JPRS ID: 9048 USSR REPORT ENERGY

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CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7
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APPROVE~ FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-R~P82-00850R00020007004'1 -7 I t~. ~i~~ I L ~.~3~ ~ F~~#~ ~ 1 ~~F APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY , JPRS L/9048 21 April 1980 _ USSR Re ort p ENERGY (FOUO 4/80) F~IS FOREIGN ~~OADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE _ - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 NOTE JPRS publicacions contain information pric*.iarily from foreign newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets [J are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] ` or [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original informatioz was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- - mation was summarized ~r extracted. ' Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are ' enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- - tion mark and enclosed in parentheses w~re not clear in the _ original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes within the body of 3n - item originate with the source. Times within items are as _ given by source. - - The contents of this p::blication iri no wzy reFresent the poli- cies, views or attit~,des of the U.S. Government. For fsrther information on report c~ntent call (703) 351-2938 (economicl; 346�i (polit~cal, sociological, military); 2725 (life sciences); 2725 (physical sciences). COPYRIG'HT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF ` MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN "EQUIRE THAT DISSE~IINATION OF THIS PUBLICP.TION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE ('.i~]LY. - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 r~vx ur'1:'1C;lAL US~ UNLY JPRS L/9048 21 April 1980 USSR REPORT ENERGY (FOUO 4/80) CONTENTS - - ELECTRIC POWER Aspects of Hydrogen Power, Technology Growth - (E.E. Shpil'rayn; TEPLOENERGETIKA, Ma,r 80).......... 1 Solar Power Stations Contemplated (F. V. Sapozhnikov, et al.; TEPLOENERGETIKA, Mar 80) 19 Power Stations With MHD Generators (A. Ye. Sheyndlin, et al.; TEPLOENERGETII{A, Mar 80). 30 R~liability Testing Procedures for Power Station Equi~xnent ( G.I. Glac~yshev, IZVFSTIYA AKADF~'III NAUK SSSR ENERGETIKA I TRANSPORT, Jan-Feb 80) 41 Kislogub Tidal Power Station Described ( L. B. Bernshteyu, ENERGE'I'IC'HESKOYE STROITEL'STVO, ~ Jan 80) 51+ , Methods of Testing Pawer Transformer Reliability - (V.V. Sokolov , V.A. Lukashchuk, IZVESTIYA AKADEMII NAUK SSSR IIvERGETIKA I TRANSPORT, Jan-Feb 80) .o.~ ~ 64 ~ ' a ' [III - USSR - 37 FOUO) FOR 0~'FICIAL USE OiiT;,Y APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY II,ECf RIC POiIER ASPECTS OF HYDROGEN POWER, TECHNOLOGY GROWTH - Moscow TEPLOENERGETIKA in Russian No 3, Mar 80 pp 8-12 ~Article by E. E. ~pil'rayn, doctor o~ technical sciences, S. alyshenko, candidate of physical-mathematical sciences, High Temperature Institute AN USSR ~ EText~ As natural liquid and gaseous fuels are becoming depleted and more expensive, their place in the bal~.nce of primary sources of energy will be taken by coal and nuclear fu~el, and in the balance of raw material sources for indastry by hydrogen and artificial liquid or gaseous hydrocarbons obtained from wate~ and coal or natural carbon- ~_.es by spending primary energy. Along with that hydrogen, and other - artificial liquid and gaseous fuels obtained on its basis, will make it possible to transmit energy from nuclear sources and coal to numer- ous various types of users, :ncluding those who are opexating on natural liquid and gaseous tuels and are not adapted to the direct use of coal and nuclear fuel. A majority of procesaes analyzed r,nday and - - systema for obtaining artificial liquid and gaseous fuels using nuclear power and by reprocessing cnal include units for obtaining hydrogen or hydrogen-containing ~ases in combination with a source of primary enesgy which determined the name of this direction in power development hydrogen power engineering. Hydrogen and artificial fuels produced on its basis have many positive properties as universal power carriers in power engineering, chemistry - and other areas of the national economy. - 1. WaCer may be used as raw material for producing hydrogen, while to obtain artificial hydrocarbona coal, carbon dioxide and natural carbonates may be used, i.e., raw material reserves are practically unlimited. 2. In burning hydrogen or aritifical fuels obtained on its basis, a considerably smaller amount of harnnful substances is formed and con- - siderably smaller expenditures are required to protect the envirornnent than when burning natural liquid and gaseous fuels, especially those - containing sulfur. 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY 3. The obtained fuels ar~ comparatively easy to transport, preserve and store. 4. Hydrogen and artificial fuels having it as a basis (for example, methanol) may be used in car and plane engines with comparatively amall adjustments. 5. Hydrogen is used widely in modern chemistry, petrochemistry and, - _ on a smaller scale, in metallurgy, metal processing, food and other - sectors of industry and requirements for hydrogen are increasing constantly. _ The problem of hydrogen power engineering pr.oper includes the following aspects: devlop new methods and improve existing ones for obtaining hydrogen anc~ artificial fuels on its basis from water and mineral raw materials by electrolysis and combination cycles of decomposition of water, - radiolysis, photolysis as well as methods related to coal reprocessing; in this case, arrangements using var~~us power sources are considered; transport, store and distribute hydrogen in the gaseous, liquid or compound states in the form of hydrides; _ the use of hydrogen and artificial fuels on irs basis in various areas of the national econom : chemistry, petrochemistry, power, transport, metallurgy, etc. ~1-3~ . ~ Each of these aspects includes problems of safety techniques, material technology, measuring equipment, environmental protection and many others. A great and relatively independent part of the problem are - investigations and developments of new efficient intern?etal compounds that absorb hydrogen reversibly and devices for their utilization in various areas of technology. The data cited below, that characterize the state of investigations and developments of some of thE above-enumerated directions and technical-economic process indicators, are based on indicators of actual installations only for processes in use today. For future methods, these evaluations are only estimates and depend greatly on the allowances made in the calculations. At present, hydrogen is produced basically from natural gas and petro- _ leum. In this case, the basic technological processes are catalytic steam or s~team-oxygen conversion. These processes are we11 developed and various modifications of them are already in use. The basic indi- _ cators of these processes are indicated in the Table. In this Table, - the cost of hydrogen produced is given on the basis of long-range costs - of natural gas and coal in the European part of the USSR. 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 I FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY G o ~ ~o ~ r-i ~ ~ ~ r~+' o .~a ~ - t-~+ c`' ^ . u a~ ~ ~ ~ a~ ~ a ~ ^ O ~ i ~.1.~ G~,..r,.i i N O do O ~ ~ u ~ ~ ~ u1 ~n ~ ~ x u s~ ~ u a~ va ~o ~o ~ ~v o0 no ~ ~ 4 T u i i iJ Q... 1 ~ ly CV NO ~ :.J 1 1 ~l0 .C; G". - Cl .rl U Vl ~ N rM'1'+ N NN ~'xt� N C~O N 'J~ Id 1 'rl ,f'� U Gl O ~ x~+~ 6-~ y.+ o o~v.,~ ~7' -h + c'~} a~0 c0 cd 00 ~~1 N 1.~ O cNd~Oi~+d xO~OxO ~Ux0~0 ~~0~~~~~~OH P~I F+Y1 O S+ UUUUUU c~:N UUUU v] u U N ~n O dOU,CAD T 1 1 1 ~ O ~ ^ O v-I b0 \ ~ tA W .-1 V) D~ DO eN ~ ~ r-1 O f: O p ^ ~ 1~ d0 ~ m r~ J~~+ O U 3~+ M~i~.~~ t~-i~1~.~r. 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O N~ c~ ~r~1 c~0 O O N o4 v~ N~ O cn O at o t~+ cn c^ -F- pC x ai r.? ao ~C ~C cn .~E'~ ~n +-i- N x ~ ov ~~-~i x-yf- + + ~ ~ cd - - N y�~ 3 ~ i.~ ~ ~ ~ ~ = Cl ~ iJ 3 3 u i i ~ ~ _ 3~ ~~~va~i~�~ a+~+ uu a~i . ao ~a, a~+s~b~ `~`~a.�~'Nb~ .C co a~ a >.�1e co a~ u a u ~ i co ua y - ~ N v ~ d - ..a a d u~ r, o, r~ r~ o o a _ .~C N G~l O O O O~ ~ O C~ L? id ti a r-+ � ~ ~ i u ~ ~ w I~~' ~Ou'1N V1N ^ W ~ ~t~t~'~t c'7~'r1~t r1 ~'1 ~U r~ ~ ~ 1 1 ~ F+ N ~ H U C d ~ ~ ~ u w ~ ~ ~ O U O U .a ~ u ~ ~ ~ a o c~~ ~ H P+ E~ u ~ ~ 7 FOR OFFICIA~L USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The efficiency of these processes (ratio~of the lowest combustion heat~ - of the produced hydrogen to the power of the primary source spent on its production) is today fram 60 to 75% deperding upon t. purity of ~ the hydroge~ produced. In producing hydrogen from natural gas, about 40'/, of the initial gas is used as fuel and about 60% directly for producir.g hydrogen. The cost c~f the hydrogen produced in these processes is determined basically by the cost of the raw material. Methods for obtaining hydrogen from hydrocarbons at NPZ ~Petroleum Refining Plantj are close to the basic reactions and methods or obtaining hydrogen _ from natural gas, but hydrogen produced at the NPZ is more expensive. As one of the first stages of using high temperature nuclear reactors (VTYaR) in chemistry, a possibility is considered of utilizing the high temperature heat of these reactors to compensate for the end~- thermic effect of the conversion reaction which will lead to a saving of 40% in the natural oas used for producing hydrogen ~2~ . Similar - developments are being carried out in the FRG ~Federal Republic of Germany~ for coal gasification. The processes for producing hydrogen when reprocessing coal were developed in the first half of the ~ T~aentieth century. Later, the development of this work practically stopped because natural gas and petroleum were cheap and only recently has this work begun to develop intensively again in various countries of the world. At present, tens of various processes and arrangements _ are being developed in the world to reprocess coal to produce hydrogen and hydrogen-containing gases, including the use of high temperature gas reactors (VTGR). The technical-economic inveatigations of many authors indicate that the cost of hydrogen obtained in reproceasing - coal for various processes, at present business conditions, exceeds _ the cost of hydrogen obtained from natural gas and is close to the - cost of hydrogen produced at the NPZ (see Table). According to some forecasts, petroleum and gas prices in the world market will grow more rapidly than the price of coal and, therefore, it should be expected = that in the future, the cost of hydrogen production in reprocessing coal will be found to be less than when it is produced from petroleum . ar_d natural gas. At present, in the USSR and abroad, new methods are . being developed for producing hydrogen when reprocessing coal that will cost 75 to 90 rubles/ton of conventional fuel. Electrolysis is the most assimilated method for producing hydrogen from water. At present, this method is used to obtain a relatively small _ amount of hydrogen (about 1.5 x 109m3/year or 5.4 x 105 tons of conven- : Cional fuel/year in the entire world), at places with cheap electric power. Electro lysis hydrogen is used primarily when very pure hydrogen is required and where, for a small volume of consumption, a system for ~ purifying conversion hydrogen becomes unprofitable. At present, many laboratories and firms in the world are carr~ing out investigations and developments to improve electrolyzers and making them less expensive ~ fo.r utilizing eiectrolysis in large-scale production of hydrogen using ~ power from an AES. Bipolar and unipolar alkaline electrolyzers are ~ being developed, as well as electrolyzers with solid polymer electolytes. 8 FOR OFFICIAL' USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFIC IAL USE OIJI.Y The costs of producing electrolytic hydrogen in modern electrlyzers* is - 140 to 180 rubles/ton o� conventional fuel and more depending on the type of the elQCtrolyzer and the mode of its operation. For future electrolyze?-s (including high temperatare ones) these co~ts will be reduced to about 110-150 rubles/ton u.t. ~Con~?entional fuel] ~4-8~ (see Fig. . _ Oy~~~li. ~ J00 - 2S0 200 ~ ~ f JSO ~ Z S J00 ~ _ ( S) C,,, - ~ o'J ~ ,f ~ - 7 Ton~~~e~�vf Estimated costs for the production of electrolytic hydrogen (data of various authors). 1. bipolar design of 5. theoretical limit at - electrolyzer capital coste equal zero = 2. unipolar design of 6. rublea/ton u.t. electrolyzer 7. kopecks/(kw-hour) - _ 3. uni~,nlar design 8� ~el 1990 technology 4. electrolyzers with solid polymer electrolysis Since the conversion of the energy of the primxry power resources to the energy of 1-~ydrogen includes, in this case, an intermediate stage ~ of electric power production, the full efficiency, i.e., the thermo- ~ dynamic ~fficiency of the process is about 20% for modern AES and - electrolyzers, whfle for high temperature gas reactors and future - electrolyzers, it will noC exceed 42 to 45%. * Here and below the relationship of one dollar (1975) = 0.75 rubles . is used when citing foreign data on capital and production costs ar.d other economic indicators. 9 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 ; , FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - Numerous technical-economic investigations of producing hydrogen from water by electrolysis usin~ electric power from various sources (AES, - - GES, TYaES, etc.) and using future and modern electrolyzers, operating ~ ?n various modes, indicate that in the future, the estimated costs of _ producing, hydrogen from �water by electrolysis will, apparently, not " - = become lower than 100 rubles/ton u.t. ~4-9~ , - Additional res~erves, for reducing the cost of hydrogen may be byproducts - of its production: oxygen and heavy water. In decomposing water per - ton of u.t. of H2, using any :nethod of hydrogen production, a ton of 02 is ~btained from the water. In the case where the oxygen may be ~ sold where the hydrogen is produced, a reduction of five to ten rubles/ ton of u.t. may be expected; however, long distance transportation of o~gen is, apparently, not profitable. In 1977, the cost of heavy water in the United States was about 100 rubles!kg. In the combina- - tion electrolytic-catalytic process, it is possible to obtain hydrogen = and heavy water simultaneously, which reduces the cost of electrolytic hydrogen by 3S to 40 rubles/ton u.t. when the heavy water can be sold - for 100 rubles/kg ~10~ . Other arrangements for obtaining D2 as ~ a byproduct are possible that also peYtnit a combination with other methods for obtaining hydrogen from water, for example, low temperature . rectification of the obtained hydrogen with the consequent production of D20o Water may be decomposed by bypassing the electric power production - stag~ thermochemically using the heat of the primary power source. � From the thermodynamic standpoint, this method does not differ in - principle from electrolysis and if all processes of converting heat _ into electric power, electrolysis and thermochemical decomposition ' were fully reversible, both processes would be fully equivalent. � Hopes for obtaining higher efficiency of thermochemical decomposition _ of water compared to electrolysis are based on two proposals: an - efficient higher upper temperature of the thermochemical cycle may be used than in modern electric power plant cycles; the de~ree of non- ' reversibility of actual processes in thermochemical cycles may be _ found to be lower than in the sec~uence of processes of obtaining electrical ower and electrolysi~. Thermodynamic investigations indi- - ~ cate that ~11~ in principle, it is possible, in four-five reactions, to provide acceptable outputs from a water decomposition reaction at an upper temperature of the cycle of 1000 to 1200K, that is, possible for installations with higher temperature nuclear reactors. In com- bination processes that also use, along with thennochemical electro- chemical reactions, it is possible to reduce the number of necessary _ reactions in a cycle to two-three. It is also possible to implement the water decomposition process in combination cycles using photo- chemical, thermochemical, raciiochemical, plasmochemical and other types of reactions, 10 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY In recent years, numeroua thermochemical ~nd combina~ion cycle~ were pr.oposed for implementing water decomposition reactions at temperatures - ~ossible for high ten~perature gas reactors. In most cases, intennediate reagents in these cycles are aubatances that have a great affinitp to hydrogen or oxygen: haloids (for example, chlorine, bromine, - iodine), elements of grouF VI (primarily sulfur) and metals of group II (magnesium, calcium, barium). Sometimes transitional elements are used that have a variable valency and can form various oxides (for example, iron). The theoretical thermodynamic efficiancy of these cycles (ratio of the lowest combusLion heat of the obtained hydrogen to the pximary energy spent for its production) which, according to various authors, may reach 45 to 55%, i.e., exceeds that for the - electrolysis process. However, in implementing these processes, it is necessary to solve complex problems related to providing acceptable kinetics of the reactions, separating the reaction products, heat and mass exchange at various process stages, purifying the products, material stability, etc. Experimental investigations made so far . indicate that the practical implementation of these cycles is a very difficult preblem and their efficiency, apparently, will be about 40% at beat ~12~ . In tnis case, the total weight of the reagents parti- cipating in the thermochemical cycle in the gaseous, liquid and solid states and in the form of solutions is very great according to data ~13~ , it averages about 800 tons per ton of H2 and is not less than 300 tons per ton of H2. For example, for an installation with a productivity of 270,000 