Performance research and application of the vapor pump boiler equipped with flue gas recirculation system

2022 ◽  
Vol 254 ◽  
pp. 115201
Author(s):  
Yiyu Men ◽  
Xiaohua Liu ◽  
Tao Zhang
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Marc Fąfara ◽  
Norbert Modliński

The gas microturbines gain significance in various industry sectors. One of their most crucial advantages is the capability of utilizing variety of fuels. At the same time, the emissions regulations become increasingly strict. This is why there is a need to look for a new technological solution to limit the emissions of selected substances, like carbon monoxide (CO) and nitrogen oxides (NOx). The internal recirculation of the flue gases is well known to limit the temperature peak and for the homogenization of the temperature field gradient in different combustion chambers. This paper presents a numerical investigation of a novel internal flue gas recirculation system applied to gas microturbine combustors. The ability to perform an internal exhaust gases recirculation by adding a combustor internal pipe system was verified numerically. This paper exposed the numerical investigation methods and obtained results. The study presents the concept and results performed on three cases of internal exhaust gases recirculation systems applied to a reference combustor. The work permitted to demonstrate numerically that it is possible to perform an autonomous exhaust gases recirculation inside gas microturbine combustor at a maximum global rate of 0.51%, and that the recirculation system has an impact on the combustion processes without specially modifying the combustor work parameters.


Fuel ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 297 ◽  
pp. 120775
Author(s):  
Mohsen Abdelaal ◽  
Medhat El-Riedy ◽  
Ahmed M. El-Nahas ◽  
Fathy R. El-Wahsh

Author(s):  
Jochen R. Kalb ◽  
Thomas Sattelmayer

The technological objective of this work is the development of a lean-premixed burner for natural gas. Sub-ppm NOx emissions can be accomplished by shifting the lean blowout limit (LBO) to slightly lower adiabatic flame temperatures than the LBO of current standard burners. This can be achieved with a novel burner concept utilizing periodic flue gas recirculation: Hot flue gas is admixed to the injected premixed fresh mixture with a mass flow rate of comparable magnitude, in order to achieve self-ignition. The subsequent combustion of the diluted mixture again delivers flue gas. A fraction of the combustion products is then admixed to the next stream of fresh mixture. This process pattern is to be continued in a cyclically closed topology, in order to achieve stable combustion of e.g. natural gas in a temperature regime of very low NOx production. The principal ignition behavior and NOx production characteristics of one sequence of the periodic process was modeled by an idealized adiabatic system with instantaneous admixture of partially or completely burnt flue gas to one stream of fresh reactants. With the CHEMKIN-II package a reactor network consisting of one perfectly stirred reactor (PSR, providing ignition in the first place) and two plug flow reactors (PFR) has been used. The effect of varying burnout and the influence of the fraction of admixed flue gas have been evaluated. The simulations have been conducted with the reaction mechanism of Miller and Bowman and the GRI-Mech 3.0 mechanism. The results show that the high radical content of partially combusted products leads to a massive decrease of the time required for the formation of the radical pool. As a consequence, self-ignition times of 1 ms are achieved even at adiabatic flame temperatures of 1600 K and less, if the flue gas content is about 50%–60% of the reacting flow after mixing is complete. Interestingly, the effect of radicals on ignition is strong, outweighs the temperature deficiency and thus allows stable operation at very low NOx emissions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011.60 (0) ◽  
pp. _658-1_-_658-2_
Author(s):  
Ryo YOSHIIE ◽  
Takuya KAWAMOTO ◽  
Yasuaki UEKI ◽  
Ichiro NARUSE

Author(s):  
Ryosuke Matsumoto ◽  
Mamoru Ozawa ◽  
Shinya Terada ◽  
Takenori Iio

Author(s):  
V. Prakash ◽  
J. Steimes ◽  
D. J. E. M. Roekaerts ◽  
S. A. Klein

The increasing amount of renewable energy and emission norms challenge gas turbine power plants to operate at part-load with high efficiency, while reducing NOx and CO emissions. A novel solution to this dilemma is external Flue Gas Recirculation (FGR), in which flue gases are recirculated to the gas turbine inlet, increasing compressor inlet temperature and enabling higher part load efficiencies. FGR also alters the oxidizer composition, potentially leading to reduced NOx levels. This paper presents a kinetic model using chemical reactor networks in a lean premixed combustor to study the impact of FGR on emissions. The flame zone is split in two perfectly stirred reactors modelling the flame front and the recirculation zone. The flame reactor is determined based on a chemical time scale approach, accounting for different reaction kinetics due to FGR oxidizers. The recirculation zone is determined through empirical correlations. It is followed by a plug flow reactor. This method requires less details of the flow field, has been validated with literature data and is generally applicable for modelling premixed flames. Results show that due to less O2 concentration, NOx formation is inhibited down to 10–40% and CO levels are escalated up to 50%, for identical flame temperatures. Increasing combustor pressure leads to a rise in NOx due to thermal effects beyond 1800 K, and a drop in CO levels, due to the reduced chemical dissociation of CO2. Wet FGR reduces NOx by 5–10% and increases CO by 10–20%.


2021 ◽  
Vol 68 (11) ◽  
pp. 865-872
Author(s):  
N. A. Zroychikov ◽  
D. R. Grigoriev ◽  
M. Gamburg ◽  
A. V. Pay

2021 ◽  
pp. 319-337
Author(s):  
Nikola Tanasić ◽  
Mirjana Stamenić ◽  
Vladimir Tanasić

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