Effect of hydrogen enrichment on swirl/bluff-body lean premixed flame stabilization

2020 ◽  
Vol 45 (18) ◽  
pp. 10906-10919 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shilong Guo ◽  
Jinhua Wang ◽  
Weijie Zhang ◽  
Meng Zhang ◽  
Zuohua Huang
2018 ◽  
Vol 148 ◽  
pp. 250-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pier Carlo Nassini ◽  
Daniele Pampaloni ◽  
Antonio Andreini

2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Jeong Kim ◽  
Bok Jik Lee ◽  
Hong G. Im

Two-dimensional direct numerical simulations were conducted to investigate the dynamics of lean premixed flames stabilized on a meso-scale bluff-body in hydrogen-air and syngas-air mixtures. To eliminate the flow confinement effect due to the narrow channel, a larger domain size at twenty times the bluff-body dimension was used in the new simulations. Flame/flow dynamics were examined as the mean inflow velocity is incrementally raised until blow-off occurs. As the mean inflow velocity is increased, several distinct modes in the flame shape and fluctuation patterns were observed. In contrast to our previous study with a narrow channel, the onset of local extinction was observed during the asymmetric vortex shedding mode. Consequently, the flame stabilization and blow-off behavior was found to be dictated by the combined effects of the hot product gas pocket entrained into the extinction zone and the ability to auto-ignite the mixture within the given residence time corresponding to the lateral flame fluctuations. A proper time scale analysis is attempted to characterize the flame blow-off mechanism, which turns out to be consistent with the classic theory of Zukoski and Marble.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Andreini ◽  
C. Bianchini ◽  
A. Innocenti

The present study is devoted to verify current capabilities of Large Eddy Simulation (LES) methodology in the modeling of lean premixed flames in the typical turbulent combustion regime of Dry LowNOxgas turbine combustors. A relatively simple reactive test case, presenting all main aspects of turbulent combustion interaction and flame stabilization of gas turbine lean premixed combustors, was chosen as an affordable test to evaluate the feasibility of the technique also in more complex test cases. A comparison between LES and RANS modeling approach is performed in order to discuss modeling requirements, possible gains, and computational overloads associated with the former. Such comparison comprehends a sensitivity study to mesh refinement and combustion model characteristic constants, computational costs, and robustness of the approach. In order to expand the overview on different methods simulations were performed with both commercial and open-source codes switching from quasi-2D to fully 3D computations.


Author(s):  
Yu. G. Kutsenko ◽  
S. F. Onegin ◽  
L. Y. Gomzikov

Most of the modern combustor’s designs use staged concepts for reducing thermal NO emissions. Usually, a combustion process takes place inside the main zone, which uses very lean premixed fuel/air mixtures. A diffusion pilot zone supports combustion process inside a lean main zone. Thermal NO formation process takes place predominantly inside hot diffusion flame. So, operation modes of pilot and main zones must be arranged to provide low NO emissions of pilot zone and maintain flame stability inside the main zone simultaneously. In this paper a concept of new turbulent model combustion model is presented. This model allows to model diffusion and premixed flames and takes into account various physical processes, which lead to flame destabilization. The model uses an equation for reaction progress variable. In the frameworks of considered approach this equation has three source terms. These terms are responsible for different conditions of combustion process: diffusion flames, premixed flames and distributed reaction zones. A proposed model was widely validated for different types of combustion chambers such as: 1) Bluff-body flameholder (lean premixed combustion: modeling of lean blow out); 2) Conventional diffusion regime of combustion chamber of gas turbine engine (modeling of flame stabilization and NO emissions); 3) Combined combustion regime of combustion chamber: burning process is inside pilot diffusion and main premixed zones (NO emissions and lean blow out limits for several operational modes). These tests had shown a good agreement of experimentally obtained data with results of simulations.