tons of H2 per year for 40%, a minimum of 85 million tons of reagents per year participate in the chemical reactions of the cycle and minimal capital investments in the installa- " tion without taking into account the cost of the power source are about - 1..25 billion rubres, which is more than double the capital investments in electrolyzers of the same productivity. For combination th~rmo- electrochemical cycles, the unit weight of the reagents is reduced with the increase in the share of electric'power in the power balance of the cycle. For example, i~ 50% of the energy is spent in the form ~ of electrical energy for electrolysis, then the minimal unit weight ' of the reagents is about 80 tons per ton of HZ and the general level - of capital investments is lowered, getting closer to capital invest- _ ments in electrolysis production of the same productivity. The Table shows the most.authentic technical-economic characteriatics of hydrogen production methods according to data of various authors. For long-range hydrogen production methods, these estimates are of ` a preliminary nature hecause they were obtained on the basis of laboratory investigations of the process and preliminary estimates of capital investments in high temperature nuclear reactors and the installations themselves are based on existing practices in power _ engineering and chemistry. ~ 11 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Technical-economic investigations of various thermochemical and hybrid water decomposition cycles indicate that thermochemical and thermo- electrochemical hybrid processes using electrolysis can hardly become _ more economical than electrolysis, especially of the high temperature _ cycle with a solid oxide electrolyte. At the same time, hybrid cycles, - using along with thermochemical more intensive than electrolysis, for example, plasmochemical E14~ , apparently, implemented with lower capital investments and may be found to be competitiv~ with electrolysis. At present, however, there are no reliable technical-economic estimates ~ of the characteristics of these cycles because the work on these cycles is only beginning to develop and it will be necessary to solve complex - scientific-technical problems in their practical implecnentation. It - should be expected that at the first stages of the development of hydro- gen power engineering, the most efficient methods of large-scale production of co~ercial hydrogen will be electrolysis and the use of coal. In this case, the costs of gaseous hydrogen produced, according to optimistic estimates, will be, apparently, not lower than 100 rubles!ton u.t. The production of liquid hydrogen involves additional power expenditures for liquefaction and orthoparaconversion of hydro- gen and additional capital investments in a liquefaction plant. The _ theoreticg~. expenditures of electric power for liquefaction are 10.67 Mjoules/kg H2; with the present state of the art, however, they amount to about 45 to 50 Mjoules/kg H2 for a large-scale liquefying plant. Estimated costs for liquefying hydrogen for a plant with a productivity of 1000 tons u.te/day of liquid H2 are 9~ to 110 rubles/ton u.t. - without taking into account the costs of storage and servicing; with . _ an increase in the productivity of the liquefying plant, the liqueflca- ~ tion cost will decrease logarithmically. Thus, according to optimistic - estimates, the cost of liquid hydrogen produced from water will be not - less than 200 rubles/ton u.t. at the plant tap for a medium productivi~y plant. Processes of storing, transporting and distributing gaseous hydrogen are very similar to those for natural gas. It is most economical to store large quantities of hydrogen in underground storage facilities: worked-out petroleum and gas fields, water-filled porous structures, ~ - salt-dome and other natural and artificial caverns. Experience is available on such storage of large amounts of natural gas and hqdrogen under pressures of up to 10 MPa. Hydrogen storage under such condi- - tions per ton u.t. is two to four times more expensive than for natural gas 15~ . Experimental investigations have shown the technical feasi ility of using existing systems of the main transport and dis- - _ tribution of natural gas with some modernization for transporting and distributing hydrogen. If this modernization is not done, the system will transmit 10 to 15% less energy in hydrogen than in natural gas. The cost of transporting and distributing hydrogen over pipelines under pressure of 7 MPa is 1.5 to 2 times higher than of natural gas. 12 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 ~ ~OR OFFICIAL USE ONLY In optimizing the systems for Che transport and distribution of hydrogen, the diameter of the pige must be 15 to ?0% greater than for natural gas. To transport liquid hydrogen, as well as other - liquid fuel, large distances (up to 1000-1500km) it is most feasible to use water transport (in tankers) and RR transport (in tanks), while _ for distances leas than I00 to 150km by motor vehicles. Lossea of hydrogen in the beet available facilities, as a rule, do not exceed 0.5% per day and the transportation costs do i~ot increaee the cost of liquid hydrogen aignificantly. For example, the casts of ~ranaporting - liquid hydrogen a distance of 500km, taking into account losses, are ~ _ 8.8, 17.6 and 35.2 rubles/ton u.t. for river, RR and motor vehicle transport respectively ~15, 7] . Long distance pipeline transport of liquid hydrogen is uneconomical due to the high cost of heat insula- ~ tion of the pipeline that exceeds 100 rubles/m for vacuum-shield insulation. Storing large quantities of liquid hydrogen in cryogenic tanka with losses less than 0.3% per day is technically feasible at _ present. Very promising is the uae of hydrides of intextnetallic _ compound of the LaN~.S and FeTi types for storing relatively amall amounts of hydrogen. Such st~rage systems for transport inatallations are being intensively developed at present in the USSR and abroad and the first prototypes were created for motor vehicle transport. The cost of alloys for storing hydrogen is now 3.5 to 10 rubles/kg for lots of 500kg. Under normal condifiions, such alloys absorb up to 2-3% of hydrogen by weight. Recently, alloys that absorb up 6-7% HZ were obtained. - At present, about ~60 million tons u.t. of hydrogen per year are pro- duced and used in the world. Its basic users are petro~eum refining planta and chemical industry enterprises for producing ammonia and methanol. They uae about 95% of the total hydrogen produced. The remaining hydrogen is used by the cr~etallurgical, processing, food, pharn?aceutical and other industries. By 1990, it is forecast that - , the production and use of hydrogen in the world will increase to 200 million tons u.t. and even greater with inaignificant changea in the structure of consumption. A comparison is frequently made in literature of various methods for producing hydrogen and an analysis of its long-range use in various areas of the national economy, on tt~e basis of estimated costs for producing hydrogen by this or another method. This approach has sense only if this commercial, or "free" _ hydrogen goes directly to the market and to the user, when the use technology does not depend on the method for producing hydr4gen. At preaent, and long-range, up to the year 2000, this ia not the case because the transition by basic users of hydrogen from natural fuels to "commercial" hydrogen is related to the change in the technology of production of the final product and these changes depend on what kind of hydrogen ("thermochemical", "coal", "electrolytic and others) they use, on the possibility of also using, besides the hydrogen, the heat and electrical power, produced by the nuclear power plant, the 13 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY possibility of usin~ byproducts, etc. Therefor~, it is more correct to make a technical-economic comparisan of various methods of hydrogen procluction according to tt?e change in the eatimated coste of the final _ product (ammoni~, methanol, etc.) bq replacing in the production cycle natural gaseous and liquid fuels by nuclear heat or coal and hydrogen, and not according to the eatimated costs ot hyc;�-ogen. A _ aimilar situation exists alao when uaing hydrogen as fuel in transport where the comparison must be made in accordance with the cost of the transportation and not the cost of the fuel, as well as in power engineering and other industrial sectors. - Moreover, because of tiie limited inexpensive natural poWer-resources and the necessity of their efficient utilization in the national ` economy, a comprehensive technical-economic optimization of power resource consumption by various sectors of industry is most efficient including tiie power sector, in analyzing the feasibility of changing them over to nuclear power and coal as power sources, and using hydrogen as a power carrier and as raw material. Such technical-economic investigations made at the High Temperatures Institute indicate that even at today's prices for natural gas and peak electric power, it may be found more expedient to create power-technological complexes - for the production of ammonia and electric power~including peak, on the basis of modern AES with electrolytic production of hydrogen for _ full replacement of natural gas.3eparate preliminary estimates made previously for the production of ammonia indicated that electrolytic hydrogen, produced at the AES, can be used expediently for the prc~- duction of ammonia for partial replacement of natural gas at natural gas costs of about 68 rubles/ton u.t., i.e., in the fairly distant future. A more comprehensive analysis changes this conclusion - - essentially. Apparently, the most efficient method for introducing hydrogen power in the national economy is the creation of large inter~ industrial petrolednrefining and metallurgical complexes based on nuclear power, and coal using hydrogen to atore energy, as an energy carrier and as raw material. The optimal structure of these production - facilities and their combination with the power source, and between = themselves, must be established as a reault of a comprehensive system analysis for individual regions. _ Investigations made abroad and in the USSR indicate that hydrogen may be used expediently to transmit heat and power over long diatances. Main-line long di~tance pipeline transport of hydrogen and the conver- sion of its combustion heat into electric power at the receiving end of the main-line with an efficiency coefficient of 40% is a taird of the - cost of tranaporting electric power over AC VL ~.L)rr~rheati line The advantages of hydroSen transport are preserved, although to a lesser degree, conipared to DC VL. At present, processes of long : distance transport of heat from high temperature :zuclear reactors are being developed for home heating and technological purposes based - on the endothermic reaction of converting methane and the exothermic ~ 14 FOR FICIAL USE ~NLY _ ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY process of reverse methane production. In this case, heat tr~nsport _ can be implemented as a heat transport process, as well as a simul- taneous pipeline transport of artificial methane to the user. Te.;hnical- economic evaluations indicate that transporting heat over long dis- tances ha~ advantages over transporting hot water. _ Hydrogen can be used in transport as basic fuel and as an additive to liquid hydrocarbons fuels to reduce the toxicity of the exhausts. Hydrogen may be used in aviation in liquid form as fuel for super- sonic and hypersonic planes. ~nvestigations done in the United States and the Soviet Union indicate that at the cost of liquid hydrogen aboard a plane of about 30~ rubles/ton u.t., direct costs for operat- ing a supersonic plane on hydrogen fuel are close to thoae for a plane operating on kerosene at a cost of kerosene for the plane of about 200 rubles/ton u.t. for a flight distance of over 4004 to SOOOkm. Thus, the use of liquid hydrogen as fuel for long distance supersonic aviation may be found to be expectedc not too far in the future. A changeover to hydrogen fuel in aviation, however, involves large capital investments. For example, costs to reequip a large airport for hydrogen fuel are, according to Lockheed, about one billion dollars. Investigations and developments in the use of hydrogen i.n motor vehicle transport, done in the USSR and abroad, indi~ate the ex,~ediency of using hydrogen as an additive to regular fuels for city motor vehicle - transpor~ even at present business conditions. When fi~e percent - _ hydrogen is added to the usual fuels, it is'possible to reduce exhaust toxicity considerably and improve the efficiency of engine operation. ~ By using hydride systems to store hydrogen aboard a motor vehicle in various laboratoric:s in the world, the first prot~~types of such motor vehicles were created. At present in the USSR, FRG, United States, Japan, France, Italy and other countries, wide programs of investigations and developments are ~being adopted in the area of hydrogen power engineering. A broad and imiltifaceted devel,opment of hydrogen power engineering and technology - is not expected before the first quarter of the Twenty-First Century. However, the increasing costs of liquid and gaseous fuel and the ~ - increase in the demand for hydrogen by its traditional users, esgecially in the NPZ, enterprises for producing ammonia and methanol and in - metallurgy, may make it profitable to develop large-scale production of hydrogPn and before the end of the century gradually replace natural liquid and gaseous fuels produced in the processes of petroleum refining, the synthesis of inethanol and ammonia, and metallurgical - _ production using nuclear heat and coal. _ 15 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The natural power source-technological unit system for producing the energy carrier (hydrogen) may make it possible in the last quarter . of the 20th Century, to solve problems relat;ed to the creation of large autonomous power-technological complexes that do not use hyd~ro- - - carbon fuel, to produce power and chemical synthesis products. - Already, in this sense, at the present time, the problem must be solved of creating a power technology that uses nuclear power and coal as basic power resources, whi?.e hydrogen and arCificial fuels made on its basis will be used as power carriers and raw materials. Along with this, the. developmEnt of large power systems based on nuclear power and coal as power sources and including numerous users of various kinds, leads to the necessity of utilizing in the very near future, artificial~fuel based on hydrogen, and hydrogen as a power carrier and for storing power, which will make it possible to destgn a more flexible system more adapted to the users and one that does - not depend on the type of power sources. BIBLIOGRAPHY 1. Legasov, V. A. 'RJniversal Possibilities of Hydrogen." KOMMUNIST, - 1976, No 1, pp 72-73. 2. Dollezhal', N. A.; Zaichko, N. D.; Yemel'yanov, .I.Ya.; et al. "Comprehensive Utilization o~ Nuclear Reactor Power for Heavy Tonnage Production in the Nitrogen Industry." In book: "Voprosy atomnoy nauki i tekhniki. Atomno-vodorod- naya energetika" (Problems of Atomic Science and Technology. Atomic-Hydrogen Power Engineering), 1977, No 2(3), pp 5-14. 3. Legasov, V. A.; Ponomarev-Stepnoy, N. N.; et al. "Long-Range Prospects of Utilizing VTGR and Basic Problems of Introducing VTGR in Technolo~ical Processes and Electric Power ~ngineering. In book: "Voprosy atomnoy nauki i tekhniki. Atomno-vodorod- naya energetika" (Problems of Atomic Science and Technology. At~mic-Hydrogen Power Engineering), 1978, No 1(4) pp 3-18. 4. Shpil'rayn, E. E.; Sarumov, Yu. A.; Popel', O.S.; Zhukova, I.A. In book: "Voprosy atomnoy nauki i tekhniki. Ato:nno- vodorodnaya energetika" (Problems of Atomic Science and Technology. Atomic-Hydrogen Power Engineering), 1979, No 1 (5), pp 11-21. 5. Le Roy, R. L.; Stuart, A. K. Unipolar Water Electrolyzers a competitive technology. Hydr. Energy System. Ed. N. _ Veziroglu, W. Seifritz, Vol. 1, pp 359-376. Per~amon Press, - 1978. - 16 FOR JFFICIAL USE ONLY - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY 6. Menth, A.; Stueki, S. Present State and Outlook of the electrolytic H2 Production Route. Hydrogen Energy System. ~ Ed. N. Veziroglu, W. Seifrtiz. Vol. 1, pp 55-60. , Pergamon Press, 1978. 7. Biederman, N.; Darrow, K.; Konopka, A. Utilization of hydrogen - Rep. EPRI, RP320-1, Aug. 1975. 8. Nuttal, L. J.; Russel, J. H. Solid Polymer Electrolyte water = Electrolysis Development Status. Energy Syatem. Ed. N. Veziroglu, W. Seifr~.tz, Vol. 1, pp 391-402. Pergamon Press, - 1978. 9. Doenitz, W.; Schmidberger, R.; Steinheil, E.; Streicher, R. _ Hydrogen production by high temperature electolysis of water - vapour. Energy System Ed. N. Veziroglu, W. Seifr~tz. Vol. 1, pp 403-422. Pergamon Press, 1978. 10. Hammerli, M. Heavy water as a valuable byproduct of electro- lytic hydrogen. Hydr. Energy System. Ed. N. Veziroglu, W. Seifritz. Vol. 1, pp 423-450. Pergamon Press, 1978. ii. Shpil'rayn E. E. "Thermodynamic Bases of Thennochemical ' Decomposition of Water." IVTAN preprint No 2-- 007, 1977. 12. Cox. K. Thermochemical production of hydrogen from water, a critical review. 7~ASL. 1978. USA/USSR Workshop on Alternative Uses of Fusion Energy. High Temperature institute. _ Moswoc, No 20-24, 1978. 13. Deneure, F.; Roncato, J. P. Thermochemical or hybrid Cycles of Hydrogen Energy System. Ed. N. Verizoglu, W. Seifritz; Vol. 4, pp 2179-2204. Pergamon Press, 1978. 1~~ Legasov, V. A.; Rusanov, V. D. Fridman, A. A. "Nonequilibrium . Plasmochemical Processes in Heterogeneous Systems~" Plastaa Chemistry. No 5, pp 116-147. Moscow, Atomizdat, 1978. 15� Breelle, Y.; Gelin, P.; Meyer, C.; Petit, G. Int. Journ. Hydrogen Energy, 1979, vol. 4, pp 297-308. 