Introduction
This report provides a clear and practical explanation of how the GE 9FA gas turbine behaves across its operating range in a combined-cycle power plant.
It focuses on:
Load vs firing temperature
CPD (compressor pressure ratio) influence
IGV and mass flow relationship
Why exhaust temperature is high at part load
Why exhaust temperature decreases toward base load
The difference between simple-cycle and combined-cycle firing logic
The role of IBH (Inlet Bleed Heat) in part-load operation
The explanations here are intended to give engineers a strong understanding of how the turbine’s thermodynamic characteristics and control philosophy interact.
2. GT Load Control Modes (Mark VIe Overview)
GE Mark VIe uses three main control regions:
2.1 Speed/Acceleration Control (0–3000 rpm)
Fuel flow controlled to maintain acceleration profile
IGVs remain near minimum position
Reaches 3000 rpm
2.2 Droop Load Control (Synchronization → Near Base Load)
Begins immediately after synchronization
Fuel increases based on droop (frequency-sensitive control)
IGVs open gradually to increase air mass flow
Unit responds to grid frequency deviations
2.3 Temperature Control (High load → Base load)
When firing temperature hits its limit, fuel stops increasing
Load becomes a consequence of firing temperature
IGVs at or near full-open
3. Relationship Between Firing Temperature and CPD
The GE 9FA does not use a fixed firing temperature.
Instead, it uses a CPD-biased firing temperature reference (TTRF1):
Low CPD → Higher firing temperature allowed
High CPD → Lower firing temperature allowed
This protects turbine hot-gas-path components because cooling air pressure increases with CPD.
Thus:
TTRF1 = function of (CPD), not a constant.
3.1 Firing Temperature Control Logic
The Mark VIe controller manages load and exhaust temperature as follows:
The controller reads CPD and determines the corresponding TTRF reference (TTRF_REF).
If the governor/load demands more power, fuel is increased, causing actual exhaust temperature and TTRF to rise.
If TTRF approaches or exceeds TTRF_REF, the FSR2 (firing temperature limiter) reduces fuel or prevents further increase.
A new equilibrium is established where CPD, mass flow, fuel flow, and TTRF satisfy both the load demand and TTRF limits.
This explains why, as CPD increases, the turbine initially adds fuel to maintain load and exhaust temperature until the firing limit is reached, after which the temperature controller constrains further increases.
4. Why Exhaust Temperature Is High at Part Load
At part load:
Mass flow is lower
CPD is lower
Firing temperature must be raised for combustion stability
HRSG needs hotter exhaust to maintain steam generation
This results in exhaust temperatures around 640–660°C at part load.
4.1 Combined-Cycle Requirement
GE intentionally maintains high exhaust temperature at part load because:
HRSG steam generation collapses if exhaust temperature falls
Combined-cycle efficiency depends heavily on exhaust heat
This is a design requirement, not a fault.
5. Why Exhaust Temperature Decreases at Higher Loads
As the turbine approaches base load:
Mass flow increases
More energy is converted into shaft power
Less heat remains in exhaust
CPD increases → firing reference decreases
Exhaust temperature typically drops to ~600–620°C
This is normal GE 9FA behaviour.
6. Simple-Cycle vs Combined-Cycle Firing Philosophy
Simple Cycle
Exhaust temperature can be reduced (even to 550–580°C)
Lower firing temperature acceptable
No HRSG to feed
Combined Cycle
Requires higher part-load exhaust to maintain steam production
Uses a different firing schedule optimized for HRSG efficiency
This explains why you cannot reduce exhaust temperature in combined cycle the same way as in simple cycle.
7. IGV, Mass Flow, and Compressor Work
7.1 IGV Function
More IGV opening → more air mass flow → higher CPD
Less IGV opening → less air mass flow → lower CPD
7.2 Compressor Work
Compressor power depends on both mass flow and pressure ratio.
Thus, compressor load increases significantly as IGVs open and airflow rises.
8. Why You Cannot Reduce Exhaust Temperature in Combined Cycle
Even if the gas turbine could run at lower exhaust temperatures, this would:
Reduce steam production
Reduce steam turbine output
Lower total plant efficiency
Move operating point outside GE combined-cycle design philosophy
Therefore:
Combined cycle requires higher exhaust temperature at part load — by design.
9. Real Plant Observation Interpretation
Your measurements confirm GE design behaviour:
150 MW → Part-load conditions
CPD ≈ 10.5 bar
Exhaust temperature ≈ 650°C
Exhaust flow ≈ 460 kg/s
~180 MW → Transition point
CPD ≈ 11.8 bar
IGV ≈ 63°
Mass flow ≈ 502 kg/s
Exhaust temperature starts decreasing
250 MW → Near base-load conditions
CPD ≈ 15.2 bar
Exhaust temperature ≈ 613°C
Exhaust flow ≈ 638 kg/s
This shows the transition point at which:
Exhaust temperature starts to fall
CPD rises
IGV and mass flow increase toward base-load values
These real values perfectly match expected 9FA characteristics and demonstrate how firing temperature, CPD, and airflow interact to control exhaust temperature.
