Application of Active Combustion Instability Control to a Heavy Duty Gas Turbine

1998 ◽  
Vol 120 (4) ◽  
pp. 721-726 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Seume ◽  
N. Vortmeyer ◽  
W. Krause ◽  
J. Hermann ◽  
C.-C. Hantschk ◽  
...  

During the prototype shop tests, the Model V84.3A ring combustor gas turbine unexpectedly exhibited a noticeable “humming” caused by self-excited flame vibrations in the combustion chamber for certain operating conditions. The amplitudes of the pressure fluctuations in the combustor were unusually high when compared to the previous experience with silo combustor machines. As part of the optimization program, the humming was investigated and analyzed. To date, combustion instabilities in real, complex combustors cannot be predicted analytically during the design phase. Therefore, and as a preventive measure against future surprises by “humming,” a feedback system was developed which counteracts combustion instabilities by modulation of the fuel flow rate with rapid valves (active instability control, AIC). The AIC achieved a reduction of combustion-induced pressure amplitudes by 86 percent. The Combustion instability in the Model V84.3A gas turbine was eliminated by changes of the combustor design. Therefore, the AIC is not required for the operation of customer gas turbines.

Author(s):  
J. R. Seume ◽  
N. Vortmeyer ◽  
W. Krause ◽  
J. Hermann ◽  
C.-C. Hantschk ◽  
...  

During the prototype shop tests, the Model V84.3A ring combustor gas turbine unexpectedly exhibited a noticeable “humming” caused by self-excited flame vibrations in the combustion chamber for certain operating conditions. The amplitudes of the pressure fluctuations in the combustor were unusually high when compared to the previous experience with silo combustor machines. As part of the optimization program, the humming was investigated and analyzed. To date, combustion instabilities in real, complex combustors cannot be predicted analytically during the design phase. Therefore, and as a preventive measure against future surprises by “humming”, a feedback system was developed which counteracts combustion instabilities by modulation of the fuel flow rate with rapid valves (Active Instability Control, AIC). The AIC achieved a reduction of combustion-induced pressure amplitudes by 86%. The combustion instability in the Model V84.3A gas turbine was eliminated by changes of the combustor design. Therefore, the AIC is not required for the operation of customer gas-turbines.


Author(s):  
O. R. Schmoch ◽  
B. Deblon

The peripheral speeds of the rotors of large heavy-duty gas turbines have reached levels which place extremely high demands on material strength properties. The particular requirements of gas turbine rotors, as a result of the cycle, operating conditions and the ensuing overall concepts, have led different gas turbine manufacturers to produce special structural designs to resolve these problems. In this connection, a report is given here on a gas turbine rotor consisting of separate discs which are held together by a center bolt and mutually centered by radial serrations in a manner permitting expansion and contraction in response to temperature changges. In particular, the experience gained in the manufacture, operation and servicing are discussed.


Author(s):  
Martin von Hoyningen-Huene ◽  
Wolfram Frank ◽  
Alexander R. Jung

Unsteady stator-rotor interaction in gas turbines has been investigated experimentally and numerically for some years now. Most investigations determine the pressure fluctuations in the flow field as well as on the blades. So far, little attention has been paid to a detailed analysis of the blade pressure fluctuations. For further progress in turbine design, however, it is mandatory to better understand the underlying mechanisms. Therefore, computed space–time maps of static pressure are presented on both the stator vanes and the rotor blades for two test cases, viz the first and the last turbine stage of a modern heavy duty gas turbine. These pressure fluctuation charts are used to explain the interaction of potential interaction, wake-blade interaction, deterministic pressure fluctuations, and acoustic waveswith the instantaneous surface pressure on vanes and blades. Part I of this two-part paper refers to the same computations, focusing on the unsteady secondary now field in these stages. The investigations have been performed with the flow solver ITSM3D which allows for efficient simulations that simulate the real blade count ratio. Accounting for the true blade count ratio is essential to obtain the correct frequencies and amplitudes of the fluctuations.