16. Hadden, L. D. The Economics of Producing Hydrogen from small air blown Coal Gasifier. Hydrogen Energy System. Ed. N. Veziraglu; W. 5eifritz, Vol. 2, pp 983-1006. - i'j. Tai, A. S.; Kraskovskiy, R. A. Centralized Energy Balance, Economic considerations for thermochemical Hydrogen production from Fusion Reactor Blankets. LASL. Paper presented at the 17 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY USE/USSR Workshop on Alternative Applicatians of Fusion Energy. Moscow, Nov 20-24, 1978. 18~ Escher, W. J. D.; Donakovakiy, T. D.; Veziroglu Ed. N. - Cc~nference Yroceedings of thP lst World Hydrogen Conference - Miami Beach, March 1-3, 1976, Vol. 1, pp 2A-1, 19� Krikorian. 0. H. The 2nSe Thermochemical Cycle for Hydrogen Production: chemical and process design studies. Hydrogen Energy System. Ed. N. Veziroglu, W. Weifritz. Vol. 2, pp 791-80$. Pergamon Press, 1978. 20� Broggi, A.; Joels, R.; Mertel, G., Morbello, M. A n~~thod - for the techno-economic evaluation of the chemical process improvements to the "Optimo" code. Energy System. Ed. N. - Veziroglu, W. Seifritz, Vol. 4, pp 2205-2230. Pergamon Press, 1978. COPYRIGHT: Zzdatel'stvo "Energiya; "Teploenerge+ika", 1980. 2291 CSO: 1822 I 1 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ' - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ ELECTRIC PO~WER - SOLAR POWER STATIONS CONTEMPLATED Moscow TEPLOENERGETIKA in Russian No 3, Mar 80 pp 5-8 ~Article by F. V. Sapozhnikov, Deputy Minister of the USSR Ministry of Power and Electrification, Yu. N. Malevskiy, V. K. Gusev, Minene'rgo ~Ministry of Pawer and Electrification~,ENIN ~Power ~nstitute imeni G. M. Krzhizhanev~kiy~ , TEP [Teploelektroproyekt"]] [Text~ In recent years, work on utilizing sol,ar power in the USSR and other countries has developed noticeably basically for supplying ~ hot water,heating and sir conditioning buildings, drying various materials and agricultural products, demineralizing water, etc. The creation of solar electric power plants (SES), operating on the basis of machine thermodynamic cycles and capable of producing electric - and thermal energy occupies a special place. _ The attention and interest in developing SES in the USSR are due to the poasibility of replacing some amount of foseil fuel used in traditional methods to produce power and reduce the contamination level of the environment due to the absence of chemical exhausts. Some attention is also being devoted to this problem in the USSR in the work program on utilizing solar power. Starting in 1978, certain _ scientific, planning and design organizaCions of the USSR Minenergo (ENIN, TEP, SKB ~Special design bureau~ , VTI ~All-Union Heat Engineering Institute imeni F. E. Dzerzhinskiy PKB ~Planning design bureau] for mechanizing power construction, PKB "Energostal'- konstruktsiya", etc.) began working to create the �irst experimental SES in the USSR to dete~ine the long-range prosperts of using plants af this type in southern regions of the country. The idea of creating SES of an induetrial type was proposed for the first time by Soviet enginepr N. V. Linitakiy over 30 years ago. He then propc~sed an arrangement of a solar power plant, which is naiw called a solar power plant arrangement with a central receiver or tower arrangement (Fig. 1). 19 . FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 ' FOR OFFICIAL USE OPP~Y \ _ ~1) (2) /Iadaroevee /lpueronuK _ uonyvt~ue ~'j~ � Hecyu~aw ~au~N~ - ~cnuuc~ o~inei - //i// . / . Fig. 1. Schematic diagram of a solar plant of the t~wer type. 1. Incident radiation 3. Tower 2. Receiver 4. Heliostats In this system, the steam generator (solar radiation receiver) is - - located on a tall tower, surrounded by a field of mirror reflectors (heliostats), by means of which solar radiation is focused on the heat receiving surface of t?~is receiver. After that, the heat energy is transfoztned into electrical power in accordance with the usual steam-power industrial parameter cycle. At the end of the fifties, _ on the basis of this concept, the ENIN developeu a technical proposal for a 2.5 Mw (electric) SES which later became widely known due tA publications in the scientific-engineering journals of several - countries. In the mid~dle of seventies, the problem of utilizing renewable energy ` sources in industrial electric power production in the USSR began to be considered on the level of concrete evaluations. _ These evaluations were made in the direction of studying the technical- economic indicators of solar electric power plants operating either independently or within powe~ systems, as well as along the "ine of scientifiq design and planning developments of a small capacity prototype. The USSR has regions where the intensity of solar radiation is fairly high and stable. In the Central Asian republics, Kazakhstan, Crimea, ' Caucasus and Zabaykal, the sun shines 2000 to 3000 hours per yesr. Taking into account the natural and economic conditions of the southern USSR, it is sound practice to consider first the importance of solar power from the standpoint of improving the power supply to numerous scattered comparatively small agricultural users of power. : ~ 20 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY As shown by an analysis made by the Sel'energoproyekt, the power required by such uaers is from 1.5 to SMw. A great number of auch - ' usera are, for example, in Kazakhstan in regione south of the 500 of the northern latitude. These regions (their area is over half the area of the republic) are characterized by the fact that it is preciaely here where machine irrigation is conceatrated and almost all arid and aemiarid pastures far sheep-raiaing are located that irrigation ia required; here are located numeroua large salt lakes and considerable reaerves of underground highly mineralized watera. In such zones, solar installations operaCing with flat collectors, - autonomous small capacity SES may find application for comprehensive electrical and heat supply, including Chat for obtaining commercial _ steam, heating, hot water, drying, refrigerating feeding electric pumps for irrigation systems and dernineralizing water. - SES are characterized by ununifoYm production of heat and electric power which, to a certain extent, can be equalized by a system of a limited energy capacity storage. For this reason, the use of SES is preferab~.e in regiona where users may permit some interruption in power supply or it is possible to etore the energy produced by the ~ SES in the fonq for example, of ice or elevated or demineralized water. In all other cases, either a standby power installation can _ be used or local 35 to 110kv electric network may be employed which, according to the Sel'energoproyekt data, have a transit capacity in the majority of zones where solar energy can be utilized. Technical-economic calculations, made by taking into account long- range increasea in fuel costs, indicate that in several regions of Southern Kazakhstan and Turkmenia, reduced costs with electric power supplied by the SES, including that operating jointly with local _ electric networks, may be comparable or even lower than the reduced costa for the version of power supply from sources operating on solid or liquid fuel brought in from a distance. Autonomous condensation type SES, operating outside the system, most favorable in the load mode, are pumping stations for irrigating oases. Such pumping stations operate from April to September 12 to 13 houra duiing daylight, while in April-May, the electric power need changes to 30-60% of the maximum, in June-July 100%, decreases gradually to 60% in August-September and then to 30%. Thus, the daily schedule of pumping station operation during the year coincides with the schedule of reception of solar radiation. This fact, as well as that the use of such SES does not require st~ndby power sources reflect poaitively on the technical-economic characteristics of the SES. Data analysis on the long-range development of machine irrigation in Kazakhstan indicated that there are large irrigation areas and more are planned (basically oasea) located considerable distances from power system centers that, in each case, require over 1000kw of electric , 21 - FOR OFFICIAL uSE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000200074441-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY power for transporting water. Capital investments for competitive SES of such a capacity must be within 750 to 500 rubles/kw with the power system centers being within 300 to 50km away and fuel costs _ not greater than 30 rubles/ton of conventional fuel. _ - The trend in changing the annual achedules of the operations of the power asaociation in some southern regions of the country atteat to the fact that in the future (10 to 20 years), the annual maximum power loads will occur in the summer (i.e., in the period of maximum � reception of solar radiation) due to the increasing ehare of power consumption for aeasonal agricultural work, sir conditioning and ' machine irrigations. This fact ~xpands the prospects of utilizing - SES in the indicated regions. In accordance with the program for further study of the possibilitiea of creating, operating and utilizing SES as a power source in the country, it is planned before 1985 to build in the Crimea and to make tests of the first USSR experimental 3 to SMw SES, which will include all basic subsystems of a solar electric power plant with industrial parameters. Table 1 shnws the basic characteristics of the plan for such an SES made by the Teploelektroproyekt on the basis of the _ scientific development of the Power Institute imeni G. M. Krzhizhan- ovskiy. Table 1 - Basic characteristics of an experimental solar electric power plant of the tower type (estimates) Characteristic Value Electric power, Mw 3-5 Heat power, Mw maximum 21 average annual 18.5 Number of operating hours annually 2000 _ Annual electric power output, million kw-h~urs up to 9 _ Helioatat field Ring Diameter, m: outer 470 inner 140 Total area of mirror surface, 1000m2 40 Number of heliostats 1600 - Size of heliostat 5 x S Height of tower, m 70 ~ 22 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL US~ ONLY - Table 1 contd. - Characteristic Value Density of radiation flux on the surface of the eteam genera+tor (7 x 7), kw/m2: 2= June, 12 houra: average 135 maximal 225 - - 22 December, 12 hours; - average 90 maximal 190 Steam parameters ahead of turbine: pressure, MPa 3 temperature, �C 232 , ~o~ ~ N . 197on~ � ' tcnuotmamoC `N~Ol' 7~'~' _ - 1400r~ ~tnuocmaT Fig. 2. Grouping of a large 300 Mw solar electric power plant arrange- ment consisting of four modules (75Mw each). 1. Heliostat field 2. Heliostat 23 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ 4=~~:,~;~~K ~ ~.y1,~~ ~c,,,rr�~,~,o_ , .~n u _ ~p~~,u i~~�� ��r,~p- U.~ n yng�i~N - - ~ - . =1 ~ =s~ _ _ ~ ~ s _ - Fig. 3. Thermal arrangement of experimental SES-5 with receiver- _ accumulator 1. Solar radiation receiver 3. Separators - 2. Receiver-accumulator Fig. 3. shows one possible thermal arrangement of an SES using a - receiver-accumulato~' whose basic features are as follows: - the thermal arrangement ia made on the basis of a cycle with saturated _ steam with the turbine operating in the condensation mode; the solar steam generator is of the drum type with natural circulation; a type P-6-35/5 SMw turbine is used; = to keep the turbine hot during short interruptions in solar radiation ~ (one to two hours) a receiver-accumulator is used in the system, filled with water at saturation teanperature a reserve of which is created by a part of the ateam apecially condensed for this purpose, produced by ~ the ateam generator, after it becomea operative at the nominal mode. During interrup*_ions of solar radiation and, therefore, a stoppage in - the production of steam in the boiler, the thermal arrangement ia - kept 1-~t due to ventilation by saturated steam evaporated from the atored saturated water. ; 24 - ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ - I ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The use of saturated steam as an operating medium, especially, at SES with Che combined production of heat and electric power has certain advantagea. The reduction of electrical efficiency ia made up by the increase in the reliabliity of the eteam generator, that has to operate with the intermittent arrival of aolar radiation, by a eimpler arrangement of Che autrnn~atic control of the 3ES and the accumulator and, therefore, 6y lower capital expenditures for thie part. The experimental SES-5 will have the possibility of testing several thernial arrangements, including one- and two-loop with a heat accumulator that makes it poasible to equalize and ehift the output of heat and electrical power during the day. - ~ In the first loop of the SES, it is beneficial to use as a heat carrier e liquid with a high boiling point or a liquid metal heat carrier with high specific heat. This makes it posaible to create an _ inexpensive heat accumulator of large energy capacity in which the _ _ pressure will not exceed 0.8 to 1 MPa. However, in the first S~S, it is expedient to use water at moderate pressures of 2.5 to 4.5 MPa _ as a working medium that permits using as an accumulator equipment available in the power, chemical and gas induatries. Under Crimean conditions, the number of operating hours of the - experimental SES per year will be about 2000. In this case, the change in the daily hours of plant operation during the year will vary from 12 (in the aumQaer) to five (in the winter) from the manent the sun's altitude is 15� above the horizon (Fig. 4) in a solar - radiaCion flux density range of 0.65 to 0.87 kw/m2. - In implementing in practice the full technological arrangement for tranaforming solar energy into heat and electrical power, the planned - power level of three to five Mw for the experimental plant is sufficient for experimental debugging of the principle of operaCion, the ASU ~Automatic control system the design of the basic subsyatems, their interaction and identification of special feaCures of the operation of such electric power plants, includin~ larger ones also. 'I'he scientific, planning and design organizationa of the Minenergo - also evaluated the projected deaign and technical-economic characterie- tics of large industrial SES on an example of a 200 to 300 Mw eolar - electric power plant, operuting within a power eyatem. 25 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY I,0 nQr/M~~ _ (2~ _ ~ lfavano u Koneq - --s - - - - pa~omei G3C /!n~ /3�Qe~comei nod zvpuoonmaro ~ .r- ~ .0 - ~1y ~ / `n~ ~ ~ . -6 ' -4 -z nc:-~c.~o ~ 4 s " ~3) , Fig. 4. Cnntinuity of SES operation during a bright day and the change in solar radiation intensity (kw/m2) in Crimea (45� northern 1aCitude) for days in the summaer (June), winter (December) solstice - andequinox (September). 1. kw/m2 3. Noon 2. Start and end of SES 4. For s 15� altituae above operation the horizon The operation of a SES within a power system under USSR conditions is of independent interest. The presence of a branched power system ~ network in the country makes it poasible to utilize in varioua ways large solar electric power plants of varioua types in various climatic and economic zonea, including ~ES operating in the mode of feeding electric power into the network during the day, and plants that have _ a aCorage ayatem and that participate in the power balance of the power syatem independently, as well as in combination with thercnal ar hydraulic plants (hybrid version). By a corresponding increage in the heat capacity of the storage . facility, it may be possible to achieve a basic mode of SES operation which not only replaces a certain amount of fuel burned in the aystem by solar energy, but also correaponding fuel of a basic thermal , electric power plant as a whole. In one gossible version, the S~S-300 may consist of four modules each _ of. which (with a power of up to 75Mw) repreaents an electric power plant operating on the "steam generator-turbine" thermodynamic princi- rile, that has a separate heliostat field with an area of up to 2km2 and a central ~ower 250m high (k'ig. 3). Each SES-300 module contains about 12,000 heliostats with a mirror aurface of 7 x 7m and a saturated steam pressure ahead of the t~urbine of 6I~.'a. 26 ~ ~ FOR OFFICIAL USc ONLY ~ ` ~ . