Effect of Hydrogen-Rich Fuels on Turbulent Combustion of Advanced Gas Turbine

Author(s):  
Weikuo Zhang ◽  
Wenjun Kong ◽  
Chunjie Sui ◽  
Tong Wang ◽  
Li Peng
Author(s):  
Antonio Andreini ◽  
Matteo Cerutti ◽  
Bruno Facchini ◽  
Luca Mangani

One of the driving requirements in gas turbine design is the combustion analysis. The reduction of exhaust pollutant emissions is in fact the main design constraint of modern gas turbine engines, requiring a detailed investigation of flame stabilization criteria and temperature distribution within combustion chamber. At the same time, the prediction of thermal loads on liner walls continues to represent a critical issue especially with diffusion flame combustors which are still widely used in aeroengines. To meet such requirement, design techniques have to take advantage also of the most recent CFD tools that have to supply advanced combustion models according to the specific application demand. Even if LES approach represents a very accurate approach for the analysis of reactive flows, RANS computation still represents a fundamental tool in industrial gas turbine development, thanks to its optimal tradeoff between accuracy and computational costs. This paper describes the development and the validation of both combustion and radiation models in a object-oriented RANS CFD code: several turbulent combustion models were considered, all based on a generalized presumed PDF flamelet approach, valid for premixed and non premixed flames. Concerning radiative heat transfer calculations, two directional models based on the P1-Approximation and the Finite Volume Method were treated. Accuracy and reliability of developed models have been proved by performing several computations on well known literature test-cases. Selected cases investigate several turbulent flame types and regimes allowing to prove code affordability in a wide range of possible gas turbine operating conditions.


Author(s):  
Alessandro Innocenti ◽  
Antonio Andreini ◽  
Andrea Giusti ◽  
Bruno Facchini ◽  
Matteo Cerutti ◽  
...  

In the present paper a numerical analysis of a low NOx partially premixed burner for industrial gas turbine applications is presented. The first part of the work is focused on the study of the premixing process inside the burner. Standard RANS CFD approach was used: k–ε turbulence model was modified and calibrated in order to find a configuration able to fit available experimental profiles of fuel/air concentration at the exit of the burner. The resulting profiles at different test points have been used to perform reactive simulations of an experimental test rig, where exhaust NOx emissions were measured. An assessment of the turbulent combustion model was carried out with a critical investigation of the expected turbulent combustion regimes in the system and taking into account the partially premixed nature of the flame due to the presence of diffusion type pilot flames. A reliable numerical setup was discovered by comparing predicted and measured NOx emissions at different operating conditions and at different split ratio between main and pilot fuel. In the investigated range, the influence of the premixer in the NOx formation rate was found to be marginal if compared with the pilot flame one. The calibrated numerical setup was then employed to explore possible modifications to fuel injection criteria and fuel split, with the aim of minimizing exhaust NOx emissions. This preliminary numerical screening of alternative fuel injection strategies allowed to define a set of advanced configurations to be investigated in future experimental tests.


Author(s):  
Alessandro Innocenti ◽  
Antonio Andreini ◽  
Bruno Facchini ◽  
Matteo Cerutti ◽  
Gianni Ceccherini ◽  
...  

A numerical investigation of a low NOx partially premixed fuel nozzle for heavy-duty gas turbine applications is presented in this paper. Availability of results from a recent test campaign on the same fuel nozzle architecture allowed the exhaustive comparison study presented in this work. At first, an assessment of the turbulent combustion model was carried out, with a critical investigation of the expected turbulent combustion regimes in the system and taking into account the partially premixed nature of the flame due to the presence of diffusion type pilot flames. In particular, the fluent partially premixed combustion model and a flamelet approach are used to simulate the flame. The laminar flamelet database is generated using the flamelet generated manifold (FGM) chemistry reduction technique. Species and temperature are parameterized by mixture fraction and progress variable. Comparisons with calculations with partially premixed model and the steady diffusion flamelet (SDF) database are made for the baseline configuration in order to discuss possible gains associated with the introduced dimension in the FGM database (reaction progress), which makes it possible to account for nonequilibrium effects. Numerical characterization of the baseline nozzle has been carried out in terms of NOx. Computed values for both the baseline and some alternative premixer designs have been then compared with experimental measurements on the reactive test rig at different operating conditions and different split ratios between main and pilot fuel. Numerical results allowed pointing out the fundamental NOx formation processes, both in terms of spatial distribution within the flame and in terms of different formation mechanisms. The obtained knowledge would allow further improvement of fuel nozzle design.


