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High Marnham Power Station

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

High Marnham Power Station
High Marnham Power Station
Viewed from the east in July 2004
Map
CountryEngland
LocationHigh Marnham, Nottinghamshire, East Midlands, NG23 6SE
Coordinates53°13′44″N 0°47′33″W / 53.229020°N 0.792565°W / 53.229020; -0.792565
StatusDecommissioned and Demolished
Construction began1954
Commission date1959[1]
Decommission date2003
Construction cost£50m (1962)
Operator(s)Central Electricity Generating Board
(1959–1990)
Powergen
(1990–2002)
E.ON UK
(2002–2003)
Thermal power station
Primary fuelCoal
Chimneys2
Cooling towers5
Cooling sourceRiver Trent
Cooling Towers
Power generation
Nameplate capacity1000 MW
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

grid reference SK807709

High Marnham Power Station was a coal fuelled power station in Nottinghamshire, to the west of the River Trent, approximately 0.5 miles (0.8 km) north of the village of High Marnham. Construction site clearance began in November 1955, No. 1 Unit power generation commenced in October 1959, and the station became fully operational in June 1962. The plant operated until 2003 when it was decommissioned, though the cooling towers weren't demolished until 2012.

High Marnham was the most southerly of three power stations which lined the River Trent, known locally as Megawatt Valley, the others being West Burton and Cottam. It was the first 1000 MW [946 MW net] power station built and commissioned in Europe; it operated at higher boiler pressure and temperatures than earlier plants.[1][2]

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  • Demolition of 5 Cooling Towers at High Marnham Power Station UK by controlled explosion

Transcription

Construction

High Marnham was first proposed in 1953 by design engineer Stanley Brown.[3] The station was constructed by the Central Electricity Generating Board Northern Project Group, on a green field site. Work started in 1954, with groundworks on the site of Barks Farm, which was demolished the following year.[4] The main civil engineering practice for the construction was Freeman Fox & Partners.[5] The work was overseen by resident engineer Douglas Derbyshire who later went on to construct the nearby West Burton Power Station. The main contractor during construction was Alfred McAlpine. The station was commissioned in 1959[1][6] and was fully operational by June 1962. The plant was officially opened in October 1962[6] by Sir Stanley Brown (F.H.S. Brown), now the deputy chairman of the CEGB.

Boiler plant

The plant was designed and built by International Combustion Ltd. Five boiler units, each weighing about 14,000 tons, were suspended on beams and support columns, for a vertical expansion of 8 inches (200 mm). Each boiler was built in twin furnace construction with 1.5 inch (38mm) bore tubes, all connected to a common drum at the top of the boiler, and fitted with safety valves set at 2,500 pounds per square inch (17,000 kPa). One furnace carried the superheat pendants, connected to the boiler drum top and to an outlet header, fitted with a safety valve set at 2,450 pounds per square inch (16,900 kPa). The second furnace carried the reheat pendants connected to an inlet header from the HP cylinder exhaust and to an outlet header to the turbine IP cylinder. The lower section of the furnace corners contained a wind box with the pulverised fuel nozzles and retractable oil burners. Fuel nozzles and burners were aligned at an imaginary circle in the furnace ensuring an even heat distribution. Pulverised fuel nozzles were provided with vertical movement to control temperature conditions. At the bottom of each furnace, the front and rear wall tubes were formed into an inward slope where the tubes were bent back (forming a nose and gap) to their original vertical wall alignment terminating at their front and rear bottom furnace water tube headers. A steel skirt was fitted around each furnace base.

Water circulation within the boiler furnace was assisted by fully immersed electrical pumps manufactured by Hayward Tyler Co. Four Lopulco coal roller mills with pulverised coal fans per boiler were located in the boiler house basement. Coal was fed from overhead bunkers by speed-regulated drum feeders to the mills and crushed to fine dust by three 7.5 ton roller drums per mill, then blown into the wind boxes through pipework and the PF nozzles. Combustion air was delivered by two forced draught fans located above the coal bunkers, taking warm air from above the boiler roof casing and discharging it though rotating heat exchangers to the furnace wind boxes. Hot gas was drawn from the furnaces through the pendants, water tube economisers, rotating heat exchanger, cyclone dust collectors and electrostatic precipitators by two induced draught fans before entering the chimney flue ducts and passing up the 500 feet (150 m) high chimneys.

Heavy combustion products fell into basement mounted hoppers with water troughs under each furnace that engaged with the bottom furnace header casing skirt. The hoppers were emptied by a water jet/sluice arrangement into an ash receiving pit.

Boiler water feed system

Cooling towers in June 2006

Condensed steam was taken from the turbine condenser and pumped back into the boiler feed system, via the unit evaporator, low and high pressure water tube heaters (after being subjected to bled steam heat from turbine cylinders) into a de-aerator. The de-aerated water was taken by the main feed pump (multi stage cartridge design pump or a smaller start up pump) and discharged at 3,000 pounds per square inch (21,000 kPa) into the boiler water feed system through feed regulating valves. Both feed pump types were electric motor driven. Additional station boiler feed water supply could also be made up by the station water treatment plant and fed into the de-aerator, this was operated and controlled by the station chemistry department.

