Description
Key Technical Specifications
- Model Number: ABB 3BHE004573R0041 UFC760BE41
- Manufacturer: ABB Power Automation Division
- Control Precision: ±0.2% of full-scale fuel flow (liquid/gaseous fuels)
- Fuel Compatibility: Natural gas, distillate oil, syngas (software-configurable)
- Redundancy Configuration: 1+1 hot-standby, automatic failover <5ms
- Response Time: <15ms (flow adjustment to turbine load demand)
- Input Signals: 4-20mA (turbine load setpoint), RTD (fuel temperature), 24VDC discrete (status)
- Output Signals: 4-20mA (fuel valve positioning), 24VDC discrete (fault alarms)
- Power Supply: Dual 24VDC ±10% inputs, 1.2A typical per controller
- Operating Temperature: -20°C to +65°C (-4°F to +149°F)
- Isolation Rating: 2kV AC (signal to power); 1kV AC (channel to channel)
- Certifications: IEC 61508 (SIL 3), CE, UL 508, ATEX Zone 2, ISO 13849-1
- Compatibility: ABB Symphony Plus DCS, GT26/GT36 gas turbines, 3BHE series I/O modules

ABB 3BHE004573R0041 UFC760BE41
Field Application & Problem Solved
In gas turbine operations—power plants, LNG liquefaction trains, petrochemical complexes—fuel control precision directly impacts efficiency and safety. A Middle Eastern LNG facility lost $420k in monthly natural gas waste when a generic fuel control unit drifted by 1.5%, delivering excess fuel to GT36 turbines. Legacy units also lack redundancy: a Texas power plant experienced a 10-hour outage ($1.8M loss) when a single-point fuel controller failure shut down a 400MW combined-cycle unit.
You’ll find this unit integrated with Symphony Plus DCS in critical turbine applications: GT26 turbines in German power plants, GT36 liquefaction drives in Qatar LNG facilities, and syngas-fired turbines in Louisiana petrochemical complexes. Its core value is precision fuel metering + fail-safe redundancy. The ±0.2% accuracy cut the Middle Eastern facility’s gas waste by 85%, saving $357k monthly. At the Texas plant, the 1+1 hot-standby design eliminated single-point failures—no unplanned outages in 3 years.
For a European petrochemical plant, SIL 3 certification ensured compliance with strict safety regulations, avoiding $280k in non-compliance fines. Its ability to switch between natural gas and distillate oil (in 500ms) also proved critical during a gas supply disruption, keeping turbines online and preventing $1.2M in production losses.
Installation & Maintenance Pitfalls (Expert Tips)
- Fuel Type Calibration—Match to Turbine Specifications: Rookies use default natural gas calibration for distillate oil, causing 3% flow errors. A Pennsylvania power plant made this mistake during commissioning, leading to turbine flame instability. Use ABB’s Control Builder M software to select fuel type (gas/oil/syngas) and input viscosity/density parameters. Verify with a flow meter: actual flow must match setpoint within ±0.2%.
- Redundant Power—Separate UPS Sources Are Mandatory: Wiring both controller inputs to one UPS defeats redundancy. A Florida plant did this; a UPS failure took down both units, triggering a 2-hour turbine shutdown. Feed Controller A from the turbine’s main UPS, Controller B from the plant’s emergency UPS. Use the unit’s built-in power monitor to alarm if either input drops below 20VDC.
- Signal Scaling—Align with Fuel Valve Range: Incorrect valve signal scaling (e.g., 0-100% flow mapped to 4-20mA incorrectly) limits fuel adjustment. A North Carolina plant’s turbine couldn’t reach full load because the UFC760BE41 was calibrated for a 0-50% valve range. Cross-verify valve stroke (0-100%) with signal output (4-20mA) using a valve positioner tester—ensure 4mA = 0% stroke, 20mA = 100% stroke.
- Filter Maintenance—Quarterly, Not Annual: Clogged fuel temperature/pressure sensor filters cause drift. A Wyoming plant skipped quarterly checks; sensor blockage led to 0.8% flow error and increased emissions. Clean inlet filters on RTD/pressure sensors every 3 months, and replace O-rings with ABB’s 3BSE048900R1 Viton seals to resist fuel degradation.

Technical Deep Dive & Overview
The ABB 3BHE004573R0041 UFC760BE41 is a dedicated fuel control unit for heavy-duty gas turbines, engineered to deliver precise, redundant fuel flow regulation. At its core, dual 32-bit MCUs operate in lockstep: one executes the adaptive PID control algorithm (optimized for turbine fuel dynamics), while the other validates outputs to prevent drift—critical for SIL 3 compliance. The algorithm adjusts fuel flow based on three inputs: turbine load demand (from DCS), fuel temperature (via RTD), and fuel pressure (via pressure transmitter), compensating for density changes in real time.
Redundancy is baked into every layer: dual power supplies, redundant communication paths to the DCS, and hot-standby processing. The standby controller mirrors the primary’s setpoints and status via a dedicated 100Mbps sync link; if the primary detects a fault (CPU error, signal loss), the standby takes over in <5ms—faster than the turbine’s fuel dynamics, so no load disruption.
The unit communicates with the Symphony Plus DCS via IEC 61850 GOOSE/MMS, enabling remote monitoring and configuration. Its conformal-coated PCB resists fuel vapors and dust, while the -20°C to +65°C operating range handles unconditioned turbine enclosures. Unlike generic units, it’s factory-calibrated for ABB’s GT26/GT36 turbines, ensuring seamless integration and eliminating custom tuning.
What sets it apart is the balance of precision, redundancy, and safety—critical for applications where turbine downtime costs $20k+ per minute. It doesn’t just regulate fuel; it acts as a safety-critical link between the DCS and turbine, optimizing efficiency, preventing waste, and ensuring compliance with global safety standards.


