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Many of the impracticalities associated with the Carnot cycle can be elimi-nated by superheating the steam in the boiler and condensing it completely in
the condenser, as shown schematically on a T-sdiagram in Fig. 8–39. The cy-cle that results is the Rankine cycle,which is the ideal cycle for vapor power
plants. The ideal Rankine cycle does not involve any internal irreversibilities
and consists of the following four processes:
1-2 Isentropic compression in a pump
2-3 Constant pressure heat addition in a boiler
3-4 Isentropic expansion in a turbine
4-1 Constant pressure heat rejection in a condenser
Water enters the pumpat state 1 as saturated liquid and is compressed isen-tropically to the operating pressure of the boiler. The water temperature in-creases somewhat during this isentropic compression process due to a slight
decrease in the specific volume of the water. The vertical distance between
states 1 and 2 on the T-sdiagram is greatly exaggerated for clarity. (If water
were truly incompressible, would there be a temperature change at all during
this process?)
Water enters the boileras a compressed liquid at state 2 and leaves as a su-perheated vapor at state 3. The boiler is basically a large heat exchanger where
the heat originating from combustion gases, nuclear reactors, or other sources
is transferred to the water essentially at constant pressure. The boiler, together
with the section where the steam is superheated (the superheater), is often
called the steam generator.
The superheated vapor at state 3 enters the turbine,where it expands isen-tropically and produces work by rotating the shaft connected to an electric
generator. The pressure and the temperature of the steam drop during this
process to the values at state 4, where steam enters the condenser.At this state,
steam is usually a saturated liquid–vapor mixture with a high quality. Steam is
condensed at constant pressure in the condenser, which is basically a large
heat exchanger, by rejecting heat to a cooling medium such as a lake, a river,
or the atmosphere. Steam leaves the condenser as saturated liquid and enters
the pump, completing the cycle. In areas where water is precious, the power
plants are cooled by air instead of water. This method of cooling, which is also
used in car engines, is called dry cooling.Several power plants in the world,
including some in the United States, use dry cooling to conserve water.
Remembering that the area under the process curve on a T-sdiagram repre-sents the heat transfer for internally reversible processes, we see that the area
under process curve 2-3 represents the heat transferred to the water in the
boiler and the area under the process curve 4-1 represents the heat rejected in
the condenser. The difference between these two (the area enclosed by the
cycle curve) is the net work produced during the cycle.
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