explain the high pressure steam turbine and its components and operating cycle and process
High Pressure Steam Turbine – Overview
A High Pressure Steam Turbine is the first stage of a multi-stage steam turbine used in thermal power plants. It receives high-pressure, high-temperature steam (typically 130–170 bar & 530–540°C) directly from the boiler and converts its thermal energy into mechanical rotation to drive the generator.
Main Components of High Pressure Steam Turbine
Casing: Encloses turbine blades and maintains steam pressure.
Rotor & Blades: Convert steam energy to rotational energy.
Nozzles: Direct and accelerate steam onto rotor blades.
Glands & Seals: Prevent steam leakage at shaft ends.
Bearings: Support and align the rotating shaft.
Control Valves & Governor: Regulate steam flow and turbine speed.
🔄 Operating Cycle (Rankine Cycle)
Boiler: Steam is generated at high pressure and temperature.
HP Turbine: Steam expands here, doing mechanical work.
Reheater: Exhaust steam from HP turbine is reheated for intermediate or low-pressure turbines.
Condenser: Steam converts back to water.
Feed Pump: Water is pumped again to the boiler—completing the cycle.
⚙️ Process Summary
High-pressure steam enters the HP turbine → expands through nozzles and blades → loses pressure and temperature while rotating the shaft → exhausts to reheater → goes to next turbine stage.
👉 Read full article on Steam Turbine in Power Plant.