Author(s):  
Simone Cubeda ◽  
Tommaso Bacci ◽  
Lorenzo Mazzei ◽  
Simone Salvadori ◽  
Bruno Facchini ◽  
...  

Abstract Modern industrial gas turbines typically employ lean-premix combustors, which can limit pollutant emissions thanks to premixed flames, while sustaining high turbine inlet temperatures that increase the single-cycle thermal efficiency. As such, gas-turbine first stage nozzles can be characterized by a highly-swirled and temperature-distorted inlet flow field. However, due to several sources of uncertainty during the design phase, wide safety margins are commonly adopted, having a direct impact on engine performance and efficiency. Therefore, aiming at increasing the knowledge on combustor-turbine interaction and improving standard design practices, a non-reactive test rig composed of real hardware was assembled at the University of Florence, Italy. The rig, accommodating three lean-premix swirlers within a combustion chamber and two first stage film-cooled nozzles of a Baker Hughes heavy-duty gas turbine, is operated in similitude conditions. The rig has been designed to reproduce the real engine periodic flow field on the central vane channel, also allowing for measurements far enough from the lateral walls. The periodicity condition on the central sector was achieved by the proper design of both the angular profile and pitch value of the tailboards with respect to the vanes, which was carried out in a preliminary phase via a Design of Experiments procedure. In addition, circular ducts needed to be installed at the injectors outlet section to preserve the non-reactive swirling flow down to the nozzles’ inlet plane. The combustor-turbine interface section has been experimentally characterized in nominal operating conditions as per the temperature, velocity and pressure fields by means of a five-hole pressure probe provided with a thermocouple, installed on an automatic traverse system. To study the evolution of the combustor outlet flow through the vanes and its interaction with the film-cooling flow, such measurements have been replicated also downstream of the vanes’ trailing edge. This work allowed for designing and providing preliminary data on a combustor simulator capable of equipping and testing real hardware film-cooled nozzles of a heavy-duty gas turbine. Ultimately, the activity sets the basis for an extensive test campaign aimed at characterizing the metal temperature, film effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient at realistic aerothermal conditions. In addition, and by leveraging experimental data, this activity paves the way for a detailed validation of current design practices as well as more advanced numerical methodologies such as Scale-Adaptive Simulations of the integrated combustor-turbine domain.


Author(s):  
Antonio Asti ◽  
Luca Mangani ◽  
Antonio Andreini

The development of current industrial gas turbines is strictly constrained by legislative requirements for low polluting emissions. Lean Premixed combustion technology has become through the years the necessary standard to meet such requirements. Premixed technology introduces a new range of problems: combustion instabilities in many operating conditions. Specifically, lean premixed flames pose the threat of pressure oscillations. This phenomenon is the effect of the strong interaction between combustion heat-release and fluid dynamics aspects. The prediction of acoustic oscillations and combustion instabilities is generally difficult because of the complexity of real combustor geometries. As a result, the design phase is usually performed as a trial-and-error task: a specific design is constructed, tested and modified, in a process that continues until acceptable results are found. A specific tool was developed by GE Energy to help predicting the acoustic behaviour of newly designed partially-premixed combustors, avoiding the traditional trial-and-error process: the tool allows the designer to analyze the problem of combustion instabilities since the early design phase, limiting subsequent testing efforts. A mono-dimensional tool based on the 1-D acoustic model was developed by GE Energy and was applied to the single-can combustor of the GE10 machine (a gas turbine in the 10MW class). All the main geometrical features of the GE10 machine, including fuel line geometry, were considered and modeled in a one-dimensional scheme, in order to build an equivalent model for the linear tool analysis. The main frequencies, measured during tests on the GE10 machine, were compared to the numerical results of the tool, showing good agreement between numerical and experimental results and confirming the predictive capability. This good agreement demonstrates that the model can be used for predicting the effects of design changes, with a reduced need of tests.


