DocumentCode
2871576
Title
Monitoring of generator condition and some limitations thereof
Author
Maughan, Clyde V.
Author_Institution
Maughan Eng. Consultants, Schenectady, NY
fYear
2005
fDate
26-26 Oct. 2005
Firstpage
50
Lastpage
53
Abstract
Historically turbine-generator condition was monitored by rather primitive instrumentation, e.g., ammeters, voltmeters, temperature sensors. More advanced instrumentation devices have been added in the last 25+ years, e.g., partial discharge, turn-short flux probe, core monitors. But there still remains little or no detection capability for some of the major deterioration mechanisms, e.g., bar vibration without partial discharge, stator bar clip liquid leaks, series/phase joint copper cracking, developing field turn cracks, field insulation abrasion/cracks, retaining ring corrosion and cracks, field forging cracks. This paper will discuss root causes and progression rates of some generator deterioration mechanisms. The resulting negative impact on generator reliability of extending the periods between outage inspections can be high. Advantages of remaining with the historic 5-year period between outages will be illustrated
Keywords
condition monitoring; inspection; reliability; turbogenerators; condition monitoring; deterioration mechanism; instrumentation device; outage inspection; reliability; turbine-generator; Ammeters; Condition monitoring; Instruments; Leak detection; Partial discharges; Phase detection; Probes; Stator cores; Temperature sensors; Voltmeters;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electrical Insulation Conference and Electrical Manufacturing Expo, 2005. Proceedings
Conference_Location
Indianapolis, IN
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9145-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/EEIC.2005.1566257
Filename
1566257
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