March-April 2009

Fire and Ice

University of Arizona increases turbine efficiency with ice storage.

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Photo: University of Arizona

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By Al Tarcola

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The CHRP was built in 1950 and has 8,500 tons of centrifugal refrigeration chilled water capacity along with 154,000 pph of 125-psi steam capacity from three gas-fired boilers. It also has a 6.5-MW, gas-fired turbine generator with an auxiliary 1.7-MW steam turbine generator that produces electricity for the campus grid, along with 33,000 pph of 125-psi steam from the Turbine Exhaust Heat Recovery Steam Generator (HRSG).

The second central plant, built in 1968, is the AHSC. It has 7,200 tons of centrifugal refrigeration chilled water capacity along with 70,000 pph of high-pressure steam capacity, which is produced by two gas-fired boilers and 24,000-pph-high-pressure steam from a 4.5-MW gas turbine at HRSG.

The CRB is of 1988 vintage and is the home of the Ice Storage System. When its three ice chillers make ice, the system has 15,650 tons of centrifugal refrigeration chilled water capacity. However, when the chillers produce chilled water, that capacity is increased to 17,000 tons.

The Ice Plant
“The ice storage system [also known as the thermal storage project or ice plant] is powered by a Combined Heat and Power [CHP] system located at the AHSC plant, that supplies electricity to three Trane CenTraVac ice chillers,” says Ned Morris Trane’s local representative. “These chillers make ice at 910 tons and 0.783 kilowatts per ton. They freeze water in the 156 storage tanks that are discharged on demand, providing 23,400-ton hours of capacity or 3,120 tons for 7.5 hours. We often accelerate the discharge to as high as 3,500 tons during peak hours, further reducing electric demand charges.”

Photos: University of Arizona
CALMAC Ice Storage tanks located at CRB plant
Green Seal-certified low-pressure Trane CenTraVac
The use of ice storage for recovering turbine heat means the AHSC Plant Turbine is now loaded during off-peak hours, thereby reducing the higher natural gas cost for boiler steam. In turn, chilled water costs are kept to a minimum by reducing the number of chillers that need to run at peak-demand periods.

When fully loaded, the Deltak Heat Recovery Steam Generator (22 KP pounds per hour) produces 24,000 pph of high-pressure steam, most of which is used by the AHSC, as well as by the University Medical Center and its surrounding buildings. The auxiliary steam turbine can be used to generate electricity during periods of excess steam production, if the chilled water load allows.

The ability to choose gas or purchased electricity, combined with the ability to move or reduce electric demand with ice storage, provides tremendous negotiating power with the local utility
suppliers.

Ice is produced at the CRB during the evening and at night, and is melted to produce chilled water during the day. However, during winter evenings when the campus chilled water load falls below 5,000 tons, the resultant electric load on the AHSC 4.5-MW solar turbine is unable to meet the University Medical Center and Sciences Center buildings’ steam demand. In these situations, the ice chillers are brought online to produce ice, raising the electrical load on the turbine, and thus producing the needed steam.

With 10 years of steady investment in chilled water distribution infrastructure, the University has created a chilled water grid with less than a 12-psig-pressure differential across the 1.3-mile campus diameter. As a result, chilled water produced by the ice storage system can be distributed across campus during the day to displace production by any chiller connected to the utility’s electrical grid and distribution loop. “Shaving this peak represents up to a $38,000 monthly savings to the University,” notes Deutsch.

In addition, prior to ice storage, the chillers needed to “cycle” in order to meet fluctuating cooling loads. With ice storage, the chillers can run constantly at the same level of output, which, in turn, optimizes the turbine’s efficiency and extends the life of the chillers.

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University of Arizona representatives investigated ice storage by visiting several installations that use this technology, including CALMAC’s installation at Shell Point, a retirement community in Ft. Myers, FL. “Eventually the CALMAC system was chosen because of its tanks’ non-corrosive material, the ability to isolate modules in groups of three (IceBank tank model 1500C), the mobility of the tanks, their ease of installation, and the ease of maintenance and repair,” Bush. “An additional consideration was the simplicity and modular nature of the CALMAC system. We started on June 1, 2004 and produced our first batch of ice on July 1, 2004. We have had ice available everyday, without exception since then. We would not have made this tight schedule without our piping partner, Sun Mechanical, headed by Scott Candrian.”

The original plans called for 23,400 ton-hours (3,000 tons for eight hours at 39 degrees), however up to 23,400 ton-hours from the system at a higher discharge temperature for longer melting periods was delivered. Today, the system relies on 156 tanks at about 150 tons per hour each. Next Page >

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