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Table 2 Expected power characteristics of th~ SES-300 in southern regions Indicator Crimea Uzbekistan Kirgizia Dageetan - Lower Tadzhikietan Tranabaykal Volga Turkmenia Annual output of electric power, Mkw- - hour 355- 560-715 430-575 450-600 445 Hours operation per year 2000 2700 2150 2270 Saving of fossil fuel per year (1000 tona of conventional fuel) Up to Up to 245 Up to 195 Up to 200 _ 150 ~ Table 2 shows expected annual electrical power outputs of an SES-300 in southern regions of the country, the number of hours of plant operation per year and possible fuel saving. Below is given an estimate of unit costs of SES operating on a free schedule in which they can compete with traditional power plants at an average uniC cost of the latter of 200 rubles/kw. The moat favorable SES cost indicators may be expected for Crimea and the Lower Volga region. This is because in the forecast 20-year - period, the rated fuel costs for the indicated regions may increase almost to 50 rubles/ton of conventional fuel, while for Kazakhstan _ and Transbaykal lower fuel costa are expected (24 and 10 rubles/ton of conventional fuel reapectively), which is characteristic for the eastern regions of the country that have rich fuel resources. Calculations made by taking into account the possible reduction in the cost o� the SES in the future with increasing fuel costs, indicate - _ that for condensation SES operating on a free schedule without parti- cipating in the power system balance, the maxi~um competitive capa- bility with thermal condensation plants ia a cost per inetalled lkw for the considered regions of fraa 270 rubles (Traasbaykal) to 550 rubles (Crimea). For example, for cond3tions of the Lower Vol~a region, 300Mw condensation SES may be more economically profitable in the case where its unit cost does~not exceed 530 rubles/kw. 27 ~ - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY , _ According to plan esti~r~ates, the unit cost of installed lkw of large - SES may vary, depending upon Che regi~on, within 750 to 900 rubles for an electric power production cost of two to four kopecks~(kw-hour). In the �uture, due to technological improvements of the SES system, including an increase in opersting parameters of the equipment and - uaing more optimal matarials, a certain reduc~tion in thie value may be expected. ~ . . The data shown above indicatea thP long-range poesibilities of uaing - solar electric power plants of vartous types (nt firat of small ~ ca acities) in the aouthern re iona of the count - P g ry may, in aome cases, be evaluated as poaitive. Only the future will show what place solar electric power takes in _ the fuel-power balance of the country and what efforts will be required for its development. Scientific research and experimental design work in this area will be directed to technological and technical-economic search for ways to increase the efficiency and competitiveness of solar electric power - plants. The problem of power storage requires further investigations. It ia also necessary to develop types of SES that, besides heat and electric power, can also produce products (for example, hydrogen or ethanol). In the futur~ photoelements may be used widely in tower SES systems capable of operating at high densities of the radiation flux and temperaturea of up to 300�C. It may be expected that the use of photoelements on the SES receiver surfaces will make it posaible to increase the total efficiency of converting solar energy into electric power to 35% and higher. BIBLIOGRAPHY Malevskiy, Yu. N.; Tarnizhevskiy, B. V.; Fugenfirov, M. I. "Solar Power Abroad: Forecasta and the State of Art." In book: "Energetika _ i toplivo (dostizheniya i perapektiva)" (Power and fuel, achievements and prospects). No 1. Mezhdunarodnyy tsentr nauchnoy i tekhnicheskoy info~atsii, 1975, pp 41-50. - The PY Enersy BudgeC-Nuclear News, 1978, vol 21, No 4, pp 30-35. Aparisi, R. R.; Baum, V. A.; Garf, B. A. "High Power Solar Installations." In book: "Ispol'zovaniye solnechnoy energii" (Utilization of solar energy), (symposium I) Izd. AN SSSR, 1957, pp 85-98. Linitskiy, N. V. "Arrangement of a Powerful Concentrator for Solar Energy with Stationary Flat Mirrors." GELIOT~I~TIKA, 1969, No 4, ~ - pp 21-28. - 28 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Baum, V. A.; Aparisi, I~. R.; Garf, V. A. High Power Solar Installa- tion Sol~r Energy, vol 1, 1957, No 2, pp 6-10. COPYRiGHT: Izdatel' etvo 'tErneo!$~~~'-t;~ "T'ep~o~g,~tike~," ~ 1980. . 2291 CSO: 1822 29 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ELECTRIC POWER UDC 629.7.064.58 POWER STATIONS WITH Mf~ GENERATORS � : Moscow TEPLOENERGL~!'IRA in Russian No 3, Mar 80 pp 2-5 [Article by Academician A. Ye. Sheyndlin; B. Ya. Shumyatskiy and E. E. Shpil'rayn, doctors of technical sciences; and G. N. Morozow and G. M. Koryagina,, ca~adidates of technfcal sciences, AN USSR High Tempera~ure ~ Institute; "Present-Day State of the Problem of Constructing Electric Power Stations With A4ID Generatorsl] [Text] Research in the are a of energy conversion by magneto- hydrodynamic rnethods, conducted about 20 years ago in the Soviet Union and abroad.~ makes it possible for us at the pre- ~ _ sent time to proceed to a qualitatively new stage--the com- mercial introduction in power engineering of thermal electric power stations with magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) generators. _ The first large-scale experimental and experimental-industrial installations called upon to demonstrate the feasibility of utilizing the MHD method and to accumulate experience in oper- _ ating the individual systems have been built in our country and abroad. The MHD power unit is a two-stage power instal- lation, in the upper region of whose temperature range (2700- 2000�C) the MHD generator operates and in the lower region (5~~-3~�C) a conventional steam-turbine installation is en- gaged. The high initial temperature, which is practically un- attainable in other types af structures, makes it possible to - increase the efficiency of thermal electric ~ower stations - with MHD generators to j0-60 percent. In this way~ great sav- ings in fuel are achieved in comparison with the best modern ~ thermal stations (efficiency of 3?.3 percent). The savings are approximately 25-30 percent greater. The promise of MHD energy conversion is also determined by the fact that the MHD ~ = l0ur readers can become acquainted with the basic trends in fuel and power production resources economy in the coal indus- try by reading the articles in UGOI,' No 3, 1980. ; 30 ~ - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY generator can be utilized not only in a binary cycle with'a steam power plant~ but also in a multistage cycle. In this case, thermal machinery (a potash turbine~ for example) can be used in the 1200-600�C temperature range. The more efficient the lower and middle stages of a combined MHD installation~ the greater the thermal sa~ings of the entire electric powar station. The utilization of the MHD generator is promising not only for increasing the savings at electric power stations where chemical fuels are employed but also at nuclear electric power installations. A non-equilibrium plas~ia MHD generator with an initial inert gas temperature of 1300-1500�C is possible in combination with a high-temperature gas-cooled reactor. In the long term it wi~l be possible to use gaseous-phase nucleax reactors with an MHD installation, wl~ich in this case will be the sole or pri- mary source of electric energy. There are interesting propo- _ sals for the utilization of MHD generators in combination - with thermonuclear installations. ~ - An important virtue of the MHD installation is the feasibility of achieving great indiva.dual outputs from the power units. - In this case~ t~ne higher the output, the greater the sav~ngs for the installation. This is due to the fact that the useful - effect--the conversion of energy--is volumetric, while all the deleterious effects~ such as the friction losses, current leaks along the insulating walls~ etc., take place on the sur- - f aces of the MHD generator. Consequently, it is necessary to have a sufficiently great ratio between the volume of the MHD - channel and its surface in order to decrease these deleterious effects. Estimates show that open-cycle MHD generators become ~ adequately efficient at outputs of 500-1000 MW. The overall - _ output of the MHD unit, including the steam turbine, will com- prise approximately 1000-2000 MGJ. With the utilization of the MHD electric power station pollu- - = tion of the environment is reduced. The enhanced efficiency of the MHD electrzc power station leads to a reduction of the thermal emissions with flue gases per unit of energy produced which is proportional to the reduction in the unit expznditure of fuel, that is~ by 20-35 percent. . With the increase in efficiency from ~0 th 50 percent the ex- penditure of cooling water decreases by a factor of 1.~5, and . by more than a factor of 2 when the increase in efficiency - reaches 60 percent. 31 ~ , FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The injection of an ionizing additive--potassium carronate _ (K2C03)-- into the MHD electric power station's combustion pro- _ ducts almost completely fixes the sulfuric oxides that are formed during the burning of high-sulfur coal or fuel oil. This eliminates the problem of constructing special, expensive - sulfur-scrubbing equipment, the cost of which~ the estimates show, reaches 30 percent of the cost of a traditional electric power pla.nt. By virtue of the very high temperatures at which the combus- tion process takes place in MHD installations, greater amounts of nitrous oxides (up to 2 percent) are formed in the combus- - - tion products. The most widely used method of combating nitrous oxides is the two-stage combustion of the fuel. It is this method that is successfully employed at MHD electric power plants. In the primary combustion chamber the stoichiometric ra+io is main- _ tained at the 0.9-0.85 level, at which point CO and Ha are formed, which at temperatures above 1500-1300�C dissolve the nitrous oxides by taking the oxygen from them. Later on air is fed into the combustion products and an afterburning of the incompletely consumed fuel takes place. Calculations and ex- _ perimental data show that, in addition~ the nitrous oxide con- - tent can be reduced to values substantially lower than those allowed by existing standards. Besides this, in certain cases it may prove to be expedient to extract the nitrous oxides from the combustion products in order to produce nitric acid. ~ The MHD electric power station is characterized by its great - adjustability:for specific schedule determinations the load can vary from nominal to 20 percent, which significantly ex- ceeds the control limits at conventional thermal electric power stations. Such a wide range of control is insured by the feasibility of shutting down the MHD generator and switching ~ the steam generator over to a mode of operation using self- contained burners with consequent regulation of only the steam power unit. , The MHD open-cycle installation can utilize almost all forms of fossil fuels. Naturally~ at the first stage preference was given to the utilization of "clean" fuel--fuel oil and natural gas. However, most of the coal from USSR deposits can also be effectively utilizeds in particular, bituminous coal from the - Kuznetskiy Basin~ Kansko-Achinsk coal or semi-coke, obtained on the basis of thermal treatment of the latter. With the utilization of coal the operation of the individual systems becomes more complicated. This occurs, first of all, in the system for preheatin~ the air~ for injection of the additive - 32 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ ~ �e ~ . ~f' ' ~ - ti~ c. � b � ~e ~ - ~ ~T ~ a � ~ . om ~S S~ S~ c~ s - ~ H i ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ r- - i ~ ' ~ I ~ ~ ~ i - ~ ~ ~ I ~ , ~ ' ~ i - r~J _ J 1 I . . I i 4 ( r----- - ~ ' ~ _ _ . i~~ i - , N ; i _S ~ . . , -,a*-= - ~ I ~ ' ~ ( . ~ ~ ~ . ~O~'r . w � ~ ~ ; ~ , . ` h N ^ _ ~ ~ 1 T I I - anT3 oy 33 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 1~UK U~'F1C1AL USE ONLY BASIC EQUIPMENT I~AYOUT OF THE MHD POWER UNIT AT THE RYAZAN' GRES 1. Air fractionating unit ~ 2o Oxidant compressor 3. Catalytic reactor 4~. High-temperature oxidant heaters (VNO's) 5. Combustion chamber 6. MHD generator (nozzle, channel, diffuser) - 7. Inverter substation 8. Combustion chamber cooling system 9. Self-contained system for cooling the nozzle and the initial portion of the channel 10. Channel cooling system (p=2.0 megapascals) 11. Channel cooling system (p=4.5 megapascals) - 12. Industrial c~ndenser ~ 13. Steam generator 14. Air preheater for independent operation of the steam generator 15. Cottrell precipitators 16. Flue 17. Turbine unit 18. Flue ~;ases 19~ N atural gas 20. Air 21. Oxidant ' - 22. Steam, water ~ SS - Steam superheater WE - Water economizer FP - Fuel preheater _ PE - Pre-engaged economizer 3~+ FOR OFFICIAY. USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY and for recovery of the additive, where the presence of scale a,ffects the operation to a greater degree. There are, how- ever~ certain merits to the coal-fired variant: a layer of slag protects the walls of the station's high-tem erature ele- ments ( the combustion chamber and the MHD ch~annel~ and the coal combustion products possess a somewhat higher electrical conductivity (in comparison with those from gas or fuel oil at the same temperature). This can substantially facilitate the solution to the problem of extended operation of high- - temperature materials and can reduce somewhat the necessary level of oxidant heating. The figure attained for the savings in fuel (or the efficiency) at an open-cycle MHD electric power station in compaxison with the traditional steam-turbine electric power plants depends primarily upon the method and level of heating the air (the oxidant) in the MHD electric power plant's cycle. For example, in MHD installations in which the oxidant is heated to 1700�C by combustion products from a special (self-contained) com- bustion chamber, a combined-cycle efficiency of 48-50 percent can be attained. If this same oxidant preheating level is pro- vided for through the utilization of the combustion products exiting the MHD generator, that is~ through heat recovery in the MHD cycle, the combined-cycle efficiency increases to 50-~4 percent. An additional increase in the degree of heat recovery (wit~i the engagement in the system of the installa- tion's MHD unit for the thermochemical treatment of the fuel by the heat of the gases which exit the MHD generator) increas- es the efficiency of the MHD installation to 55-58 percent. The higher figures for MHD installation efficiency cited in the literature (up to 60 percent) can be attained in the long term when tY~e installation's parameters are increased (the oxidant preheating temperature to 2000�C~ the magnetic field induction to 8 tons, etc.). In the USSR the MHD installations that are best prepared and are planned for future industrial introduction are the open- _ cycle, gas-fired MHD plants with self-contained oxidant heat- ing and a bottom-cycle steam turbine. The construction of a gas-fired MHD electric power plant will allow us to create the necessary production base for industry and to accumulate the operational experience which is necessary for the construction of a coal-fired MHD electric power plant. The most special- - ized installation elements (the MHD channel with its magnetic system, the inversion system~ etc.) will undergo practically no changes in the transition to another type of fuel. - The leading position in MHD electric power plant development belongs to the Soviet Union. In addition to some large-scale - scientific reseaxch installations, the U-25 experimental- 35 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY industrial installation (whose MHD generator in 197~ re ached its designed electric output of 20.4~ MW and over the course - of more than 250 hours operated continuously at loads of up to 10 MW) has been in operation since 1971 in the Soviet Union. The installation's overall operational time exceeds 6000 hours. In the U-25 installation not only the main unit--the MHD - generator--but also the other elements have been mastered~ the additive injection and extractions systems, the high- temperature combustion chamber~ the steam generator, a system for inverting the current drawn from the MHD generator~ the apparatus for keeping the heating surfaces free from additive deposits, high-voltage electrical insulation for elements of - the MHD generator and the combustion chamber, etc. Some of these elements are either totally new or acquire, in combi- nation with the MHD installation, special characteristics that are distinct from the working specifications of traditional thermal electric power plants. In recent years, research associated with the development in - the Soviet Union of a coal-fired MHD electric power plant has been conducted at a U-02 installation where the mineral por- tion of the fuel is imitated through the use of ash supplied by the gas-combustion products, as well as at the Minenergo installation at Kokhtla-Yarve. Further substantial develop- ment of the utilization of coal at MHD electric~power stations _ is planned on the existing experimental basis in Kokhtla-Yarve at the Kazakh Scientific Research Institute of Power Engineer- ing (KazNIIenergetika) in Alma-Ata and at the U-02 and U-25 inatallations which will be refurbished and fully equipped. The development of coal utilization is also planned at newly ~ constructed special stations and installations as well. Con- struction in the future of a coal-f ired experimental-industrial MHD installation on the basis of the U-25 facility will allow - us to ootain the data necessary for designing a 1000 MW hard coal-fired industrial MHD electric power plant. In the U.S.