspired by the internal combustion engine invented by Brayton displayed at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1876 Selden patented a four wheel car working on a smaller lighter multicylinder version He then filed a series of amendments to his application which stretched out the legal process resulting in a delay of 16 years before the patent 5 was granted on November 5 1895 In 1903 Selden sued Ford for patent infringement and Henry Ford fought the Selden patent until 1911 Selden had never actually produced a working car so during the trial two machines were constructed according to the patent drawings Ford argued his cars used the four stroke Alphonse Beau de Rochas cycle or Otto cycle and not the Brayton cycle engine used in the Selden auto Ford won the appeal of the original case 6 In 1887 Brayton developed and patented a four stroke direct injection oil engine 7 The fuel system used a variable quantity pump and liquid fuel high pressure spray type injection The liquid was forced through a spring loaded relief type valve injector which caused the fuel to become divided into small droplets Injection was timed to occur at or near the peak of the compression stroke A platinum igniter provided the source of ignition Brayton describes the invention as I have discovered that heavy oils can be mechanically converted into a finely divided condition within a firing portion of the cylinder or in a communicating firing chamber Another part reads I have for the first time so far as my knowledge extends regulated speed by variably controlling the direct discharge of liquid fuel into the combustion chamber or cylinder into a finely divided condition highly favorable to immediate combustion This was likely the first engine to use a lean burn system to regulate engine speed and output In this manner the engine fired on every power stroke and speed and output were controlled solely by the quantity of fuel injected In 1890 Brayton developed and patented a four stroke air blast oil engine 8 The fuel system delivered a variable quantity of vaporized fuel to the center of the cylinder under pressure at or near the peak of the compression stroke The ignition source was an igniter made from platinum wire A variable quantity injection pump provided the fuel to an injector where it was mixed with air as it entered the cylinder A small crank driven compressor provided the source for air This engine also used the lean burn system Rudolf Diesel originally proposed a very high compression constant temperature cycle where the heat of compression would exceed the heat of combustion but after several years of experiments he realized that the constant temperature cycle would not work in a piston engine Early Diesel engines use an air blast system which was pioneered by Brayton in 1890 Consequently these early engines use the constant pressure cycle 9 Examples of Brayton engines nbsp Brayton gas engine 1872 nbsp Brayton walking beam engine 1872 nbsp Brayton engine 1875 nbsp Brayton double acting constant pressure engine cut away 1877 nbsp Brayton four stroke air blast engine 1889 nbsp Brayton four stroke air blast engine 1890Early gas turbine history edit1791 First patent for a gas turbine John Barber United Kingdom 1904 Unsuccessful gas turbine project by Franz Stolze in Berlin first axial compressor 1906 Armengaud Lemale gas turbine in France centrifugal compressor no useful power 1910 First gas turbine featuring intermittent combustion Holzwarth 150 kW constant volume combustion 1923 First exhaust gas turbocharger to increase the power of diesel engines 1939 Turbojet powered Heinkel He 178 world s first jet aircraft makes first flight World s first gas turbine for power generation by Brown Boveri Neuchatel Switzerland velox burner aerodynamics by Stodola Models editA Brayton type engine consists of three components a compressor a mixing chamber and an expander Modern Brayton engines are almost always a turbine type although Brayton only made piston engines In the original 19th century Brayton engine ambient air is drawn into a piston compressor where it is compressed ideally an isentropic process The compressed air then passes through a mixing chamber where fuel is added an isobaric process The pressurized air and fuel mixture is then ignited in an expansion cylinder and energy is released causing the heated air and combustion products to expand through a piston cylinder another ideally isentropic process Some of the work extracted by the piston cylinder is used to drive the compressor through a crankshaft arrangement Gas turbine engines are also Brayton engines with three components an air compressor a combustion chamber and a gas turbine Ideal Brayton cycle isentropic process ambient air is drawn into the compressor where it is pressurized isobaric process the compressed air then passes through a combustion chamber where fuel is burned heating that air a constant pressure process since the chamber is open to flow in and out isentropic process the heated pressurized