1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (3) ◽  
pp. 429-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. W. Kendrick ◽  
T. J. Anderson ◽  
W. A. Sowa ◽  
T. S. Snyder

An experimental and numerical investigation into the attenuation of combustion induced pressure oscillations in a single nozzle rig was undertaken at the United Technologies Research Center. Results from these investigations indicated a high combustor exit Mach number, similar to that used in a gas turbine engine, was required to correctly simulate the combustor dynamics and evaluate acoustic characteristics of lean premixed fuel injectors. Comparisons made between aerodynamically stabilized and bluff-body stabilized nozzles and the use of premixed and diffusion pilots showed that small levels of diffusion piloting behind a bluff-body yielded the best acoustic/emission performance. Their success is due to increased flame stabilization (superior anchoring ability), which reduced flame motion and thermal/acoustic coupling. For cases where diffusion piloting was not present, both designs exhibited similar dynamical behavior. Increases in the combustor exit Mach number and reductions in the inlet air temperature were shown to degrade acoustic performance of both nozzle designs. The bluff-body configuration with small levels of diffusion piloting, however, was found to be less sensitive to these changes when compared to its aerodynamic counterpart.


Author(s):  
Sandrine Berger ◽  
Stéphane Richard ◽  
Florent Duchaine ◽  
Laurent Gicquel

Aircraft engine components are subject to hostile thermal environments. The solid parts in the hot stages encounter very high temperature levels and gradients that are critical for the engine lifespan. Combustion chamber walls in particular exhibit very heterogeneous thermal fields. The prediction of this specific thermal field is a very complex task as it results from complex interactions between fresh gas injections, cooling flow distributions, combustion, flame stabilization and thermal transfers to the solids. All these phenomena are tightly coupled and do not evolve linearly. Today, the design phase of a combustion chamber is strongly enhanced by the use of high fidelity computations such as Large Eddy Simulations (LES). However, thermal boundary conditions are rarely well known and are thus treated either as adiabatic or as approximated isothermal conditions. Such approximations on thermal boundary conditions can lead to several errors and inaccurate predictions of the combustion chamber flow field. With this in mind and to foresee the potential difficulties of LES based Conjugate Heat Transfer (CHT) predictions, the effect of the wall temperature on a laminar premixed flame stabilization is numerically investigated in this paper for an academic configuration. The considered case consists of a squared cylinder flame holder at a low Reynolds number for which several wall-resolved Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS) are performed varying the bluff-body wall thermal condition. In such a set-up, the reactive flow and the flame holder interact in a complex way with an underlying strong impact of the wall temperature. For a baseline configuration where the flame holder wall temperature is fixed at 700K, the flow field is steady with a flame stabilized thanks to the recirculation zone of the flame holder. As the wall temperature is decreased, the position of the stabilized flame moves further downstream. The flame remains steady until a threshold cold temperature is reached below which an instability appears. For solid temperatures above 700 K, the flame is seen to move further and further upstream. For very hot conditions, the flame even stabilizes ahead of the bluff-body. The various flow solution bifurcations as the flame stabilization evolves are detailed in this paper. Heat flux distribution along the bluff-body walls are observed to be dictated by the flame stabilization process illustrating different mechanisms while integration of these fluxes on the whole flame holder surface confirms that various theoretical equilibrium states may exist for this configuration. This suggests that computation of more realistic cases including thermal conduction in the bluff-body solid part could lead to different converged results depending on the initial thermal state.


Author(s):  
Donald W. Kendrick ◽  
Torger J. Anderson ◽  
William A. Sowa ◽  
Timothy S. Snyder

An experimental and numerical investigation into the attenuation of combustion induced pressure oscillations in a single nozzle rig was undertaken at the United Technologies Research Center. Results from these investigations indicated a high combustor exit Mach number, similar to that used in a gas turbine engine, was required to correctly simulate the combustor dynamics and evaluate acoustic characteristics of lean premixed fuel injectors. Comparisons made between aerodynamically stabilized and bluff-body stabilized nozzles and the use of premixed and diffusion pilots showed that small levels of diffusion piloting behind a bluff-body yielded the best acoustic/emission performance. Their success is due to increased flame stabilization (superior anchoring ability) which reduced flame motion and thermal/acoustic coupling. For cases where diffusion piloting was not present, both designs exhibited similar dynamical behavior. Increases in the combustor exit Mach number and reductions in the inlet air temperature were shown to degrade acoustic performance of both nozzle designs. The bluff-body configuration with small levels of diffusion piloting, however, was found to be less sensitive to these changes when compared to its aerodynamic counterpart.


2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 034103
Author(s):  
Manikandan Balasubramaniyan ◽  
Abhijit Kushwaha ◽  
Yu Guan ◽  
Jianchang Feng ◽  
Peijin Liu ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document