~ Japan, India and Poland great attention is being devoted to the development of MHD electric power plants. Some research is being conducted in Canada~ Finland, Romania, Yugo- - slavia and other countries. England, France and West Germany at the end of the 196o's shelved their MHD energy conversion research in vie:v of the absence of sufficient reserves of fossil fuel and the fact -that they pinned their hopes on the _ immediate development of atomic power. - - In the U.S. more than 20 organizations from government as well ` as laxge private firms are engaged in research in the area of - _ MHD power conversion. The largest scientific research cen- ters participating in research into MHD power conversion axe: 36 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-00850R040240070041-7 ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY the U.S. National Bureau of Standards, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology~ the Argonne National I,aboratory~ the Pittsburgh Coal Research Center, the University of - Tennessee, Stanford University and other firms: Westinghouse, General Electric~ Avco-Everett, Reynolds and many others. At present a special MHD power conversion institute is being or- ~ ganized in the U.S. in the state of Montana (MERDI), where - experimental and experimental-industrial installations are be- ing built. ThA transition to the practical introduction stage is characteristic of MHD electric power plant development in the United States. = The majority of research being done in the U.S. and other foreign nations (excluding Japan, which is oriented basically toward importEd oil) is directed at the creation of co41-fired MHD installations. In the U.S. at the present time more than - 80 million dollars axe being invested yearly in this develop- ment. The first large-scale experimental coal-fired MHD fa- - cility with a 50 MW thermal output is in the final installa- tion stage, and the start-up and adjustment operations axe be- ginning. There are proposals for the construction in 1985 of = an experimental-industrial MHD station with an output of about 125 M4V, which will subsequently be increased to 250 MW. _ The construction of a coal-fired 2000 MW MHD electric power _ plant in the U.S. is proposed for completion in 1990. A forecast done by the General Electric Company shows that, ac- cording to their technical nad economic indicators~ MHD instal- lations may prove to be the most preferred in the U.S. by the beginning of the 21st century. Taking into account the nature of thermal electric power plant development in the Soviet Union, we are orienting the realiza- tion of a development program fcr MHD electric power plants in - two basic steps: the construction of several ga~- and fuel oil-fired MHD elec- tric power plants witli the engagement of a pilot power unit in 1985~ the construction of a coal-fired MHD electric power plant with the engagement of a pilot power unit at the start of the 199o's. - At the present time the development of MHD electric power plants has passed the stage of technical and economic demon- _ stration. The technical design stage of a pilot MHD power unit will be started at the Ryazan' GRES. 37 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 - F~R OFFICIAL USE ONLY The following prerequisites have been prescribed as the bas~.s _ of design development of a pil+~t industrial MHD electric power plant . The techr.ical-~conomic indicators for the MHD electric power plant's pilot power unit should be higher than those of the = known alternative Qlectric power producing installations pro- posed for introduction in 1985. ' - � _ The technical decisions incorpor�ated in the design should pos- sess reliable experimental confirmation. This predetermined, first of all~ the choice of fuel, since w~ in the Soviet - Union have at the present time experience in u tilizing only natural gas in MHD installations. It seemed expedient to adopt the steam-power installation of the MHD power unit as the standard layout~ since its manufac- - ~ure and operation had already been mastered. On the basis of considering the limited expenditures for the pilot unit, - _ the steam-power installation's output should be kept to a mini- mum, but it should not be lower than the output at which the MHD generator proves to be sufficiently economical. - - The K-300-240 turbine~ widely used in the Soviet Union, con- forms completely with these conditions. The output of the MHD superstructure for this turbine comprises 24o-26a nRw, which, a1 though it is substanti~,lly lower than the optimum figure for the MHD generator~ is sufficient for demonstrating 4 the principal advantages of th.e MHD method. In connection with the characteristics of the MHD ~nstallation (increased combustion-product temperatures, the pre~ence of additives in the combustion products, the necessity of utiliz- ing the heat extracted from the combustion chamber cooling system and the MHD generator in the steam cycle, etc.), the MHD unit's steam genera+or differs in construction from the standard model. The design development carried out has shown that all the new _ equipment (the super-conductive magnetic system, compressors~ a system to separate the combustion products from the additive~ the electric portion of the MHD generator, etc.) is on a _ technical level where it can be manufactured at existing in- _ dustrial enterpris~s~ usin~ a minimum of new materials. = The oxidant preheating is done at temperatures up to 1700`C ~ an3 is carried out in self-contained, high-teniperature, fu;^nace-type heaters (Cowper blast air heat~rs), since the higher preheating of the oxidant or a replacement of the self- - contained heaters with regenerators is associated with t~'~e use _ oi new materials, the manufacture of which demands a substan- tial refitting of industry. ~ 38 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY I APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - The thermal flow sheet for the power unit of the pilot MHD electric power plant~ developed in accordance with the con- ~ siderations discussed above~ is represented in the diagram. - The MHD generator is designed in such a way that the dischaxge - and enthalpy of its exhaust gasea are sufficient to obtain the quantity of steam neceseary for the K-300-240 turbine. The application of atmospheric air or air that is slightly enriched with oxygen (up to 27 percent) and preheated to 1700�C is planned for the oxidizing agent. The slight enrichment is foreseen as a back-up measure in case in the initial period the temperatL~.re and electrical conductivity should prove to be iower than calculated. In both cases the same equipment will be used. The equipment layout at the MHD electric power plant is ~om- - pleted with compressors that are driven by synchronous moters. A more economical solution is the installation of a compressor driven by a special turbine wh.i~~h receives a portion of the steam from the primary turbine's TsVD (high-pressure cylinder) after intermediate superheating. In this case, however~ the _ ~ development of a new prima~.�y steam turbine would be required for the electric generator drive, since the flow rate of steam within it would be different before and after the inter- mediate superheating. Such a solution would not be adopted for the pilot unit~ but it is proposed that when the MHD elec- tric power plant goes into commercial production this solution be rEViewed and that we make the transition to a steam drive for the compressor. One of the complex problems is the efficient utilization of low-potential heat in the MHD cycle. In contrast tc~ conven- tional steam-turbine plants~ the cooling of exha,ust gases in = Mh~ electric power plants in the temperature region below 300�C - cannot be carried out by the oxidant, since it exits the com- pressor at a higher temperature. In addition, 7-9 percent of _ the burned fuel's heat is extracted from the combustion cham- ber's cooling system and from the MHD generator at tempera- tures no higher than 250-260�C. Zow-potential heat can be utilized only under conditions of partial displacement of the steam regeneration; for utilization of the heat of the exiting _ gases to heat the fuel and preheat the air that enters the _ self-contained high-temperature heaters; and for other pur- poses. The design developments that have been carried out show that the application of MHD electric power plants~instead of steam-turbine electric power stations provides a 21-22 percent savings in fuel. With the cost of fuel at 30 rubles per ton - of conventional fuel this makes it possible to reduce the cal- culated expenditures for the output produced by 6-7 percent. _ 39 ~OR OFFICIAL USF .^,'r1LY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OrFICIAL USE ONLY The designing of the MHD power unit for the Ryazan' GRES is being carried out by the Moscow branch of the - "Teploelektroproyekt" Institute. In the development of equip- � ment for the MHD power unit~ the laxgest scientific research institutes and design organizations of the USSR Minenergo~ - Minelektrotekhprom~ Minenergomash~ the USSR Minchermet and Minkhimash are participating, as well as from other depart- _ ments~ such as the Zeningrad "Elektrosila" union~ the NPO TsKTI (Scientific-Industrial Union of the Central Scientif ic Research and Design-Construction Turbine ~oiler Institute imeni I. I, Polzunov)~ Ukrgipromez and others. The plans for 19 long-range, special-purpose programs relating to new developments in the area of power engineering have been examined by a permanent commission for the formulation of a long-term, complex program of development of a fuel and power- - - production complex for the Soviet Union. This permanent com- mission is under the control of the USSR Gosplan, the USSR - Council of Ministers State Committee for Science and Technolo- gy and t,~le AN USSR. A preliminary analysis has shown that, even with consideration given to all the allowances made for _ the possible deviations in the program's results~ the gas- and - solid fuel-fired MHD electric power plants occupy one of the first places among the new power-production technologies with - respect to the expenditures cited. COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo "Energiya," "Teploenergetika," 1980 9512 - CSO: 1822 ~+0 ~ ~ _ FOR OFFICiAL USE ONLY I APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICI.AL US~ ONLY ELECTRIC POWER = UDC 621.3.019.3 RELIABILITY TESTING PROCEDURES POR POWER STATTON EQUTPMENT Moscow IZVESTIYA AKADEMII NAUK SSSR ENERGETIKA I~ TRANSPORT in Ruesian No 1, Jan-Feb 80 pp 11-18 manuscript received 17 May 79 - [Article by G.I. Gladyshev, Moscow: "Methods of Estimating the Reliability of the Main Thermal Power Equipment of Electric Poxer Stations"] - [Text] Diagnostic monitoring and statistical probability methods of estimating the reliability of the ma~or thermal power engineering equipment of electric poarer stations are treated. The efficiency of their utilization in various operational pariode ia analyzed. The theoretical capability of utilizing the data of monitor diagnostic measurements for statistical probability estimates and forecasting tRe reliability of equ~pment ~a demonstrated. Figures 5; references 7; pp 11-18. Equipment which is in servic~ subject to both obsolescence and physical aging4 Physical aging is expressed in a loss of operability by parts and assemblies which operate under conditions of creep, under cpclical _ loada, ae we11 as in cases of corrosion and erosion. Process~es which lead to a loss of operabilitp contfnue throughout all operational periods of the equipment, and some, for example, corrosion - processes, also continue when the equipment is not operating. Thus, - physical aging is continuously taking place. This circumstance determines the necesaity of ascertaining the time intervals for parts, assemblies and units of a whnle, during which their performance does not fall bel.ow some previously specified level vhich assures the execution of the speci- - fied functions. For individual types of equipment, such time intervals - are stipulated during the design. For the components of boilera, turbines and pipi~ng which operate at high temperatures (more than 400� C for carbon - steels, more than 450� C for alloy steels and more than 525� for austen- itic nickel-chrome steels), the time factor is tak~n into account by a conventional long term strength limit at the design temperature, which corresponds to fracture after 105 hours, as well as with a conventional _ limit of creep, also after 105 hours. Within the range of this time 41 FOR OFFTCIA.L USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 I FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY period, which is the design ti~ae period, the funct~onal time--long term strength and time--creep relationships are known, aince proviaiona are made for deeign marg~na ot etrengtl~ [1]. The accounting for long term strength and creep at temperatures above 400� C is due to the fact thaC ~rith the action of the applied loads and the stressed state arising as a consequence of this, the performance of heat resistant steels and alloys, which is deteranined by the resistance to defor~nat~on and fracture under conditions of creep and the capabilitp - of degorma~ion during delayed fracture, varies with time. The mechanism for the change in the performance of steels and alloys, from which the - parts and assemblies of thermal power engineering equ~pment are fabricated, is determined by the ~egree of alloying of the base, the quantitative ratio of components in the solid solution and the parameters of the excess strengthening phase (carbide and intermeta~lic). Structural and phase changes are constantly taking place in a metal and are accompanied by a reduction in its strength characteristics in time [2]. The loss in the strength of 12MKh and 15 KhM steels due to the transi- t~on o~ molybdenum to carbides at various accrued operating times is shoWn in Figure 1. It can be noted that the influence of te~perature in the etressed state within a range of 105 hours ia taken into account sufficiently completsly, although it is necessarp to continue research on a number of problems [3]. In assessing the influence of cqclical loads on the long term service life, - only some ot the factors are taken into acco~nt ~n the design calculations: the change in the pressure of the ororking mediwn durtng atartups and ahut- do~rns, fluctuations in the woiking pressure, fluctu~t~ons in the external - loads, cycles during temperature atresses during the.time of startups and shutdowna and oscillatians during operation. The impact of water-chemical modes is not taken into account, which, as is well known, have a catalptic action with the occurrence and development of defects in components, and in a number of cases, are the decisive factors in the formation and apread of damage, for example, in the bends of unheated pipes and the drums of boilers. Corrosion is taken into account in the calculations for the piping of heating surfaces in the case of high temperature procesaes. Other ki.nds _ of corrosion and erosion processes are not taken into account. _ Thus, phys~cal aging and consequently, the loss of performance can be determined by calculations only on the basis of a few criteria for a part of the equipment of electric power stations and in a nwnber of cases, only for its individual components and assemblies in a range of accrued operating tin+e of up to 105 hours. Tn the case of operation which exceeds - ~his timeframe, physical agi,ng is estimated either by physical or by probabliatic statistical methoda of checking, or ~p Doth methods simul- - taneously. The gossibilities of each of the methods is to be assessed as - well as the promise for their use in power engineering. ~ 42 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - ~ ~a) u . 3 . fl~ . - ~ , . a 2 f.muns /ZMX f.n~:ti~n 15xrd 5 ,a ~ o o~ ~ nv - - - - ~ 5 o ~ ~ - - p ~p ~ o b DO I o _ o4p 1 1 - (1) i ~ - - - - tl ~y ~ _ y ZO - - _ y - - v - � - G ~ ~ p 60U~~ 0 ~U(1/10 lUOO~~U ~ _ � 10000 ~D0000 70UOD � kg f~~2 (4) `~aFa6o~�Ka., y . Q6~NZC/MM~ b ~u~ ~ - - -.-T . : ~ ~ ~ v I O 10�C x o 0 0 0 0� ~ SD �o - - - - - - 10 C _ c~ o ' o d~ o 0 0� o � e lx . 40 - o _ _ _ x -x_ - x " S10~C x xx x 510�C - . ~ -x % x ~0 xx x x s~ % xx x x~ j x~� x' x ,~x -x. x x xx ~ x 1 � 2~ Gman~ 12MX 3~ Cman~ 15XM ~ ' Z~0 20 40 60 0. 20 ~ 40 60 BU~ ~1~ % nepeioda n+onu6dena e Kapbr~ad~ ^ Figure l. The 1oe~s of strength in eteela with a change in the molybden~a content in the carbides. Key: 1. Percentage of transition of Mo into carbidea; 2. 12 1~IICh steel; _ 3. 15 KhM steel; 4. Accrued operating time, hours. The level of equipment reliabilitp, whtch at everp point in time cor- _ responds to its physical state, is characterized bp several determtnate criteria, Which can be quantitatively estimated [4~. The ma~or onee of ~hem are the following: the ~hort tena mechanical properties of the metal - at room and working temperatures, the long term strength, chemical compos- ttion, densitp, structure, residual deformation, the preaence and nature - of defecta and stress concentrators, as w~el't. as the rate of corroeion and erosion wear. The magnitude of the criteria is est3mated by means of - instrumented diagnosis: ultr3sonic and magnetic flaw detection, X-ray and ge~na ray radioscopp, measureaents of residual deformation, mechanical properties and chem~cal composition, eCc. ~+3 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - The high precia~on of ineaeurement of the cri~eria ueing diagnoatic inatrumentaeion makea it poasible at anp fiaed point in ti~ne to conti- den~ly eafiimate the actual per~armance of aeaeTnDiies and crnaponents on which the meaeurements are made. HoWever~ tt~e res~slte oDtained cannot _ alotays be extrapolated to identical components on wRich the diagnostic procedure was not performed. This circwnstance auDatantiallp reducea the effectiveness of physicsl methoda Qf checking. TRua, during the ultra- sonic fla~z detection of the Dends of unheatnd beiler pipea, a batch of 36,179 Denda of 133 x 10 mm fabricated from carbon steel Was tested for - - the purpoae of estimating their reliability. Of the entire number of those tested, flaws were found in 725 bends (2 percent). In this case, defective bends were not detected at all in some of the boilers, and in some others, the re~ection tigure e$ceeded 10 percent. Tt is obvious that the estrapolation of the reaulta obtained bp ultrasonic flaw detec- tion from some un3.ts to othera is precluded in practice. _ There are even fewer possibilities for ultrasonic flaar detection in the - forecasting of changes in the criteria being measured. Tn fact, as a result of testing the 36,179 bends and finding 725 flaared bends among Ct~an, an answer was obtained concerning the rel~aDilitp at the moment of Cesting. However, it remained unclear when and at ~rhat rate flaws Would occur and spread in the remaining parta. At the present time, this - drawback is localized in practice a.t periodic control checks, which are made at time intervals specified bp regulationa, and on which considerable material and personnel resources are expended. However, using some instrumented diagnostic procedures, it is possible to predict reliability (residual deformaCion, 3ong term strength, hardness and a number of others). To d~ this, repea~ed measurements are needed a~ definite, rather lengthy intervals of time. As a rule, the diagnosis is performed on parts and assemblies, the damage - or destruction of which cannot be allowed becau~e of c:onditions for dis- ruption of the power supply to consumers, the safetp of servicing personnel . and the maintenance of the equipment. Since an estimate of the level of reliability at every point in time of the measurements is rather high, while the possibilities of predict~on based on the data obtained are limited, the monitor diagnostic work is carried out syatematica111p at specified time intervals, during which the probaD~li~y of failure or damage is loW. - - Monitor diagnostic measurements for the purpose oi estimating the reli- ability of equip~ment are made spstematicallp on a one-time basis. The necessitg of making one-time measurements is