10. Summary of Key Points
GE 9FA exhaust temperature is intentionally high at part load.
Exhaust temperature drops as load increases.
IGVs directly influence mass flow, CPD, and firing temperature.
Combined-cycle units must maintain high exhaust temperature for HRSG performance.
Firing temperature reference is CPD-biased, not fixed.
Base-load exhaust temperature is lower because turbine efficiency increases.
IBH plays a major role in stabilizing part-load combustion and airflow.
11. IBH (Inlet Bleed Heat) Operation and Impact on Exhaust Temperature
IBH is a key system at part load and is important for understanding turbine behavior.
11.1 What IBH Does
IBH re-circulates hot compressor discharge air back to the compressor inlet.
This increases inlet temperature and lowers compressor pressure ratio.
IBH is mainly used for:
1. Improving Compressor Surge Margin
At low load:
Mass flow is low
Pressure ratio is low
Surge margin becomes tight
IBH helps by shifting the compressor operating point away from the surge line.
2. Improving Emissions Stability
At low load, combustion tends to become unstable.
IBH increases inlet temperature, helping:
Maintain stable flame
Reduce NOx and CO emissions
11.2 How IBH Operates With Load
Below ~180 MW: IBH opens, providing surge protection and emissions stability.
Above ~180 MW: IBH closes, restoring maximum CPD and airflow for base-load efficiency.
11.3 Impact on Exhaust Temperature
When IBH is open:
Inlet temperature increases
CPD drops
Firing temperature reference increases
Exhaust temperature becomes higher
When IBH closes:
Inlet temperature decreases
CPD increases
Firing reference decreases
Exhaust temperature drops
Conclusion:
IBH is a major contributor to high part-load exhaust temperature and its decrease toward base load.
12. Disclaimer
This report was prepared as a personal effort by Mohamed Zaki Nawar, with the assistance of ChatGPT to help organize information and explain technical logic.
The content reflects my current understanding of the GE 9FA gas turbine in combined-cycle operation, but it is not guaranteed to be 100% accurate.
For operational decisions, please refer to official GE manuals and operating guides.
This report provides a clear and practical explanation of how the GE 9FA gas turbine behaves across its operating range in a combined-cycle power plant.
It focuses on:
Load vs firing temperature
CPD (compressor pressure ratio) influence
IGV and mass flow relationship
Why exhaust temperature is high at part load
Why exhaust temperature decreases toward base load
The difference between simple-cycle and combined-cycle firing logic
The role of IBH (Inlet Bleed Heat) in part-load operation
The explanations here are intended to give engineers a strong understanding of how the turbine’s thermodynamic characteristics and control philosophy interact.
2. GT Load Control Modes (Mark VIe Overview)
GE Mark VIe uses three main control regions:
2.1 Speed/Acceleration Control (0–3000 rpm)
Fuel flow controlled to maintain acceleration profile
IGVs remain near minimum position
Reaches 3000 rpm
2.2 Droop Load Control (Synchronization → Near Base Load)
Begins immediately after synchronization
Fuel increases based on droop (frequency-sensitive control)
IGVs open gradually to increase air mass flow
Unit responds to grid frequency deviations
2.3 Temperature Control (High load → Base load)
When firing temperature hits its limit, fuel stops increasing
Load becomes a consequence of firing temperature
IGVs at or near full-open
3. Relationship Between Firing Temperature and CPD
The GE 9FA does not use a fixed firing temperature.
Instead, it uses a CPD-biased firing temperature reference (TTRF1):
Low CPD → Higher firing temperature allowed
High CPD → Lower firing temperature allowed
This protects turbine hot-gas-path components because cooling air pressure increases with CPD.
Thus:
TTRF1 = function of (CPD), not a constant.
3.1 Firing Temperature Control Logic
The Mark VIe controller manages load and exhaust temperature as follows:
The controller reads CPD and determines the corresponding TTRF reference (TTRF_REF).
If the governor/load demands more power, fuel is increased, causing actual exhaust temperature and TTRF to rise.
If TTRF approaches or exceeds TTRF_REF, the FSR2 (firing temperature limiter) reduces fuel or prevents further increase.
A new equilibrium is established where CPD, mass flow, fuel flow, and TTRF satisfy both the load demand and TTRF limits.
This explains why, as CPD increases, the turbine initially adds fuel to maintain load and exhaust temperature until the firing limit is reached, after which the temperature controller constrains further increases.
