1 / 24

Corporate Organization

CDAWG November 13, 2013 Ivanpah Solar Project: Helping to meet California’s Climate Change Goals by Shankara Babu, ESH Manager, NRG O&M Doug Davis, Senior Compliance Manager, BSE. Corporate Organization. Solar Partners Holdco, LLC - Equity Investors NRG Google BrightSource

skip
Download Presentation

Corporate Organization

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CDAWG November 13, 2013Ivanpah Solar Project: Helping to meet California’s Climate Change GoalsbyShankara Babu, ESH Manager, NRG O&MDoug Davis, Senior Compliance Manager, BSE

  2. Corporate Organization • Solar Partners Holdco, LLC - Equity Investors • NRG • Google • BrightSource • Three Individual Projects • Solar Partners II – Ivanpah #1. Selling power to PG&E. • Solar Partners I – Ivanpah #2. Selling power to SCE. • Solar Partners VIII – Ivanpah #3. Selling power to PG&E. • Southern California Edison Transmission Upgrade • Implementing their El Dorado to Ivanpah Transmission Project (EITP)

  3. Parabolic troughs Central Receiver / Heliostats Parabolic dishes CSP - Technologies Linear Fresnel Reflectors

  4. Energy from Sun • Insolation is a measure of solar radiation energy received on a given surface area and recorded during a given time. • Direct insolation is the solar irradiance measured at a given location on Earth, excluding atmospheric diffused insolation. • Absorbed solar radiation is converted to thermal energy, causing an increase in the object's temperature.

  5. Overview

  6. Power Block Configuration SOLAR RECEIVER STEAM GENERATOR (RILEY POWER) Concentrated sunlight converts water in a boiler to high-temperature steam. OPTIMIZATION / CONTROL SOFTWARE (BRIGHTSOURCE) Solar Field Integrated Control System is the proprietary optimization software to manage heliostat positioning and optimize concentrated sunlight on the boiler. AIR-COOLED CONDENSER (SPX) Environmentally friendly in design, using 95% less water than competitive technologies. TURBINE (SIEMENS) Steam powers turbine to produce electricity – then is converted back to water through an air-cooled condenser. HELIOSTATS (BRIGHTSOURCE) Software-controlled field of mirrors concentrate sunlight on a boiler mounted on a central tower.

  7. Overview

  8. Site Geography and Footprint • Project, about 3600 acres • Edge of U1 SF to edge of U3 SF = 5 miles • Unit 1 to Unit 3 Tower = 3.2 miles Tower • Height 459” steel structure with the boiler on top • Tuned Mass Damper

  9. Solar Steam Generator Boiler • 2646 psig / 1054 F • Evaporator • Super Heater • Reheat Controls • IR Cameras – 2/wall, total 8 • Heat Flux Sensors – 24 pairs of TCs embedded in SH, RH, and EVA tubes. • About 1180 loops, 120 MOVs (networked), 17 CVs • 100% steam bypass, no sky valves

  10. Solar Steam Generator Layout Superheat Protection Panels Evaporator Reheat

  11. Steam Turbine Generator Turbine • Siemens SST-900 • HP and IP Turbine • HP – 7200 RPM • IP – 3600 RPM Generator • 135 MVA • 3600 RPM Design • Fast Startup • Daily Cycling

  12. Air Cooled Condenser ACC • Water Consumption limited to 100 acre-ft / year • 3 Streets of 5 fans / Unit • 2 Speed

  13. Solar Field 18

  14. System Components Overview: Focal Length Focus length too long Heliostat focused on SRSG Focus length too short

  15. System Components: Heliostat System Components: Heliostat  LH-2.2 Heliostat  Mirrors  Metal support structure Dual-axis drives  Heliostat controller  Focuses sun on SRSG  Under SFINCS control

  16. Solar Field Control System (SFINCS) • Heliostat desired aiming points calculating to: • Flux vsLoad balancing • Implement quick flux reduction / defocusing • Measuring SRSG skin temperature • Alert on crossing temperature limits

  17. Solar Field Control System (SFINCS) • Inputs: • Heliostat calibration data, heliostat reflectivity • Weather data • Skin temperature of panels • SFINCS state, operation mode and sensor info • DCS SP & control parameters • Outputs: • HAPA (Heliostat Aiming Point Array): a collection of aiming points (1/heliostat), sent to SF through SFC • Is there potential flux for operation? • Is tracking active (per SRSG section)? • Process information, flux and temperature maps • Alarms on flux / temperature deviation

  18. Weather System Insolation Matr East Weather StatioTower Weather StatioInsolation Weather Statio West Weather Statio

  19. General Description  Weather Station Measurements  Radiation  Direct Normal Radiation (DNR) - Critical for optimizing performance Global Horizontal (GH) radiation  Diffused Horizontal (DH) radiation UV horizontal radiation  Wind  Wind speed in different locations - Critical for SF safety during high winds Wind direction  Ambient weather  Ambient temperature Relative humidity Barometric pressure Rainfall

  20. Instrumentation

  21. California Renewables Portfolio Standards [RPS] • Under California's Renewables Portfolio Standard (RPS) statutes, all sellers of electricity in California, including publicly owned utilities (POUs), investor-owned utilities (IOUs), electricity service providers (ESPs), and community choice aggregators (CCAs), are required to procure a portion of their electricity retail sales from eligible renewable resources to meet the following goals: • 20 percent by the end of 2013 • 25 percent by the end of 2016 • 33 percent by the end of 2020

  22. Environmental Considerations • Flora and fauna – Protected Species • Desert Tortoises • Succulent Desert Plants • Weed Management • Water - 100 acre-ft/year • 2 – onsite wells provide all the water • Air – Emissions • Title V • GHS/cap and trade • Avian and Bat - nesting and migratory birds • Surveys • Monitoring • Reports

  23. Ivanpah Stats 7.8 Million man-hours worked without a lost time accident 2600 employees at the peak of construction 70 O&M employees post construction 2.3 Billion 3 units generating 373 MW Will power 140K homes

  24. Questions?

More Related