air then gives up its energy expanding through a turbine or series of turbines Some of the work extracted by the turbine is used to drive the compressor isobaric process heat rejection in the atmosphere Actual Brayton cycle adiabatic process compression isobaric process heat addition adiabatic process expansion isobaric process heat rejection nbsp The idealized Brayton cycle where P pressure v volume T temperature s entropy and q the heat added to or rejected by the system 10 Since neither the compression nor the expansion can be truly isentropic losses through the compressor and the expander represent sources of inescapable working inefficiencies In general increasing the compression ratio is the most direct way to increase the overall power output of a Brayton system 11 The efficiency of the ideal Brayton cycle is h 1 T 1 T 2 1 P 1 P 2 g 1 g displaystyle eta 1 frac T 1 T 2 1 left frac P 1 P 2 right gamma 1 gamma nbsp where g displaystyle gamma nbsp is the heat capacity ratio 12 Figure 1 indicates how the cycle efficiency changes with an increase in pressure ratio Figure 2 indicates how the specific power output changes with an increase in the gas turbine inlet temperature for two different pressure ratio values nbsp Figure 1 Brayton cycle efficiency nbsp Figure 2 Brayton cycle specific power outputThe highest gas temperature in the cycle occurs where work transfer to the high pressure turbine rotor inlet takes place This is lower than the highest gas temperature in the engine combustion zone The maximum cycle temperature is limited by the turbine materials and required turbine life This also limits the pressure ratios that can be used in the cycle For a fixed turbine inlet temperature the net work output per cycle increases with the pressure ratio thus the thermal efficiency and the net work output With less work output per cycle a larger mass flow rate thus a larger system is needed to maintain the same power output which may not be economical In most common designs the pressure ratio of a gas turbine ranges from about 11 to 16 13 Methods to increase power editThe power output of a Brayton engine can be improved by Reheat wherein the working fluid in most cases air expands through a series of turbines then is passed through a second combustion chamber before expanding to ambient pressure through a final set of turbines has the advantage of increasing the power output possible for a given compression ratio without exceeding any metallurgical constraints typically about 1000 C The use of an afterburner for jet aircraft engines can also be referred to as reheat it is a different process in that the reheated air is expanded through a thrust nozzle rather than a turbine The metallurgical constraints are somewhat alleviated enabling much higher reheat temperatures about 2000 C Reheat is most often used to improve the specific power and is usually associated with a drop in efficiency this effect is especially pronounced in afterburners due to the extreme amounts of extra fuel used In overspray after the first compressor stage water is injected into the compressor thus increasing the mass flow inside the compressor increasing the turbine output power significantly and reducing compressor outlet temperatures 14 In the second compressor stage the water is completely converted to a gas form offering some intercooling via its latent heat of vaporization Methods to improve efficiency editThe efficiency of a Brayton engine can be improved by Increasing pressure ratio as Figure 1 above shows increasing the pressure ratio increases the efficiency of the Brayton cycle This is analogous to the increase of efficiency seen in the Otto cycle when the compression ratio is increased However practical limits occur when it comes to increasing the pressure ratio First of all increasing the pressure ratio increases the compressor discharge temperature Since the turbine temperature has a limit determined by metallurgical and life constraints the allowable rise in temperature fuel added in the combustor becomes smaller Also because the length of the compressor blades becomes progressively smaller in the higher pressure stages a constant running gap through the compressor between the blade tips and the engine casing becomes a bigger percentage of the compressor blade height increasing air leakage past the tips This causes a drop in compressor efficiency and is most likely to occur in smaller gas turbines since blades are inherently smaller to begin with Finally as can be seen in Figure 1 the efficiency levels off as pressure ratio increases Hence little gain is expected by increasing the pressure ratio further if it is already at a high level Recuperator 15 If the Brayton cycle is run at a low pressure ratio and a high temperature increase in the combustion chamber the exhaust gas after the last turbine stage might still be hotter than the compressed inlet gas after the last compression stage but before the combustor In that case a heat exchanger can be used to transfer thermal