4. Why Exhaust Temperature Is High at Part Load
At part load:
Mass flow is lower
CPD is lower
Firing temperature must be raised for combustion stability
HRSG needs hotter exhaust to maintain steam generation
This results in exhaust temperatures around 640–660°C at part load.
4.1 Combined-Cycle Requirement
GE intentionally maintains high exhaust temperature at part load because:
HRSG steam generation collapses if exhaust temperature falls
Combined-cycle efficiency depends heavily on exhaust heat
This is a design requirement, not a fault.
5. Why Exhaust Temperature Decreases at Higher Loads
As the turbine approaches base load:
Mass flow increases
More energy is converted into shaft power
Less heat remains in exhaust
CPD increases → firing reference decreases
Exhaust temperature typically drops to ~600–620°C
This is normal GE 9FA behaviour.
6. Simple-Cycle vs Combined-Cycle Firing Philosophy
Simple Cycle
Exhaust temperature can be reduced (even to 550–580°C)
Lower firing temperature acceptable
No HRSG to feed
Combined Cycle
Requires higher part-load exhaust to maintain steam production
Uses a different firing schedule optimized for HRSG efficiency
This explains why you cannot reduce exhaust temperature in combined cycle the same way as in simple cycle.
7. IGV, Mass Flow, and Compressor Work
7.1 IGV Function
More IGV opening → more air mass flow → higher CPD
Less IGV opening → less air mass flow → lower CPD
7.2 Compressor Work
Compressor power depends on both mass flow and pressure ratio.
Thus, compressor load increases significantly as IGVs open and airflow rises.
8. Why You Cannot Reduce Exhaust Temperature in Combined Cycle
Even if the gas turbine could run at lower exhaust temperatures, this would:
Reduce steam production
Reduce steam turbine output
Lower total plant efficiency
Move operating point outside GE combined-cycle design philosophy
Therefore:
Combined cycle requires higher exhaust temperature at part load — by design.
9. Real Plant Observation Interpretation
Your measurements confirm GE design behaviour:
150 MW → Part-load conditions
CPD ≈ 10.5 bar
Exhaust temperature ≈ 650°C
Exhaust flow ≈ 460 kg/s
~180 MW → Transition point
CPD ≈ 11.8 bar
IGV ≈ 63°
Mass flow ≈ 502 kg/s
Exhaust temperature starts decreasing
250 MW → Near base-load conditions
CPD ≈ 15.2 bar
Exhaust temperature ≈ 613°C
Exhaust flow ≈ 638 kg/s
This shows the transition point at which:
Exhaust temperature starts to fall
CPD rises
IGV and mass flow increase toward base-load values
These real values perfectly match expected 9FA characteristics and demonstrate how firing temperature, CPD, and airflow interact to control exhaust temperature.
10. Summary of Key Points
GE 9FA exhaust temperature is intentionally high at part load.
Exhaust temperature drops as load increases.
IGVs directly influence mass flow, CPD, and firing temperature.
Combined-cycle units must maintain high exhaust temperature for HRSG performance.
Firing temperature reference is CPD-biased, not fixed.
Base-load exhaust temperature is lower because turbine efficiency increases.
IBH plays a major role in stabilizing part-load combustion and airflow.
11. IBH (Inlet Bleed Heat) Operation and Impact on Exhaust Temperature
IBH is a key system at part load and is important for understanding turbine behavior.
11.1 What IBH Does
IBH re-circulates hot compressor discharge air back to the compressor inlet.
This increases inlet temperature and lowers compressor pressure ratio.
IBH is mainly used for:
1. Improving Compressor Surge Margin
At low load:
Mass flow is low
Pressure ratio is low
Surge margin becomes tight
IBH helps by shifting the compressor operating point away from the surge line.
2. Improving Emissions Stability
At low load, combustion tends to become unstable.
IBH increases inlet temperature, helping:
Maintain stable flame
Reduce NOx and CO emissions
11.2 How IBH Operates With Load
Below ~180 MW: IBH opens, providing surge protection and emissions stability.
Above ~180 MW: IBH closes, restoring maximum CPD and airflow for base-load efficiency.
11.3 Impact on Exhaust Temperature
When IBH is open:
Inlet temperature increases
CPD drops
Firing temperature reference increases
Exhaust temperature becomes higher
When IBH closes:
Inlet temperature decreases
CPD increases
Firing reference decreases
Exhaust temperature drops
Conclusion:
IBH is a major contributor to high part-load exhaust temperature and its decrease toward base load.
12. Disclaimer
This report was prepared as a personal effort by Mohamed Zaki Nawar, with the assistance of ChatGPT to help organize information and explain technical logic.
The content reflects my current understanding of the GE 9FA gas turbine in combined-cycle operation, but it is not guaranteed to be 100% accurate.
For operational decisions, please refer to official GE manuals and operating guides.
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