Author(s):  
Riccardo Da Soghe ◽  
Cosimo Bianchini ◽  
Mirko Micio ◽  
Jacopo D’Errico ◽  
Francesco Bavassano

The desired reduction of secondary air consumption of gas turbines is especially challenging when the sealing of stator-rotor cavities is concerned, where it is necessary to guarantee integrity against hot gas ingestion. Sealing and thermal performance of gas turbine stator-rotor cavities are directly dependent on the rim configuration. This paper provides a CFD-based characterization of heavy-duty gas turbine wheel-spaces when dealing with real engine operating conditions and geometries. Focusing on the rim seal configuration, the geometrical arrangement of the ingestion-cavity, the buffer-cavity and the inner cavities were investigated to improve the ingress flow-discouraging behaviour. The study reveals that the most important geometrical parameters affecting the rim sealing effectiveness are those related to the ingestion-cavity. Moreover, an empirical model to predict the stator-rotor cavity sealing performance in off-design conditions was proposed. The model, that consists in an extension of a well-known literature approach, performed well at the analysed operating conditions, confirming to be an excellent tool for the early design phases. Finally, an investigation on the unsteady behaviour of the seal highlights a coupling with an acoustic mode of the cavity, suggesting possible reasons to justify the presence of rotating structures embedded into the cavity flow.


Author(s):  
Joel M. Haynes ◽  
Daniel Micka ◽  
Ben Hojnacki ◽  
Craig Russell ◽  
John Lipinski ◽  
...  

The application of the trapped vortex combustor (TVC) concept to heavy-duty gas turbine conditions has been explored. Combustor stability, lean blow out, and emission performance requirements limit design options for conventional lean premixed combustors. The TVC concept has demonstrated reduced emissions and high turndown with liquid fuels and could overcome existing lean premixed performance constraints as well. The present study examines premixed injection of natural gas into the TVC at heavy-duty gas turbine conditions. The emission performance is measured over a range of operating conditions. The combustor turndown and dynamics performance are also presented. To forecast the performance potential of the TVC combustor a chemical reactor network model was developed. The model was anchored with experimental data and implemented in the prediction of TVC combustor emissions and turndown performance. The reactor model confirms that NOx reduction greater than 60% is possible using a trapped vortex combustor (TVC).


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniele Pampaloni ◽  
Pier Carlo Nassini ◽  
Antonio Andreini ◽  
Bruno Facchini ◽  
Matteo Cerutti

Abstract A numerical investigation of pollutant emissions of a novel dry low-emissions burner for heavy-duty gas turbine applications is presented. The objective of this work is to develop and assess a robust and cost-efficient numerical setup for the prediction of NOx and CO emissions in industrial gas turbines and to investigate the pollutant formation mechanisms, thus supporting the design process of a novel low-emission burner. To this end, a comparison against experimental data, from a recent experimental campaign performed by BHGE in cooperation with University of Florence, has been exploited. In the first part of this work, a Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) approach on both a simplified geometry and the complete domain is adopted to characterize the global flame behavior and validate the numerical setup. Then, unsteady simulations exploiting the scale adaptive simulation (SAS) approach have been performed to assess the prediction improvements that can be obtained with the unsteady modeling of the flame. For all simulations, the flamelet generated manifold (FGM) model has been used, allowing the reliable and cost-efficient application of detailed chemistry mechanisms in computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation. However, FGM typically faces issues predicting flame emissions, such as NOx and CO, due to the wide range of time scales involved, from turbulent mixing to pollutant species oxidation. Specific models are typically used to predict NOx emissions, starting from the converged flow-field and introducing additional transport equations. Also CO prediction, especially at part-load operating conditions could be an issue for flamelet-based model: in fact, as the load decreases and the extinction limit approaches, a superequilibrium CO concentration, which cannot be accurately predicted by FGM, appears in the exhaust gases. To overcome this issue, a specific CO-burn-out model, following the original idea proposed by Klarmann, has been implemented in ANSYS fluent. The model allows to decouple the effective CO oxidation term from the one computed by FGM, defining a postflame zone where the source term of CO is treated following the Arrhenius formulation. In order to support the design process, an indepth CFD investigation has been carried out, evaluating the impact of an alternative burner geometrical configuration on stability and emissions and providing detailed information about the main regions and mechanisms of pollutants production. The outcomes support the analysis of experimental results, allowing an indepth investigation of the complex flow-field and the flame-related quantities, which have not been measured during the tests.