Turbine/generator plant

Designed and built by the English Electric Co., five steam turbine units of high pressure, intermediate pressure and double-flow low pressure turbine cylinders were coupled to 200 MW generators. The steam flow into the turbine was regulated by the hydraulically controlled steam inlet valves to maintain a generating speed of 3000 RPM. The turbine over-speed protection was by weight eccentric rings on the turbine shaft, set to throw-out at a predetermined RPM and shutting the high pressure cylinder inlet steam valves. Exhaust flow from the HP turbine cylinders passed to the boiler for reheating (with some having been bled off to feed heaters), returned to the intermediate pressure cylinder (with some bled off to low pressure feed heaters) and exhausted from the double-flow LP cylinder under vacuum into underslung water-cooled condensers. Condenser cooling water was delivered from a sub-basement ring main around the turbine house. The turbine/generator assembly was mounted on reinforced concrete pedestals that ran along the length of the turbine hall. High Marnham was one of the CEGB’s twenty steam power stations with the highest thermal efficiency; in 1963–4 the thermal efficiency was 33.66 per cent, 33.31 per cent in 1964–5, and 32.93 per cent in 1965–6.[7] The annual electricity output of High Marnham was:[7][8]

Electricity output of High Marnham
Year 1960–1 1961–2 1962–3 1963–4 1964–5 1965–6 1966–7 1971–2 1978–9 1980–1 1981–2
Electricity supplied, GWh 1,306 3,609 4,472 5,080 5,184 5,569 5,405 4,246 3,264 3,945 3,619

National Grid

On 15 December 1963, the first 400kV supergrid link in the UK's National Grid was switched on between the power station and the Monk Fryston substation, near the Selby Fork on the A63 road towards Fairburn, North Yorkshire - a distance of 64 miles. This line was mainly experimental; the 420-ton transformers at either end were from English Electric at Stafford. The main 400kV supergrid was not switched on until around 1965, with the 4ZA power line (Grendon to Elstree).

E.ON sign in February 2008

Cooling water plant

Cooling water pumps were located between cooling towers in a purpose made building to deliver cooling water into a ring main for the turbine condensers. The warm water was passed on through to the five 350 feet (110 m) cooling towers, falling into the tower moats to be channelled back through screens and a chlorination process to the pump suctions for recirculation. Water loss through evaporation was made up from the river Trent by suction screened pumps. It required around 27 million gallons of water an hour.

Coal plant

High Marnham power station was supplied with coal via the 14-mile High Marnham branch off the Mansfield to Worksop line (later marketed as the Robin Hood railway line). Prior to their closure Thorsby, Welbeck, Ollerton, Bevercotes, Clipstone, Mansfield, Rufford, Blidworth and Bilsthorpe collieries were also connected to the High Marnham Branch.[9] Rail facilities at High Marnham included weighbridges, sidings and coal hoppers, a control room, coal wagon marshalling yard and conveyor systems. In about 1965 a "merry-go-round" system of automatic coal wagon unloading was installed to evaluate for future "Stations Systems". Bunker coal supply ran from the coal plant on inclined conveyors to the boiler house, where it was fed onto a moving "feed head" conveyor above the individual boiler coal bunkers. The plant burnt around 10,000 tonnes of coal a day. When it was commissioned in October 1962 it was the largest power station in Europe, consuming coal from 17 collieries.[10] The two chimneys were 450 ft high.[11] A pipeline was built to take ash across the Trent five miles to former gravel pits at Besthorpe, Nottinghamshire.

Closure and demolition

Demolition of chimneys on 15 December 2004

The station closed in 2003[12] after nearly 45 years in operation, with a loss of 119 jobs.[1] The station's chimneys were demolished on 15 December 2004.[13] The station's 150 feet (46 m)-high boiler house was demolished on 5 October 2006.[14] The station's five cooling towers were demolished on 15 July 2012 at 10:00.[15][16]

In late 2009, the railway connection that used to supply coal to the power station became Network Rail's High Marnham Test Track for innovation and development, suited to this purpose because the line consists of continuously welded rail on concrete sleepers.[17]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Job losses as power stations close" (STM). BBC News. BBC. 9 January 2003. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
  2. ^ "Power Station Locations and Capacities". ukqaa.org.uk/. United Kingdom Quality Ash Association. Archived from the original on 8 November 2011. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
  3. ^ "History of Power Generation - The Central Electricity Generating Board (CEGB)". Power Stations of the UK. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  4. ^ "Barks Farm". Bassetlaw Museum. CEGB. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  5. ^ "People". CEGB Mid Reg. Bassetlaw Museum. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  6. ^ a b Clarke, Jonathan (2013). High merit: existing English post-war coal and oil-fired power stations in context. London: Historic England.
  7. ^ a b CEGB (1966). CEGB Statistical Yearbooks 1964, 1965, 1966, 1972, 1982. London: CEGB. p. 20.
  8. ^ CEGB Annual report and Accounts, 1961, 1962 & 1963.
  9. ^ Jacobs, Gerald (1988). Eastern and Anglia Regions Track Diagrams. Exeter: Quail. pp. 12B. ISBN 0900609559.
  10. ^ Sheail, John (1991). Power in Trust. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 138. ISBN 0-19-854673-4.
  11. ^ Nottingham Evening Post. October 1962.
  12. ^ White, Emily (26 February 2020). "New green energy jobs set to be created at former High Marnham power station". Lincolnshire Live. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  13. ^ Robert Goulden (17 January 2006). "High Marnham Power Station". Retrieved 6 February 2009.
  14. ^ "E.ON UK's High Marnham Power Station's boiler house to be demolished". E.ON UK. 25 September 2006. Archived from the original (ASPX) on 27 March 2008. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
  15. ^ "Five cooling towers are demolished in High Marnham". BBC News. BBC. 15 July 2012. Retrieved 15 July 2012.
  16. ^ "Five cooling towers demolished in Nottinghamshire". Energy News Live. 16 July 2012. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  17. ^ "Rail Innovation & Development Centre – Site Data" (PDF). Network Rail. 6 August 2010. Archived from the original (presentation) on 21 May 2012. Retrieved 24 May 2022.

External links

This page was last edited on 10 January 2024, at 11:18
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