Evaporative Cooling of Gas Turbine Engines: Climatic Analysis and Application in High Humidity Regions

There are numerous power generation and mechanical drive gas turbine applications where the power drop caused by high ambient temperatures has a very detrimental effect on the production of power or process throughput. Media evaporative cooling and inlet fogging are common low cost power augmentation techniques applied to reduce these losses. Several misconceptions exist regarding the applicability of evaporative cooling to what are often called “high humidity” regions. There is a sizable evaporative cooling potential in most locations when climatic data is evaluated based on an analysis of coincident wet bulb and dry bulb data. This data is not readily available to plant users and designers. This paper provides a detailed treatment of available climatic data bases and presents actual climatic data from several world wide locations to show that considerable cooling potential actually exists even in high humidity regions. It is hoped that this paper will be of value to plant designers, engineering and operating companies that are considering the use of evaporative cooling for power augmentation.Copyright © 2007 by ASME