Author(s):  
Y.-C. Lin ◽  
S. Daniele ◽  
P. Jansohn ◽  
K. Boulouchos

In this paper, characteristics of turbulent combustion and NOx emission for high hydrogen-content fuel gases (H2 > 70 vol. %; “hydrogen-rich”) are addressed. An experimental investigation is performed in a perfectly-premixed axial-dump combustor under gas turbine relevant conditions. Fundamental features of turbulent combustion for these mixtures are evaluated based on OH-PLIF diagnostics. On the other hand, NOx emissions are measured with an exhaust gas sampling probe positioned downstream the combustor outlet. Compared to syngas mixtures (H2 + CO), the operational limits for hydrogen-rich fuel gases are found to occur at even leaner conditions concerning flashback phenomena. With respect to effects of operating pressure, a strongly reduced operational envelope is observed at elevated pressure. Only with decreasing the preheat temperature a viable approach to further extend the operational range is seen. Evaluation of the averaged turbulent flame shape shows that the profile of the flame front is generally approaching that of an ideal cone. Thus a simplified approach for estimating the turbulent flame speed via the location of the flame tip alone can be applied. The level of NOx emission for the hydrogen-rich fuel mixtures is generally above that of syngas mixtures, which exhibit already higher NOx emission values than natural gas. Distinct chemical kinetic features are found specifically at elevated pressure. While the pressure effects are weak for syngas, a non-monotonic behavior is observed for the hydrogen-rich fuels. Reaction path analysis is performed to complement and provide more insight to the findings from the measurements. From chemical kinetic calculations a distinct shift in NOx formation pathways (thermal NOx vs. NOx through N2O/NNH reaction channels) can be observed for the different fuel mixtures at different pressure levels.


Author(s):  
Jim B. W. Kok ◽  
Jurgen J. J. Louis

A model is presented for the turbulent combustion of CO/H2-air mixtures at gas turbine conditions. The model takes account of heat losses. The conversion of CO to CO2 and of H2 to H2O, as well as the non-equilibrium intermediate species concentrations are determined by two reaction progress variables and two other scalar variables. The initially available fuel concentration is expressed by a fuel mixing variable. The heat loss effect on the enthalpy is described by a scaled enthalpy variable. The modelled turbulent source terms in the transport equations for the scalar variables are discussed. Three cases of a turbulent CO/H2 diffusion flame with heat loss and chemical super-equilibrium of intermediate species are presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 147 ◽  
pp. 1299-1311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongzhao Liu ◽  
Yuzhang Wang ◽  
Tao Yu ◽  
Hecong Liu ◽  
Weiwei Cai ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Rakesh Yadav ◽  
Ishan Verma ◽  
Abhijit Modak ◽  
Shaoping Li

Abstract Flamelet Generated Manifold (FGM) has proven to be an efficient approach to model turbulent combustion across different regimes of combustion. The manifolds are generally created by solving laminar premixed or opposed flow configurations. Gas turbine combustors often involve many strong non-adiabatic events such as multiple temperature boundaries, quenching from cooling and effusion holes, conjugate heat transfer, soot radiation interaction, phase change from spray and the modulation of inlet conditions. The adiabatic assumption of the underlying flamelet generation in the FGM is, therefore, prone to errors in the prediction of flame speed, liner temperatures, and pollutant formation. In this work, a novel approach to generate fully non-adiabatic manifold is proposed and validated. The FGM manifold is created using a series of non-adiabatic flamelets, each flamelet is solved in one-dimensional physical space. The non-adiabatic flamelets are generated with an optimal combination of freely propagating and burner stabilized flames. This hybrid method of the flamelet configuration allows modeling large heat gain and loss without encountering any unrealistic temperature in the flamelet solution. Such fully non-adiabatic flamelets are then convoluted to generate a five-dimensional Non-adiabatic Flamelet Generated Manifold (NFGM) Probability Density Function (PDF.). The average properties such as temperature, mixture density, species concentration, rate of reaction, etc. from PDF are then coupled with the CFD solution. The non-adiabatic flamelets and corresponding NFGM is implemented into ANSYS Fluent software version 2020R1. This approach is validated first for canonical cases, followed by gas turbine like conditions of swirl stabilized methane fueled turbulent flame, developed at DLR Stuttgart as the PRECCINSTA combustor. The experimental data for this combustor is available for multiple operating conditions. A stable operating point (φ = 0.83, P = 30 kW) is chosen. The proposed nonadiabatic NFGM is used with Stress blended eddy simulation (SBES). The current NFGM-SBES results are compared with experimental data as well as the previously published works. The impact of modeling heat release in flamelet is used to analyze the M-shape versus V-shape flame transition and the peaks of the carbon monoxide in mixing shear layers. The findings from the current work, in terms of accuracy, validity and best practices while modeling NFGM-SBES are discussed and summarized. The improved results of NFGM compared to adiabatic FGM are encouraging and provides a potential high-fidelity tool for accurate, yet efficient modeling of turbulent combustion inside gas turbines.


Author(s):  
Bernhard Stiehl ◽  
Michelle Otero ◽  
Tommy Genova ◽  
Malcolm K. Newmyer ◽  
Kareem A. Ahmed ◽  
...  

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