Author(s):  
Daniele Pampaloni ◽  
Pier Carlo Nassini ◽  
Antonio Andreini ◽  
Bruno Facchini ◽  
Matteo Cerutti

Abstract A numerical investigation of pollutant emissions of a novel dry low-emissions burner for heavy-duty gas turbine applications is presented. The objective of the work is to develop and assess a robust and cost-efficient numerical setup for the prediction of NOx and CO emissions in industrial gas turbines and to investigate the pollutant formation mechanisms, thus supporting the design process of a novel low-emission burner. To this end, a comparison against experimental data, from a recent experimental campaign performed by BHGE in cooperation with University of Florence, has been exploited. In the first part of this work, a RANS approach on both a simplified geometry and the complete domain is adopted to characterize the global flame behavior and validate the numerical setup. Then, unsteady simulations exploiting the Scale Adaptive Simulation (SAS) approach have been performed to assess the prediction improvements that can be obtained with the unsteady modelling of the flame. For all simulations, the Flamelet Generated Manifold (FGM) model has been used, allowing the reliable and cost-efficient application of detailed chemistry mechanisms in CFD simulation. However, FGM typically faces issues predicting flame emissions, such as NOx and CO, due to the wide range of time scales involved, from turbulent mixing to pollutant species oxidation. Specific models are typically used to predict NOx emissions, starting from the converged flow field and introducing additional transport equations. Also CO prediction, especially at part-load operating conditions could be an issue for flamelet-based model: in fact, as the load decreases and the extinction limit approaches, a super-equilibrium CO concentration, which cannot be accurately predicted by FGM, appears in the exhaust gases. To overcome this issue, a specific CO burn-out model, following the original idea proposed by Klarmann, has been implemented in ANSYS Fluent. The model allows to decouple the effective CO oxidation term from the one computed by FGM, defining a post-flame zone where the source term of CO is treated following the Arrhenius formulation. In order to support the design process, an in-depth CFD investigation has been carried out, evaluating the impact of an alternative burner geometrical configuration on stability and emissions and providing detailed information about the main regions and mechanisms of pollutants production. The outcomes support the analysis of experimental results, allowing an in-depth investigation of the complex flow-field and the flame-related quantities, which have not been measured during the tests.


Author(s):  
A. K. Pozarlik ◽  
J. B. W. Kok

Prediction of mutual interaction between flow, combustion, acoustic, and vibration phenomena occurring in a combustion chamber is crucial for the reliable operation of any combustion device. In this paper, this is studied with application to the combustion chamber of a gas turbine. Very dangerous for the integrity of a gas turbine structure can be the coupling between unsteady heat release by the flame, acoustic wave propagation, and liner vibrations. This can lead to a closed-loop feedback system resulting in mechanical failure of the combustor liner due to fatigue and fatal damage to the turbine. Experimental and numerical investigations of the process are performed on a pressurized laboratory-scale combustor. To take into account interaction between reacting flow, acoustics, and vibrations of a liner, the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and computational structural dynamics (CSD) calculations are combined into one calculation process using a partitioning technique. Computed pressure fluctuations inside the combustion chamber and associated liner vibrations are validated with experiments performed at the state-of-the-art pressurized combustion setup. Three liner structures with different thicknesses are studied. The numerical results agree well with the experimental data. The research shows that the combustion instabilities can be amplified by vibrating walls. The modeling approach discussed in this paper allows to decrease the risk of the gas turbine failure by prediction, for given operating conditions, of the hazardous frequency at which the thermoacoustic instabilities appear.


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