25. Should oil systems of turbines fitted with oil filtration systems be cleaned and washed?
The cleaning and washing of turbines' oil systems (and other machinery and equipment) is the
most important operation before commissioning new machinery, and when making general overhauls
after longer periods of intensive operation, no matter if machines are equipped with oil filtration
systems or not.
Protective filters (full-flow) are usually installed much farther from bearings,
hydrogen seals, adjustment system actuators and other abrasion nodes. Contaminants may also
occur between a filter and protected bearings:
- in new machines - after production and assembly;
- in extensively operated machines - deposits generated from ageing products, products of machine parts
wearing, rust and corrosion products and contaminants penetrating into oil systems from the environment with
oil when adding oil, as well as post-assembly contaminants.
In addition, protective filters in oil systems of high-capacity machines, for constructional
reasons (large flow capacity, low difference in pressures before and after filters, high hydraulic
resistance) have low filtration accuracy - they protect bearings against destruction from large
contaminants, but do not eliminate smaller particles, which are "polishing" shaft necks and bearings.
Working (by-pass) filters, installed usually within the area of the main tank of a turbine
set, they clean turbine oil of particles that escape from an oil system and organic products
produced in the oil ageing process. Moreover, the capacity of by-pass filters is generally very
low compared with the capacity of oil system pumps. For this reason, the majority of contaminants
suspended in the flowing oil stream "circulate" in the oil system, and are depositing slowly on its
surface (especially in coolers, compensators and tanks). After more than ten years of operation
(and in the event of poor operating culture - already after several years), deposits become a
source of secondary oil contamination and are very dangerous for oil (by catalysing ageing
processes) and for lubricated machine parts (causing wear-and-tear processes and damages). Contaminant particles
deposited on surfaces of pipelines, tanks and in oil coolers are carried away from the surface and
reintroduced into the stream of oil during interruptions in a turbine's work that bring about
temporary turbulences of flowing oil. It is always taking place during start-up, lowering power,
shutting a turbine and any other machine downtime.
Without a cleaning process, contaminants cannot be flaked off from internal surfaces of the
oil system, without washing the oil system with high-flow speeds - the flaked dirt cannot be removed
from oil, and contaminants in oil entail the high wear of filter elements and unforeseen costs of
repairs and downtime losses for turbines and other machines (more information
in guide_1 and presentation).