Neuchâtel gas turbine

The Neuchâtel gas turbine is the world's first electric power-generating gas turbine to go into commercial operation. It was designed and constructed by Brown, Boveri & Cie and installed in 1939 at the municipal power station in Neuchâtel, Switzerland. The gas turbine was in service as a standby unit from 1940 until its retirement in 2002.[1][2][3]

Neuchâtel gas turbine
Neuchâtel gas turbine exhibited at the 1939 Swiss National Expo in Zurich
ClassificationGas turbine
ApplicationStandby power generator
Fuel sourceDiesel
Components
ManufacturerBrown, Boveri & Cie
DesignerAdolf Meyer
First run7 July 1939
In-service1940 - 2002
OperatorServices Industriels de la Ville de Neuchâtel

Design and development

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Brown, Boveri & Cie (BBC) first became involved with gas turbines when they began building turbo-compressors in collaboration with the French industrialist Auguste Rateau. The first machine built under this agreement was a 25 impeller, three casing centrifugal compressor for the experimental 1906 Armengaud-Lemale gas turbine.[2]

BBC worked on a number of experimental gas turbine projects in the 1910s and 20s. BBC's gas turbine collaborations included Holzwarth's explosion turbines and a two-stroke version of Herbert Humphrey’s Humphrey pump which would have been used for power generation (a so called “wet gas turbine”). None of these early gas turbine experiments produced a commercially viable product.[4]

In the 1930s BBC developed the commercially successful Velox boilers. Velox boilers use an axial flow air compressor driven by a flue-gas turbine to allow rapid heating of a steam boiler. The first Velox boiler was installed at the Mondeville steel works in France in 1932.[2]

In 1936, BBC built the world’s first constant flow industrial gas turbine for the Sun Oil refinery in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania. The early BBC gas turbine sets were essentially Velox boilers with the steam component removed. The Marcus Hook turbine was used for the catalyst regeneration cycle of the Houndry oil refining process and had a high enough compressor efficiency that the turbine produced a continuous power surplus that was used for electricity generation.[1][5]

BBC's first opportunity to build a gas turbine solely for the purposes of electrical power generation came in 1938, when the Services Industriels de la Ville de Neuchâtel placed enquiries for an emergency power generator to be placed in a bomb-proof cavern.[1] In the late 1930s, heavily protected emergency power generators were being ordered by utilities across Europe to ensure continued electrical supplies in the event of aerial bombardment.[6] BBC's proposal for a 3,000 RPM, 4 MWe gas turbine was accepted. The key concerns for this application were limited space and fast starting times rather than efficiency, which suited the early open cycle gas turbines.[1][5]

 
Layout of the Neuchatel gas turbine showing main components

Assembly of the Neuchâtel gas turbine set was completed in BBC's Baden works by the summer of 1939. Full load tests took place on 7 July under the supervision of Professor Aurel Stodola with representatives from the Swiss Association of Steam Boiler Proprietors, the Swiss Association of Electrical Engineers and the Swiss Federal Material Testing Laboratories. Power output was recorded at 4,021 kW with a cycle efficiency of 17.38%. Prior to its installation in Neuchâtel, the gas turbine was exhibited at the Swiss National Expo in Zürich.[1]

Operating history, retirement and preservation

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The Neuchâtel gas turbine went into service early in 1940.[2] In 1988 the gas turbine was awarded "mechanical landmark" status by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) in recognition of its historical significance.[1][3]

Over its 62 years in service the Neuchâtel gas turbine accumulated 7,283 operating hours and 1,908 starts. In 2002 the plant was permanently closed following damage to the gas turbine set's alternator.[1]

In 2007, Alstom (who had acquired BBC's turbine business in 2000) relocated the Neuchâtel gas turbine to their facility in Birr, Aargau where it was restored and put on display.[1][3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Eckardt, Dietrich (2014). "4.3.3 The Worlds's First Utility Gas Turbine Ste at Neuchâtel (1939)". Gas Turbine Powerhouse. Oldenbourg Verlag Munchen. pp. 181–190. ISBN 9783486735710.
  2. ^ a b c d Young, Steve (2019). "Who Invented Industrial Gas Turbines?". NEWSNOC. No. 19. Sharjah National Oil Corporation (SNOC). pp. 26–27.
  3. ^ a b c "The World's First Industrial Gas Turbine Set - GT Neuchâtel" (PDF). ASME Digital Collection. American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). 2007.
  4. ^ Noack, Walter G (1941). "Pressure Charging, Velox Boiler and Gas Turbine, a review of their origin and development by Brown Boveri" (PDF). The Brown Boveri Review. 28. Baden, Switzerland: Brown Boveri and Company.
  5. ^ a b Smith, Geoff (1951). "17 - Other Turbine Applications". Gas Turbines and Jet Propulsion (6th ed.). London: Iliffe and Sons. pp. 355–360.
  6. ^ Meyer, Adolf (1939). "The Combustion Gas Turbine, Its History, Development and Prospects". The Brown Boveri Review. 26. Baden, Switzerland: Brown Boveri and Company.
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