Technical Report: Impact of IBH Malfunction on Compressor Operating Margin and Load Limitation in GE 9FA Gas Turbine

Prepared by: Mohamed Zaki Nawar
Machine: GE 9FA + Mark VIe | DLN 2.6+
Subject: Effect of IBH Valve Failure on Compressor Operating Margin, CPR Limits, and Load Reduction

1. Introduction

This report explains the technical reasons why the gas turbine was unable to operate below a certain load when the Inlet Bleed Heat (IBH) system malfunctioned and remained closed. It also describes how IBH influences compressor operating margin, corrected speed, compressor pressure ratio (CPR), and combustion stability. The investigation includes operational data, physical behavior analysis, and the final event where the unit tripped on high exhaust temperature spread during shutdown.


2. Function of IBH and Its Relation to Compressor Operating Margin

IBH (Inlet Bleed Heat) extracts hot air from the compressor discharge and mixes it with the compressor inlet air. Its main purposes are:

2.1 Increase Inlet Temperature at Low Load

When IBH is open, compressor inlet temperature (CTIM) increases. This results in:

Lower air density

Prevent ice formation at cold days due to drop in pressure at low igv angles

Lower mass flow through compressor

Reduced compressor pressure ratio (CPR)

Increased surge margin

Stable combustion at low load

Lower NOx emissions (DLN stability)


2.2 IBH Operation Logic

For GE 9FA DLN 2.6+ machines:

IBH opens at ~95% corrected speed before synchronization

It stays open during low load operation

It starts closing when IGV > 45°

It fully closes at IGV ≈ 63° (around ~180 MW depending on ambient)


This system is critical for maintaining compressor surge margin and DLN combustion stability during part-load operation.


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4. Effect of IBH Remaining Closed at Low Load

When IBH stayed closed, the following occurred:

4.1 Decrease in Compressor Inlet Temperature

Compared with normal operation at the same ambient and same MW, CTIM decreased because IBH was not supplying heated discharge air to the inlet.

4.2 Increase in Inlet Air Density & Mass Flow

Lower CTIM → higher density → more mass flow enters compressor even at the same IGV angle and same speed.

4.3 Increase in CPR Towards Its Limit

More mass flow + same IGV + same speed → CPR increases toward the surge protection curve.

Because CPR limit is a function of:

IGV position

Corrected speed

Ambient temperature


…the unit was operating dangerously close to the compressor operating limit.

4.4 Reduced Surge Margin / Operating Margin

The compressor moved toward the surge line. This condition becomes unsafe below ~160 MW, explaining why:

The machine could not reduce load further

Any attempt to go down in load caused instability

Combustion quality deteriorated (DLN lean blowout risk)



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5. Impact on Combustion and Exhaust Spread Trip

When IBH is closed at low load:

1. Air mass flow increases


2. Fuel flow decreases (during shutdown sequence)


3. The mixture becomes too lean


4. DLN combustion becomes unstable


5. Large differences develop between combustor cans


6. Exhaust temperature spread increases


7. Trip occurs at high spread limit



This matches exactly what happened:

At 110 MW during shutdown

High exhaust spread alarms on Spread 1 & 2

Final trip on high exhaust temperature spread


The root cause: DLN lean blowout due to IBH failure.


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6. Why Load Could Not Be Reduced Under These Conditions

With IBH closed:

Lower CTIM → higher corrected speed

Higher corrected speed → higher compressor capability

Higher mass flow → higher CPR

CPR approached the CPR-limit curve

Approaching CPR limit forces the control system to stop unloading

Further unloading increases surge risk


Therefore the unit stabilized only above ~160 MW. Below this point:

Combustion becomes unstable

CPR margin is nearly zero

DLN dynamics cause high spread

Unit eventually trips


Thus, operation below this load is physically unsafe, not just control-limited.


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In this report we confirm that when IBH remained fully closed, the compressor inlet temperature (CTIM) decreased compared to the same ambient conditions when IBH is operating normally. This reduction in inlet temperature increases inlet air density and mass flow, which in turn raises CPR toward the compressor operating limit. Because CPR limit is a function of IGV angle and corrected speed, and because IBH normally opens at 95% speed before synchronization and closes only when IGV exceeds ~63°, the turbine lost its required operating margin. This explains why the machine could not reduce load further and why combustion instability occurred during shutdown, leading to high exhaust spread and the subsequent trip.


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8. Conclusion

The root cause of the operational limits and eventual shutdown trip was:

Primary Cause

Failure of the IBH system (valve stem broken), causing IBH to remain closed during part-load operation.

Consequences

Low CTIM

Increased mass flow

High CPR near limit

Reduced surge margin

DLN combustion instability at low load

High exhaust spread during shutdown

Final trip


Restoring IBH operation is necessary to:

Maintain compressor margin

Ensure DLN stability

Allow safe load reduction

Prevent future spread trips




9. 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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