energy from the exhaust to the already compressed gas before it enters the combustion chamber The thermal energy transferred is effectively reused thus increasing efficiency However this form of heat recycling is only possible if the engine is run in a low efficiency mode with low pressure ratio in the first place Transferring heat from the outlet after the last turbine to the inlet before the first compressor stage would reduce efficiency as hotter inlet air means more volume thus more work for the compressor For engines with liquid cryogenic fuels namely hydrogen it might be feasible though to use the fuel to cool the inlet air before compression to increase efficiency This concept is extensively studied for the SABRE engine A Brayton engine also forms half of the combined cycle system which combines with a Rankine engine to further increase overall efficiency However although this increases overall efficiency it does not actually increase the efficiency of the Brayton cycle itself Cogeneration systems make use of the waste heat from Brayton engines typically for hot water production or space heating Variants editClosed Brayton cycle edit nbsp Closed Brayton cycleC compressor and T turbine assemblyw high temperature heat exchangerʍ low temperature heat exchanger mechanical load e g electric generatorA closed Brayton cycle recirculates the working fluid the air expelled from the turbine is reintroduced into the compressor this cycle uses a heat exchanger to heat the working fluid instead of an internal combustion chamber The closed Brayton cycle is used for example in closed cycle gas turbine and space power generation Solar Brayton cycle edit In 2002 a hybrid open solar Brayton cycle was operated for the first time consistently and effectively with relevant papers published in the frame of the EU SOLGATE program 16 The air was heated from 570 to over 1000K into the combustor chamber Further hybridization was achieved during the EU Solhyco project running a hybridized Brayton cycle with solar energy and biodiesel only 17 This technology was scaled up to 4 6 MW within the project Solugas located near Seville where it is currently demonstrated at precommercial scale 18 Reverse Brayton cycle edit A Brayton cycle that is driven in reverse via net work input and when air is the working fluid is the gas refrigeration cycle or Bell Coleman cycle Its purpose is to move heat rather than produce work This air cooling technique is used widely in jet aircraft for air conditioning systems using bleed air tapped from the engine compressors It is also used in the LNG industry where the largest reverse Brayton cycle is for subcooling LNG using 86 MW of power from a gas turbine driven compressor and nitrogen refrigerant 19 Inverted Brayton cycle edit Main article Inverted Brayton cycleSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brayton cycle Britalus rotary engine Heat engine HVAC Rankine cycleReferences edit according to Gas Turbine History Archived June 3 2010 at the Wayback Machine Frank A Taylor 1939 Catalog of the Mechanical Collections Of The Division Of Engineering United States National Museum Bulletin 173 United States Government Printing Office p 147 a b US 125166 Brayton George B Improvement in gas engines published 1872 04 02 Holland Submarines Paterson Friends of the Great Falls Archived from the original on 2007 08 12 Retrieved 2007 07 29 a b US 549160 Selden George B Road engine published 1895 11 05 Weird amp Wonderful Patents Selden Patent www bpmlegal com US 432114 Brayton George B Gas and air engine published 1890 07 15 US 432260 Brayton George B Hydrocarbon engine published 1890 07 15 Diesel Engines www dieselnet com NASA Glenn Research Center May 5 2015 PV and TS Diagrams www grc nasa gov Lester C Lichty Combustion Engine Processes 1967 McGraw Hill Inc Library of Congress 67 10876 http web mit edu 16 unified www SPRING propulsion notes node27 html Ideal cycle equations MIT lecture notes Cengel Yunus A and Michael A Boles 9 8 Thermodynamics An Engineering Approach 7th ed New York McGraw Hill 2011 508 09 Print Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2005 11 02 Retrieved 2011 01 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Brayton Thermodynamic Cycle Archived from the original on 2010 12 15 Retrieved 2012 12 07 Research PDF europa eu Solhyco com Archived 2011 12 29 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2012 01 09 Solugas EU Archived 2014 12 25 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2014 11 09 Login www ogj com External links editToday in Science article on Brayton Engine http scitation aip org getabs servlet GetabsServlet prog normal amp id JSEEDO000126000003000872000001 amp idtype cvips amp gifs yes http elib dlr de 46328 Test and evaluation of a solar powered gas turbine system Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brayton cycle amp oldid 1188438093 Reverse Brayton cycle, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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