determined by the resolution of various individual problems arhich arise during the operational process. The essence of such problems consists in determining the level of relia- b~li~y based on individual criteria at definite points in time. The spstematic performance of the measurements is directed towards estimating - 44 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ODTI.Y - ~ the dynamics of the reliability level, ~fiich is m~asured u~ing one or several criteria. Syatematic monitor diagnoat~e operattona are performed at the preaent time primarily on turbiciea, Doilera and I~igt? prea~ure - ateam linea [5J. ~ -~j _ s j~~ I ~ - j..'T". ~ { 1 - . ~ - f - ~ ~ ~d1- - - _ ' - ~ uti � ~ ~ 0 50 f00 /SO ~ ZDO ~ o$S- - ~tl b - ~ ~ _ ~ - ~ _ ~ 0 50 100 150 200 3 Hapa6omKn, mSIC.4 10 hr Accrued operating t{.me Figure 2. The periodicitp, kinds and volwnes of moni~or diagnostic operations on the casing componenta o# turbines. a) The housings of check valves: 1. V~sua1 inspection of the surface at a temperature of the metai of 450' C and above (100% of the surface); 2. Viaual inspection of the surface at a temperature of the metal beloW 450' C(100X of the surface); 3. Magnetic powder flaw detection of all of the _ radial transitions at a temperature of the metal of 450' C and higher; 4. Magnetic poFrder flav detection of a11 radial transitions at a teaperature of the metal beloW 450� C; S.An investigation of the mechanical properties of one - notch sample for 35 KhML and 30 KhrII, steels; 6. An investi- gation of the mechanical propertiea of one notch sample for - 15 Kh1M1FL steel; 7. An investigation of the mechanical properties of one notch sample for 20 KhMT~'L steel; b) The housings of cylinders: 1. Visual inspection of the _ surface, 100X; 2. Magnetic poWder flaw detection of all _ rad~al transitions; 3. Non-sample meaainre~nent of the mechan- ical properties (no less than SO pointa); 4. An inveatigation of t~e mechanical properties of four notc~ samplea for 15 Kh1M1F steel; 5. An investigation of th~ mechanical proper,- - ties of four notch samples for 20 KhMFL steel. ~+5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY S-- - al ~ I '3---~- - - ~ 1 { i ytl - -i ~ - - u~1- . . , o i D SD !00 130 Z00 . ~otl J - - - - - - , . ~ b ti-~i 4 q - - - J - - - ~ = 0 30 f00 1S0 Z00 3 ) Hnpn6omKa, m~it. v 10 hY ' Accrued aper,.ating time , Figure 3. The periodicity, kinds and volumes of monitor diagnostic - operations for the flo~through portion of turbines. a) Parts which operate at a temperatnre of 450� C and above:~ 1. Visual inspec~ion of the aurface, 100%; ~ _ 2. Ultrasonic testing of the weld ~oints of the shaft, 100%; 3. Color flaw detection of the surface o4` the heat grooves, 100X; 4. Ultrasonic flaw detection of fastenings ~rith diametera of 42 mm and more, 100X; 5. Measurement of the firmness of fastenings witix dir~metera of 42 mm and more, 100X; b) Parta operating at temperatures below 450' C: 1. Visual ~ inspection of the eurface, 100X; 2. Ultrasonic testing of ~ the rotating bladee of the ChND [leW pressure ~ectfof~], 3,'OOX; 3. Ultrasonic testing of the weld ~ointe of ehafta, 100~. The housings of cplinders, check and control valves and nozzle cages, as well as the ~reld ~oints of cast parta between eactt ott~er and with forged parts are checked in turbines. The camponents of Ct~e flo~r-through section are alao checked: rotors, the veld ~oints of rotora, tt~e thermal grooves ' of ehatta, disks, rota~ing bladea, diaphragms, st~tor blades and fastening Wi.th diameters of 42 mm and more are likewise checked. The most complete measurementa are made on those componenta and aaaembli.es, the Working : - temperature ot ~ieh exceeds 450� C. Nonetheleaa, diagaoatic work is - also performed on medium and lov pressure cplinders. - The periodicity ancl kinds of ckeck diagnostic operations, performed on the housfng campcnents of turbines, are shown in Figure 2. In the original state, the hardness of the metal of the cylinders ~s checked no less than at 50 points in the zone of the regulating stage and tt~e flange ~oints _ outside the aeating positions. The entire internal surface of cplinders is inapectnd and ~nagnetie po~rdes fla~r detect~en (I~D} is performed on the 46 ; - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY i APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY radial transitions and repair aaaples after everp 25,000 hours of opera- tion. The asseaament of the mechanical propertiee of tt~e netal based on - tRe saaplea ia made after 100,00~ houra of accrued operat~ng ti3ne for all - - Curbines. Repeat meaaurementa and an eati~atP of tl~e mechanical proper- tiea are made for the housings of cylinders, fabricated from 15 Kh1M1FL - - ateel every 175,000 hours, and for the housing~ of cplinders made of 20 KhMFL ateel, every 220,OOQ houra. a a ~ (~1 s ~hl ' Z 0, 40 p 0, 30 - 3 Z 3 1 0, ZD - - 0, f0 ~ 40 44 4B 52 56 21 25 29 J~ 37 ~ Qa~KLC~MMY~~~,~Z ?O,Z~ICZCIMM= Figure 4. The distribution prabability for the ultimate strength and tha contientional qield limit: 1. In the original _ condition; 2. After 45,000 to 65,000 hours of accrued = operating time; 3. After 85,OE0 houra of accrued operating time; a. The d3atribution probability for the ultimate - strength; b. The distribution probab~litp for the con- _ ventional yield limit. The mechanical properties are not determined for medium pressure cylinders; onlq magnetic flaw detection and an inspect~on are peri`ornded. Visual - inspection is made of low pressure cylinders. The same kinds of monitor diagnostic operations are provided to evaluate tfie houeings of check valves. - The components of the flow-through section, Which operate at temperatures af more tha~n 450' C, are su~ected to a 100X visual inspection every - 25,000 hours. Ultrasonic fla~r detection of a11 seama is made for welded ~aints of shafts after 100,000 and 200,000 ?~oura. Color flaw detection is used to check the condition of the thermal grooves of shafts at theae aame intervals. Fastenings with diameters of 42 mm and more, which operate at temperatures of 500� C and above, are checked everp 50,000 fioura uaing ultrasonic f1aW d~tection equipment (UZD). Moreaver, tfle f~rmneaa ot` the f~sten~g is measured. 1+7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ The components of the flow-through section, wh~ch operate at a temperature belo~r 450� C, are viaually inspected every 25,000 nonrs. The rotating Dladea ot the loar pressure ~ection ~n the turbinea of poWer units with a capacity of. 150 MW and ai~ove are fully checked once every 25,000 houre ueing ultraeonic f1aW detection. Ultraaonic fla~r detection is performed on ail the ~relded ~oints of ttte at~afta after 100,000 and 200,000 accum- ulated hours of running time (Figure 3). It can be seen from the data given on moniCor diagnostic operations, that they are used to estimate the level of reliabilitp of the major componenCs of turbines after specified intervals of time. The primarq goal of the diagnostic work is to ascertain flaars which occur in th~~ ~ assemblies and componenta dur~ng the operational proce~s, as we11 as to oDserve the change ~n the properties of tAe metal at var~ous accrued operating ti'mes. The heating surfaces, unheated pipes, drums, collectors and weld joints of boilers, as well as high pressure steam lines are checked in a similar manner. The indinidual components of feed lines are likewise checked. The cost of performing monitor diagnostic operations is rather high, e:nd at the present ti~ne, is eatiinated to be 10-20 percenC of the cost of ma~or overl:auls of equfpment in power units. - Along with the diagnostic work, statistical probabilitp methods are used to estimate the reliabilitp of equipment with various accrued operating times. The problems solved using these methoda are different from those - described above. The main one of them is the eatimation of the relie- bility of a group of units, components or aasemblies, which are made into a sample and which are characterized by a definite statistical homogeneitp: the kind of fuel, the accrued op~rating time, the type of equipment and its parameters, e~c. The accuracy og the estimates and tt~e representativeness of the results obtained in this case are determ~ned by the correctness and the volwne of the generated sample. Up to the present time, information on the operation and downtimes of equipment, which makes ft possible to compute the following various indicators have been taken as the basis for the determination of the reliability level using statistical probabilitp methods: the readiness and operational readiness factors, the running time, the forced downtimes, the average restoration time, the mean time between failures and a number of others [6]. The change in these indicators in the case of various accrued operating times can likewise characterize the phys- ical wear on the equipment. However, the data obta~ned in this case con- cerning the reliability level can be extrapolated to other samples with dif~erent confidence levels, Which depend primarilp on the agreeement or _ lack of agreement between the conditions characterizing both samples. The computation ~f the probability of failu~e-free operation of thermal power engineering equipment based on the true mean time between failures can obe~ various laws. Exponential and normal d~atr~butions are encoun- tered more frequentlp than the othera. ~11 of tAe main components of the boiler heating surfaces have an ezponential distribution. 48 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY . . Among other reasons, failures can arise as a result of the phqsicsl aging of components and assemDliea. This ctrcianaCance makea it posaible to draw the conclusion that at certain accrued operating times, after which changes in the metal characteriatica are a8certained frrnn data of a phpaical check, one can campute the probabilitp of a change in the propertiea of the metal. The generation of a sample in this ~ase ahould not be made baaed on the mean cpcles between failures, but rather on the basis of tr~e mean time until a change in the properties, in which case, - all of the attributes of sample homogeneity are preserved, and in a number of cases, are specified more preciselp. The latter condition can be explained aa folloWS. If sufficient conditiona for the generation of a sample for the purpose of deter;nining the probability distribution of failure free operation of steam lines are the identitp of the nominal steam parameters, pipe diameter and tppes of steel, then additional con- ditiona on the observance of the temperature modes, including overBhoots of the temperature above the nominal level, are needed to determine the probability of a change in the properties of the metal. _ It is obvioua that in generating a sample, to observe the conditions for its homogeneity, factors which have an impact on the change in th~ metal properties must be taken into account: temperatt:re, pressure, compensation and cyclical loads, the variation in the chemical crnnposit~on and phpsi- cal properties, as we11 aa the var~atton in rRe structure. The factors can be considered separatelp and in groupa, depending on the prcblems ~hich are to be solved bp meana of the informat~on obtained from the - generated sample. As a reault of such an approach, it is possible to combine the results of monitored diagnostic measurements ~rlth the reliab~l~tp indicators determined by statistical probabilitp methods. The distribution probabilities for the ultimate strength and the conven- _ tional pield limit, obtained in tests of aamples cut from steam lines (12 Kh1MF steel) at various accrued operating t~nes are ahoWn in Figure 4. In other words, tIie distribution probabiltties Were obtained on the basis of samples of the "accrued operating time until a change in properties" type generated on the basis of monitored diagnostic measure- ment data. Two circumstances are noted. The first ia that the distri- butions obey a normal laW; the second is that arith an incLease in the length of operation, the probability o! the occurrence frequencp of the appearance of samples wtth good properties falls oft. Tt folloa~s from this that bp knowing the law governing the diatribution probabilitp of the frequency of the change in the metal propertiea o# parts and assem- blies for different accrued operating times, ane can predict the reli- ability level of the equipment. Thus, there is the theoretical possi- bilitp of establishing a relationship between the results of monitor diagnostic operations and statistical probabil~ty eatimates of equipment reliability I7J. Such relationaRips are obv~oualy more clearlp eapresaed ~+9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ' in the case of long accrued operat~ng t~nes, since ieany reliabilitp indi-- cators are ~n~kedlp degraded enly~ iri the aging peri~e,d of the equiptsent. It can be seen in FiguXe 5 tAat aacertaining relat~onships between lthe results of monitor diagnostic neasurements and an esti~mate of the equip- ment reliabilitp level by means of tt~e faiiure f].o~r parameter ia prefe~r- able in the case af long accrued opera~3:ng ti~nea. Tt~e failure f1oW para- meter variea substantially onlp ~n tAe run-~n and aging �,periods. The - diatribution probability of tAe frequencp of the change in~meCal proper~iea has a marked drop onlp after an accrued operat3ng time close to or eaceed- ing 100,000 hours. This confirms the eapedtencp ot crnaD~ning DotR meChod~ for iong running equipment. _ ~al 6 _ ~ a Ca~ p z ~ . 3. i 1 2 3 . ~ Qp,Z _ ~4~ HnPn6omKa dPEMlMLL~ y. - Figure 5. The variat~on in the fa~iure #low paralaeter and the distribution proDa~i~lit~ tor the conventional yield limit at various accrued operating times. a) Tt~e variation in the failure f1oW parameter; 1. The run-in period; _ 2. The normal operational pertod; 3. The ageing period. - b) The variation in the conventional pield limit: _ 1. The original condition; 2. After 45,000 to 65,900 hours; - 3. After 85,000 hours; 4. Accrued operating time, hours. Iti all probability, onlp by combining monitor diagnostic operations ari~h statistical probabilitp estiznates t`or equipment rei~a~ility can the pro- _ _ blems of determining the max3n~~n permissible serv3ce lives of components assemblies and units as a whole be solved for thermal power engineering equipment of electric power stations. - The utilization of the accumulated stat~stical data on equipment reliability and tt~e resuits of ~monitor diagnost~c measurementa of the state of a metal - make it poss~Dle, part~cu9.arly when they are cambined, Co reduce the labor ou~Iays and~material expendiYures for tRe est~matien of tRe reliabil3ty - of equipment wAich has been 1ef~ in service bepond the design period. _ 50 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-00850R040240070041-7 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The requisite conditions for the deveiop~en~ and ~ple~tnentatioa of pno~ grams directed toWards optimiz~ng the d~agnosttc volumes and per~od~citp _ are essentially being created. _ An important measure related to booating the efficiencp of deterndinate methods of reliability estimation can becorae the e~upplesnenbat~on of the stock of ineasurement equtpment With net~r ins~rumenCa, and particularly, ~riCh ultrasonic flaw detectors. The exiattng f1a~r detection ~natrumenta and the methods of their utilizat~on do not permit tAe rel~able checking of the reliability of contact ~reld ~oints of tt~e heating surfaces of boilers, the weld connecCions of steam lines made of austenit~c steels and certain other components of thermal poarer engineering inatallations. There are practi- - cally no means of estimating the depth and shape of cracka WAich propagaCe from the surface tnto the depth of a part. Tnstnanents are lacking for checking the ehaf*_ing of turbine rotors from the axial channel side. There is no need to continue the enumeration of the aeaemblies and parta, to evaluate the reliabilitp of ~rhich php~ical teating tools should be refined or redesigned. Tt can be seen fron~ tAe exarmpies ctted here that ~ such a problem exists, and its solu~ion arill a11oW for the optimization - of the volumes and timeframes for the perfor~ance of monitor diagnostic operations. Thus, ways of optimizing the esfiimation of reliability consist~in combin- _ ing diagnostic and statiatical probabi].ity~nethods, in refining the exist- ing measurement tools and in develop~Lng neW and more re~ined onese It must be no~ed that for the estimation of the reliability of long running thermal power equipment, th~ tools and procedures uCilized on installations operating within the li:~m~ts of the deaign serv3:ce period are altogether suitable. Cor..clusions. 1. The evaluation of the reliability of thernnal power equip- - ment using diagnoetic tools is characterized bp a Aigh level of ineaeuremen� precision and a wide range of evaluation criteria, but has limited capabi- litiea for prediction and extrapolating the re~ults obtained. 2. Statistical probability methods make it possible to predict the change in the reliability level with t~me, and to extrapolate the results of ca1- culations for homogeneous samples, but pield greater errora in the estimates in the case of small volumes of raw data. This precludea the use of pro- babilistic criteria in the calculation of the reliability of individual as- aembliea and parts, for which a small nwatDer of events have been accumulated during the operational process. - 3. In the case of long accrued operating times, the change in the probabil+- - ity and determinate indi:cators is rather w+ell pronouneed in the ageing per- - iod of the equipment, because of which there is tt~e theoretical capability of establishing a quantitative relationship betveen Deth methoda. The esiatence of a relationahip creates tAe conditiona tor pred~cting the - 51 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - results of diagnostic measurements, and for their extrapolation for ~ homogeneo~s sa~nples. _ 4. Combining the results of diagnostic work and probability estimates can reduce the volume of per~odic testing of the reliability level of equip- - ment which i~ in service. Moreover, the confidence level of the forecast - in the determination of the additioanl operati~nal time wi11 be increased for thermal power installations left in service beyond the deaign service _ period. EEBT,IOGRAPHY 1. OST 108.031.02-75, "Kotly statsionarnype parovyye i vodogreynyye i i truboprovodp para i gorpa~chey vody. Normy rascheta.~ta prochnost ["Permanent Steam and Hot Water Boilers, and Steam and Hot Water Lines. Strength Design Standards"], Implemented 7 Apr~l, 1977, Minenergomash Put,lishers, 1977. 2. I.R. Kryanin, L.P. Trusov, "Perlitnyye stali v templovoy energetike" _ ["Perlitic Steels in Thermal Pawer Eng~n~ering"], TEPLOENERGETTiCA - [THERMAL POWER ENGTNEERING], 1978, No 10. 3. P.A. Antikayn, B.M. EsCrin, "S~oysrva meta.lla paroprovodov iz staley 12MKh i 15RhM posle ekepluatatsii 90-1C0 Cy,a. cR." ["The Properties of the Metal of Steam Lines made of 12MKt~ and 15::hM Steels afte~ 90,000 to 160,000 Hours of Operation"'], TEFLOENERGETIKA, 1973, No 10. 4. V.K. Adamovich, A.I. Levchenko, et al., "Opredeleniye resursa dal'neyshey ekspluatatsii energooborudovaniya iz khromomolibdenovoy stali posle 170-200 tys. ch ekspluatatsii" ["The Determination of the - Service Life for Further Operation of Power Equtpment Made of Molpbdenum - Chr_~me Steel after 170~,000 - 200~,000 Hours of Operation"], TEPLOENE.LGETTKA, 1978, No 10. - 5. G.P. Gladyshev, "Otsenka nadezhnosti teploenergeticheskogo oborudovaniya - otrabotavshego raschetnyy srok sluzhbp" ["Esti~nating the Reliability ' of Thermal Power Engineering Equipment Operated Beyond the Design Service Life''], Report to the All-Union Seminar "Putt povysheniya nadezhnosti ekapluatatsii elektrostantsiy i seteq" ["Ways of Increasing - the ~perational Reliabili.ty of Electric Power Stations and Networks"], VDNKh jExRibition of National Econom~c AcRievements) Publiahers, 1972. 6. "Rekomendatsii k metodikam prognozirovaniya nadezhnosti pri proyektirovanii energeticheskog oborudovaniya" [''Recommendations far Pr~cedures to Predict Reliability when Designing PoFrer Engineering Equipment"], TsKTT [Central Scientific Research and Pro~ect Planning _ and Design Institute for Boilers and Turbines ~nen~ T.I~. Polzunov] ' Publishers, 1975. 52 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY~ 7. G.P. Gladyshev, "Nauchno-tekhnicheskiye issledovanipa problem nadeshnosti pri ekspluatataii teploenerge~~cheakoao oDorudovaniya, otrab~tavshego raschetnyy aroIt aluzhby" ["~Scientific and Engineering Researct? on ProDiems of Re1~ab~lifiy-~n the Case of Thermal Power Equip~ - ment Operated Eeyond the Dee~gn Service Life"], Repor~ to the All-Union Seminar on "Prognoz~,rovaniye i optiTnizataipa pokazatelep nadezhnosti ' turbogeneratorov" ["Predicting and Optimizing Reliability Tndicatore - for Turbine Generators"], ~:igTElektrmnaah PuDlisAera, 1979. COPYRIGHT: Tzdatel'stvo "Nauka"', "'YzveaCiya AN 3S3R, energetika i transport', 1980. - 8225 CS0:1822 - ' ~ 53 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 I FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ - ELECTRIC POAER UDC: 621.31], 21-827 , � KISLOGUB TIDAL POWER S~ATION DESCRIBID Moacow ENERGETICHESKOYE STROITEL'STVO in Russian No 1,Jan 80 pp 64-67 [Article by Doctor of Techni~al Sciences L. B. Bernshteyn and Candidate of Technical Sciences I. N. Usachev: "Significance of the Kislogub Tidal Power Station for Hydraulic Engineering and Power Engineering Conatructio~i'] [Text] The tough energy balance, caused by the rise in world crude oil : prices and limited reserves of natural fuel, has led to an intenaif ied search for new sources of enQrgy, inc.luding tidal power. In spite of a certain stagn~tion in conatruction of PES [Tidal Power Statio~] since construction of the French tidal power barrage at Rance, recentily there has been noted a realistic solving of the problem, expreased in the forthcoming construction of two large PES in Canada (1 and 3.8 million - kilowatta), South and North Korea, as well as in e?aboration of PES ~ pro~ects in England, Australia and other countries. The USSR is examining the possibilities of building ia the White Sea and Sea of Okhotsk PES with ~ a total generating capacity of 120 million kilowatta, anxiual electric power ~roduction at which would provide savings of 100 million tons of - coal per ~ear at thermal electric power plants. On the baeis ~f 10 years' experience of operating the Kislogub PES [1], = a~e ca~Z state with full justification that such a turning point occurred - not only as a consequence of the above-atated ob~ective factors but also - to a significant degree thanks to new technical aolutiona implemented and ' tested at the Kislogub experimental PES. This experiment was based on ' ~ full-scale teating of a new lightweight building design, making it pos- ~ aible to employ a floating technique.* The strength of this design is ~ provided by the thre~e-dimensional structural performance of thin-walled ' elements (15-20 cm in section), and barrage stability by sand ballast~. ~ This solution made it poasible to erect the PES buildia~g under the favorable conditions of a coastal industrial center and to deliver it in finished foxm, together with inatalled equipment, to the barrage site, which frees construction crews from the necessity of erecting costly * Certificate of Invention 135028 (USSR).~ Building for a Low-Head GES/ L. B. Bernshteyn. Published in B. I., No 1, 1961. = 5~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY rofferdams and from the necessity of working in the sparsely�populated, difficult-access, harsh-climate area of the barrage site. The floating method of construction has long been known and is extensively employed in the erection of floating drilling rigs, underwater tunnels, - water intakes and other atructures sited at fairly large depths. Nowhere in the world, however, had hydroelectric power stationa been constructed _ in this manner. Therefore the solution we proposed evoked many ob~ections and doubts. ~ Today, after successful erection, delivery, insertion at the barrage site - " and 10 years of studies, we can confidently state that the proposed design and method of erection are entirely reliable. It was established follow- ing thorough and extended study of the readings of 20 reinforcing rod ~ dynamometers placed at precisely calculated points in the structure that when the barrage site was flooded, tensile forces in the reinforcing rods of the block walls increased by 30-40 kN without any abrupt bursts and reached 200 kN (substantially below calculated figurea). When a block - was lowered onto a temporary bed, a rehearsal of insertion at the barrage site, forces reached 280 kN, that is, ~emained within allowable limits. During wave action fluctuations of forces did not exceed 15-20 kN. Under operating conditions measurements of forces in the reinforcing rods when the structure took a head showed extremely small fluctuations (2-5 kN) during the tide cycle. Analyais of observational data indicatss that u~der operating conditiona, when the average daily head absorbed by the structure variea insignificantly (within a range of 20-30 cm), forces in the reinforc~ng rods, with some shifting in time, are determined only by change in ambient air temperature. Stresses in the slab and sidewalls , change in conformity with change in temperature of the concrete. Forces in the sidewalls increase in an upward direction and from the interior axis toward the periphery. Forces change by 1-2 kN with a temperature ~ chan~ze ~�~F 20�C. Dynamic studies conducted with the aid of pulsation and vibration sensors, - conducted by Gidroproyekt's Scientific Research Station during critical conditions indicated that the Kislogub PES building, in spite of ita open conetruction, possesses a high degree of rigidity, exceediag that of the Saratov GES building, which ie constructed of monolithic componenta. = Analysis of pressure fluctuation on a structure in the process of operation under specially created critical conditions indieabes that the Kislogub PES building ie also on the basis of its dynamic properties a relatively more _ rigid structure than, for example, the Kiev GES building, which is also - equipped with capscle units, but the section of the building components of which is three times as large. The dimensianless natural frequencies - of the first form of oscillation for the Kislogub PES building fall within the range 33.5-43.6, and for the Kiev GES 22-27.2. Within the range of disturbing frequencies excited by passage of water through the PES, eibrations of structural components are negligibly small. 55 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 rox UrrzcraL usE ornY We should particularly note that the design of the turbine mounting, which caused the greatest concern as it seemed highly fragile, proved to be en- tirely reliable. Analysis of the vibration characteristics of the prin- cipal components of the turbo-aet indicated that the vibration load on - - them is 2-4 mkm in reverse pumping mode, which is the most difficult mode for the generator, 2-6 for the rapsule, 5-20 for the thrust bearing, and 7-24 for the runner chamber, which ie substantially below standard values. Design of the unique Kislogub PES, with the floating erection technique, required solving a great many technical problems: development of new and upgrading of existing structural materials, methods of protecting them, _ and construction of an underwater foundation. ~ Let us examine the propoaed solutions and their reliability. - ~articularly high frost-resistant concrete was unqu~stionably that decisive material which dete~ined the viability of the Kislogub PES design. A concrete composition of particularly high frost resistance was specially developed for the Kislogub PES building [2]. The fact is th~t, as was in= dicated by studies performed prior to initiation of PES construction, the few concrete structures on the Murmansk coast began diaintegrating in the _ tidal zone from the very first year of their existence with an intensity (by depth) of 10-40 mm per year. It is understandable that under these conditions, with a 20 millimeter protective layer of concrete in the 15- centimeter PES structures, the PES building would cease to exist within a - few years. Calculations established that, taking into account homogeneity of concrete in frost resistance and reserve strength factor, concrete for the PES should be grade MrzI000, which exceeded by twofold that allowed by the GOST. Concrete compositions proposed by various inatitutes were teated by ac- celerated methods under actual Kola Bay site conditions. Based on test results, preference was given to a composition with a combined addition of sodium abietate and sulfite-alcohol malt residue proposed by the Central Construction Scientific Research Institute [2]. Features of this concrete include a limited quantity of water (water-cement ratio=0.376, OK=1-3 cm) and the necessity of maintaining 2-3~ air of a specified quality in the - poured concrete in order to maintain a high degrea of frost resistance required development of a special on-site process, which was elaborated - by Gidroproyekt. This concrete was poured in the PES building, and over a period of 10 years of operation it was thoroughly tested at various experimental sites. The results of study of this concrete in the tidal zone by Schmidt instrument on core samples and specimens indicated that at the most critical sit~s (average level 6,800 cycles) it does not sus- - tain disintegration or losses in mass, its compresaive strength with a designed M400 was 70.1-83.7 MPa, watertightness V10-V14, water absorption 0.65-0.73y, and frost resistance Mrz1000. - 56 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Investigation of concrete in the zone of total immersion with the aid of - remote-control radia devices, as well as determination of concrete strength with a PIBG-2 underwater gun with ball punch and an ABG-1 aqua- concretescop~ enabled us to establish that disintegration of concrete under aquatic growth bioanass doea not occur. Ite etrength in thie zone _ was 67-72 MPa. The obtained poeitive result of extended teste of Mrz1000 concrete made it poeaible to adopt a national regulation on ita employment in harsh conditions and to recommend its adoption. - Of course the inveatigations are not ending with development of Mrz1000 concrete. A aearch ie in progress in this area for a compoeition with a longer aervice life in the North, which can be achieved by the incor- poration of a number of special additives. For large PES presently on the drawing boards, the structures of which will be sub~ected to ths effects of large ice fields more than 2 meters thick with high ice strength, it is necessary to develop a concrete capable of withstanding the abrasive action of ice. We cannot model ice action in laboratory con- ditions, and therefore the possibility of conducting continuous (for a period of 8 months) tests on structural ~ragments for ice abrasion in the basin of the Kislogub PES is of exceptional importanCe. Tests of the ice abrasion resistance of concrete structures have been in progress for 6 years, at the PES. Specimens of concretes impregnated with various com- pounds, plastic coatings and epoxy compositions are being tested on- - site. Tests are being conducted on a new method of protecting reinforced concrete structurea from ice, proposed by the Georgian Scientific Research Institute for Hydroelectric Power Construction, a method which calls for - coating them with a polymeric heater. Insulation and waterproofing. Design studies indicated the importance of temperature atressea occurring in the upper part of the atructure as we11 as that part periodically exposed by overfall. In order to eliminate these stresses, in place of the usually employed "fur coat�' (wood plate- asphalt), which is quite heavy, foam epoxy ineulation and watertight _ sealant was adopted to maintain buoyancy, applied from slabs 5 meters in thickness [3]. Investigations of this coating indicated that its heat conductivity diminished by 10-20X during the first 2 years (under the condition of coating integrity when sub3ected to mechanical action), evidently as a result of shrinkage, and subsequently heat conductivity remained con- stant. This positive result made it possible to apply foam epoxy insul~- tion and watertight sealant on a commercial scale 3n conatruction of Dneproges-II, the Nurek, Ust'-Ilimskaya and Sayano-S~?ushenskaya GES, as - well as the Karagaada Canal. In future utilization of epoxide-foatn water- tight sealant one should bear in mind that as a result of protracted measurements under "winter-sumaner" conditions it was established that dse to the thermal inertia of the water washing a structure in the tidal zone, at the contact point with the structure there exists a microclimate which decreases the calculated temperature gradient by 30-40%. 57 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Y Future investi.gations should also resolve the as yet unresolved problem of increasing the strength of insulation and watertight sealant under the effect of inechanical abrading loads. Protection of PES atructures and equipment from marine plant overgrowth also proved to be a very difficult problem. In the PES zone there are � 53 species of fouling organisme, the biomass of which reaches 10 kg/m2 in _ - a year. Many of these species attach so firmly to the surface of a structure, forming a layer 2-5 centimeters thick, that they can withstand _ high water flow velocities (up to 8 m/s) and low air (down to -30�C) and water (down to -1.5nC) temperatures. Since such intensive fouling of the turbine blading, ~usL as on a ahip's _ hull, can seziously deteriorate operating conditions, we employed here the best of the marine paints: equipment was protected by the French-manu- factured coating Cellobrase, while structu ral components were protected with Soviet-manufactured non-fouling paints: KhS-79 (blue) and KhV-750 (green), as well as KhV-712, recognized as one of the finest in the world. Their service life (together with anticorrosion coatings) of 4-5 years is considered entirely acceptable. Subsequently, however, it is necessary to _ restore the coating which, in contrast to a ship, in conditions of atruc- tures permanently immersed in water, is extremely complex and costly. In order to find more effective solutions, study has been conducted for 12 years now at the Kislogub PES of new coatings on test frames which are totally and alternatingly submerged. Alongside these studies, a search is in progress for new ways to protect structures. Or, the basis of a proposal by A. N. Usachev, for example, studies have been conducted at the Kislogub PES aince 1972 with the aim of developing a concrete with anti- . fouling properties, by introducing a number of bactericid e adc2itive agenta - to its formulation. Theae additives are introduced in the concrete in the form of aqueous solutions together with the mixing water in an amount up to 0.2% of the cement by weight [4]. A concrete formulation with lantanax additive was selected and tested at the first stage of this pro3ect. Tests at the PES indicated that under conditions of the Barents Sea this concrete does not become fouled by marine organisms for a period of 6 years. In addition, the cost ~f implementing this method of achieving a nonfoul- _ - ing effect is almost 15 times less than the cost of restoring nonfouling coat3ngs . In addition, installation of equipment to protect the suction pipes from fouling with the aid of electrolytic chlorination, with sea- water used as raw material, has now begun at the PES. We can assume that adoption of this method will substantially advance solution of problems of biological protection not only of PES on the drawing boards but also protection of large-diameter water pipes on various water engineering structures operating in rhe sea. Hydmphobic soil in the form of a batched mixture of sand with high- strength residual oil was employed for ballasting the floating atructure in the zone of variable levels. Investigations of this ballast, which is 58 ~ - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 - FOR OFFICIAL USE OATLY . contained both in enclosed cavities within the atructure proper and on test fragmenta, indicated that after more than 800C cycles of alternating thawing and freezing, the hydro~nbic properties of thia ballast remain - unchanged, which confirms its reliabili.ty. - Cathode protection [5] of the Ki~logub PES, following the design of Gipramorneft' and Azneftekhim, encompasses both the structural part (re- - inforcement, reinforced concrete and sheet piling metal cathode box in _ the rock-fill linking barrages) and the equipment, where it operates ~ointly with imported (in the turbine unit) paint coatings. - Cathode protection of reinforced concrete structures is effected from a powerful source a VSA 300/600 rectifier; protection is provided by two tubular ~nodes placed on the bottom of the head bay, and 32 anodes in- atalled in the PES building. Turbine protection is provided from a type ~ KSS-Sh power-line cathode station, an automatic control syatem, service lines and comparison electrodes for monitoring effectiveness of protec- - - tion. For this system the foreign supplier compan,y installed on the turbine unit 30 built-in platinimm-plated anodes. The cathode protection _ of the hydroelectric power equipment has preserved it throughout the _ 10 yeare of station operation in extraordinarily aggressive corrosion con- ditions of ocean-salinity seawater. As operating experience has shown, protection of the gates, provided with built-in magnesium sacrificial aaodes, is effective only in the zone of total immersion. The underwater foundation was especially thoroughly examined, since it constituted the most important condition making it possible to erect a PES without cofferdama. The foundation was laid out in the form of a half- meter layer of sand-gravel, poured down after excavation of marine sedi- ments to the specified depth. The required antifiltration and suffoaion properties of the bed were determined by the composition of the local soil, selected by the All-Union Scientific Research Inetitute of Hydraulic En- gineering, ecreening out particles more than 50 mm in diameter, as well as by the effect of a frama (blades in the ghape of a 250 mm angle bar), framing the block's reinforced concrete bottom. Poured in place by the - clamshell of a floating crane, the bed was leveled by specially built devices.* Thorough studies of the foundation were conducted during the entire 10-year _ period of PES operation. Observations employing piezometers placed at the base of the foundation indicated that change in water levels on the sea and basin sides of PES are rapidly recorded by piezometers, which attests to the absence of stagnation zones, while the preasure head gradients varied within limits of 0.08-0.15, which produced a filtration flow rate of 0.12-0.15 m3/s. Regular annual measurements of approach channels * Certificate of Tnvention 268279 (USSR). Device for ~orming Underwater - Beds/V. G. Gavrilov. Published in B. I., No 13, 1970. ~ 59 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY indicate d the absence of dangerous deformations and any suffosion of material from the bed. The moet indicative for the etate of the foundation were the reaulte of ' observations of aettling of the PES building, performed on a regular basis - by precieion leveling: at first annually, and subsequently once every 2-3 yeare. During the first three years settling averaged 20 mm at the four corners (maximum difference 3 mm), while subsequently settling stabilized to 1 mm per year uniformly at the four corners. All these data attest to the suffosion filtration reliability of the foundation and enable us to recommend it for large PES and other floating structures. In particular, such a foundation bed was prepared for the floating foundations of the towers of the 330 kilovolt overhead line in the Kakhovka Reservoir. Power generation studies. Studies of hydroelectric power generating - operations were not for the purpose of obtaining any new solutions, since they were performed by the supplier (the French (Neyrpik) Company) on the - basis of de~elapment af the hydroelectric generating unit installed at the Rare Tidal Power Station, where these units have demonstrated their ex- ceptional efficiency, obtaining from the flood (ebb) tide a maximum quantity of electric power and transforming generation of tidal power - from a lunar to a solar cycle. Studiea of the power equipment at the Kielogub PES conducted by the Gidroproyekt Scientific Reaearch Station confirmed these capabilities as well as the possibility of generating at the PES the designed quantity of electric power while operating in a mode of maximum yield and specified power output: 0.75 of installed generating _ capacity during peak demand houra, regardless of tide phase. A new innovation in this area was development of a variable rpm unit. This - proposal was presented in 1961 by L. B. Bernshteyn [6] and based on the fact that in PES operating conditions pressure heads on the turbine change betwe~n five and seven times during a cycle. Maintaining constant rpm leads to substantial energy losses. Study of ways to solve the problem of obtaining constant generator rpm (required by its AC power line hookup) resulted in selection of an induction-synchronous motor-generator(ISMG) proposed by M. M. Botvinnik, Yu. G. Shakaryan, and N. N. Blotskiy [lJ, equipment which, due to a variable state or magnetic field rate, makes it possible to convert the turbine's variable rpm to generator rotor conetant rpm. This unique equipment, built at the Elektrosila LPEO [expansion un- - known] with a control system built at the Uralelektrotyazhmash Produ~tion ~ Asaociation, was installed at the PES (in place of an imported , synchronous generator) and, upon completion of testing, demonstrated a capability to increase PES power generation by 10~6. whir_h opens up realistic prospects for increasing the efficiency not only of tidal power stations but also river hydroelectric power stationa which experience con- siderable head fluctuations. Ecology, commercial fishing. These studies are of decisive significance - for designing large PES. Studies conducted by a number of organizations indicated that the ecological properties of the PES basin did not undergo 60 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY change during the entire 10-year period of PES operation. This is due to preservation of the natural water exchange between basin and sea at the PES eite. It w~~s zatablished that the PES rectilinear-axis blading promotes the passage of commercial fiah not only through the water passage openinga but also through the turbine without causing in~ury [7]. In the process of these studies it was established that there is a favorable potential for utilizing a PES base for development of commercial fishing. This was demonstrated by establishment in the Rislogub PES basin of a fish farm for breeding Atlantic and Quinnat salmon. Investigation of side recovery of trace elements from seawater. We know tha.t world reaerves of rare elements are rapidly becoming exhausted, while some are close to disappearance. Under these conditions the age-old problem of extracting these elements (including gold, silver, etc) is being studied today in a number of countriea. Determining in this study is the development of efficient sorbents and organization of passage of very large quantitiea of seawater. Independent resolution of the second part of this problem requires building extremely costly water-passing dams spanning entire straits or narrows. Academy of Sciences Corresponding Member Yu. V. Gagarinskiy adva.nced the idea of secondary utilization of PES structures for this purpose [8]. On-site studies conducted at the � Kislogub PES demonstrated the practical possibility of such a solutioa, which requires installation of frames with sorbents in the water-passage and turbine penstocks, which leads to corresponding relatively small ad- ditional expenditures and loss of several percent of PES power generatior.. The effectiveness of this solution can be established upon obtaining high- productivity sorbents, a search for which is in progress. - It becomes obvious from the figures cited above that construction of the Kislogub PES and the studies conducted at it are opening up the poeaibility of well-~ubstantiated designing of large tidal power stations (Lumboeskaya 0.4 million kilowatts; Mezenskaya,l0 million; Tugurskaya and Penzhinakaya from 35 to 100 million kilowatts). The significance of the Kialogub PES, - however, ia certainly not limited to this. New technical solutions ob- - tained during its construction and verified in the process of subsequent studies have found application in various areas of hydraulic engineering - - and power engineering construction. _ We should mention first of all construction of a 330 kilovolt overhead ~ power line crossing on the Kakhovka Reservoir, employing 100 meter towers brought to the on-water site on floating foundations. This pro~ect was carried out on the basis of experience gained fro~m construction of the ~ Kislogub PES and provided savings of 8 mi,llion rubles [9]. 61 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 r~UK Ur'r'1C1AL USE ONLY By decision of a USSR Goaetroy expert commission, a variant design is presently being developed on the basis of this experience, for construction by the floating method of spillway gates in a Leningrad flood control dam. Conaiderable savings have also been obtained by employing the structural materials of the Kielogub PES (extremely high frost-resiatance concrete and efficient epoxide foam insulatioa and watertight sealant). The Kislogub PES played a very important role in development in the USSR of an efficient capsule hydroelectric turbine and its extensive adoption at low-head GES. ~ In 1959, during study of the French experience of building a capsule unit for a PES in the USSR, the proposal was first made calling for extensive employment of these units for specific low-head GES which were on the drawing boards at that time [10]. A thorough study and investigations made it possible to implement this proposal on a broad scale. At the _ present time 54 capsule units with a total generating capacity of 1.26 mil- lion kilowatts have been inatalled and are successfully in operation, which has produced savings of 57 million rubles on capital inveatment. In addition, Soviet machine builders have mastered the manufacture of this ' equipment so wAll that they have been able to take an important step for- = ward in the evolution of these units, building the world's largest en- cFaed unit with an encased suspended wheel diameter of 7.5 meters, with - eight such units sold to other countries. Thus we can make the entirely warranted conclusion that the Kislogub PES, located far beyond the Arctic Circle along the rugged coastal cliffs of - the Bar, zts Sea, has proven itself and has become a laboratory of advanced technology in hydroelectric power construction not only in the Arctic - but also in varioua other parts of this country. - BIBLIOGRAPHY - 1. "Kislogubskaya PES" [Kislogub Tidal Power Station], Moscow, Energiya, 1972, 263 pages. 2. Usachev, I. N. "New Materials for Water Engineering Construction," STROITEL'NYYE MATERIALY I KONSTRUKTSII, No 4, 1978, pp 11-15. _ 3. Certificate of Invention 234666 (USSR). Method of Producing Epoxide Foam/ V. I. Sakharov, A. A. Igonin. Published in B. I., No 4, 1969. 4. Usachev, I. N. "Protection of Water Engineering Structures in the _ Barents Sea," in the book "Prfineneniye polimernykh materialov v gidrotekhnichskom stroitel'stve" [Employment of Polymeric Materials in Water Engineering Construction], Leningrad, Energiya, 1972, pp 143- 148. - 62 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000200074441-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY 5. Trifel', M. S.; Plizade, G. Ya.; and Mamedov, A. K. "Electrochemic~l Protection at the Kislogub PES," GIDROTE[QiNICHESKOYE STROITEL'STVO, No 4, 1972, pp 20-26. 6. Bernahteyn, L. B.' "Pogruzhnyye gidroagregaty" [Submersible Hydro- ~ electric Turbines], Moscow, TaINTIMash, 1961, 211 pages. 7. Pasternak, V. S., and Surkov, S. S. "Distribution and Behavioral Features of Commercial Fish in the Zone of Influence of the Rislogub Tidal Power Station," in the book "Biologicheskiye oanovy upravleniya povedeniyem ryb v svyazi s primeneniyem rybozashchitnykh i _ rybopro~usknylch sooruzheniy" [Bielogical Principles of Controlling Fish Behavior in Connection With Employment of Fish Protection and Fish Passage Structures], Moscow, 1971, pp 20-23. 8. Gagarinskiy, Yu. "The Oceaa Through the Eyes of Chemists,'� PRAVDA, 17 March 1973. - 9. Bernshteyn, L. B., and Gavrilov, V. G. "Construction of a 330 Rilovolt _ Overhead Power Line Crossing on Floating Reinforced Concrete Founda- tions," ENERGETICHESKOYE STROTTEL'STVO, No 8, 1977, pp 26-29. 10. Bemshteyn, L. B. "Increa~ing the Efficiency of Low-Head Hydroelectric Power Stations," GIDROTEKHNICHE~ STROITEL'STVO, No 9, 1959, pp 36- 42. COPYRIGBT: Izdatel'stvo "Energiya", "Energeticheskoye stroitel'stvo", 1980 3024 CSO: 1822 63 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY I APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - ELECTRIC POWER UDC 621.3.019.3:621.314.212.001.14 METHODS OF TESTTNG POWER TRANSFORMER RELTABILITY Moscow IZVESTIYA AKADEMII NAUK SSSR ENERGETIKA I TRANSPORT in Rusaian No 1, Jan-Feb 80 pp 19-25 manuscript received 28 Map 79 [Article by V.V. Sokolov and V.A. Lukashchuk, Zaporozh'3re: "Queations of Estimating and Providing for the Reliabii~tp of Poaier Transformera"] - [TextJ Questions of quantitatively evaluatfng the reliability of power transfonaers are treated. Results - of an analpsis o~ the level of reliabilitp of trans= - formers are given uaing nontraditional methods of processing the sCatistical data. A classification is given for the causes of transforn~ers fa~lures in ligAt of - the design ot a diagnostic spstein. ApproacAes to the assurance of transformersreliability are formulated. Figures 4, tables 1, bibliographic citations 6. pp 19-25. The growth in the power and working voltages of electrical installations is . _ confronting transformer construction with the problem of further improving the technical and economic indicators of transformers and improving their operational reliability. These requirements are to a certain extent - contradictory, since making a design efticient leads to an increase in the _ apecific working loads on materiala, something which entatls aa increaee in the sensitivity to the degradation of the condition of the transformers in operation. Operational experience with foreign transformers shows that the reliabiliCy of modern transformers proves to be lower in a n~ber of cases than those produced 15 to 20 years ago, where the specific number of fail- ures [1J increases with an increase in the voltage class (I+igure 1). More- , , over, the failure of a large transformer leads to cons~derable losses, related to the failure to deliver electrical pmaer and the cutoff of gener- ator capacity, as kell aa expe~:diCurea for repair, Which frequenCly amount to more than 60 percent of the original cost. All of this n+akes it necessary to increase the requirements placed on tranformer reliability as well as the methods for estimating and assuring it. For a number of reasons, power tranaformers are not sub~ected to tests for - reliability, and the effectiveness of designer efforts to increase the ~ reliability can be quantitativelp assessed only from the results of 64 ~ ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY transformer performance in service. Eut eatimating transformer relia~ bility based on operationzl resulta alao has its or~n spec~f~c features. Group 15-05 of CIGRE proposed a procednre for estimating the reliabilitp of tranforaera, accord~ag to ~iet~ Che indicators are defined as the avnraged figurea aver a specified period, specifically, the failure rate is detined sa: m = n/NT xhere n is the nunber of transforaers t~Ric?~ have failed, N is the number of installed tranformers and T is tl~e observat~oa period. ~onsdiering the fact tt~at the average service life of transformers amounts to 20 to 30 years, it is reco~ended that the observation period be speci- _ fied in a range of 2 to 3 years. Such�an approach is convenient for a comparative analpsia, but ot ltttle effecti~eness in resolving the qu~ations of forecaa2ing lailure free aervice ~rithin the li~mits of the specified t3ae peri~~da, planniRg observations, establishing guarantee - periods, etc. q i ~9 1 . 1 ~ B ' ~ ~ Figure 1. Number of failurea per . i 100 pears of transformer 3 service of foreign transformers ;i - as a function of the vol.tage -1 claaa. - - Z ' Key: 1. The combined power Z systems of the Federal ~ - Republic of Germany; ~ - 2. Hqdro-Quebec (Canada); 6 _ - - , 3 ,4. Block transformers q ~ and sutotransformers ~ as evaluated bp . committee No. 12 of the Z . i CIGRE. 0 ~ ~00 2 J 4 6 B 1000 KV K e Power transformers number among the higly reliable stattc devices with service lives of tens of years, ~ere an ins~gnif~'cant ~raction ot the installed transformera eiCher fails or is damaged within the period between maintenance servicirlg, something which does not make it possible to use traditional methods of probability theorp and mathematical statistics to process data on ~a~.lurea aad requires the use of nontraditional methods [2-5]. 65 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000200070041-7 FOR UFFICIAL USE ONLY ' . ~ - ?.~Plt) _ ' ' I ~ l ~ - - i ~ �i~ i ~ ~ I . -S ~ ' ~ 1 ~ - 4 ~ i i _ -3- - - ~ I I I i -Z ~ ~ - - . ~ - - , i ' 1 ' - ~ - Q - ~ i , _ ~ - , i - - ~ - ~ \ 0 1 2 3 4 S 6 7 8t ~d~$ ncm Figure 2. I:istogram of the rat~ (a) and the curve for the probabi- litp of failure free service (A) of 110 RV power trans- - � formers. Key: 1. Insulation failures due to nioisture; ` - 2. Tnsulation failures (interwinding breakdoun~; - 3. Heating of current carrping connections; , 4. Short circuit; _ 5. Otl~er. In analyzing the reliability of various groups of tsansformers, an inter- mediate characteristic is ;