The Civic: A Concept in Vortex Induced Combustion for the Solar Gemini 10 kW Gas Turbine

1981 ◽  
Vol 103 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Shekleton

The Radial Engine Division of Solar Turbines International, an Operating Group of International Harvester, under contract to the U.S. Army Mobility Equipment Research & Development Command, developed and qualified a 10 kW gas turbine generator set. The very small size of the gas turbine created problems and, in the combustor, novel solutions were necessary. Differing types of fuel injectors, combustion chambers, and flame stabilizing methods were investigated. The arrangement chosen had a rotating cup fuel injector, in a can combustor, with conventional swirl flame stabilization but was devoid of the usual jet stirred recirculation. The use of centrifugal force to control combustion conferred substantial benefit (Rayleigh Instability Criteria). Three types of combustion processes were identified: stratified and unstratified charge (diffusion flames) and pre-mix. Emphasis is placed on five nondimensional groups (Richardson, Bagnold, Damko¨hler, Mach, and Reynolds numbers) for the better control of these combustion processes.

1974 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 405-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. A. Kennedy ◽  
C. Scaccia

This investigation presents the results of numerically modeling the combustion processes with a combustor. This furnace model consists of a rectangular chamber with rear and forward facing steps. The fuel and oxidizer are injected from two separate inlets. The swirl produced by the oxidizer inlet vanes in the actual physical situation is also modeled. The governing elliptical equations are solved numerically using a modified Gauss-Siedel procedure. Upwind differences are employed in the nonlinear convective terms to insure stability for all the Reynolds numbers considered. A parametric study to show the influence of the inlet conditions on the interior recirculation flow was performed. The burning of methane was studied within the model combustor with particular attention focused on the formation of nitrogen oxide and carbon monoxide. Stream lines, temperature, and concentration profiles are obtained within the combustor. The effect of inlet conditions on center-line profiles is discussed.


Author(s):  
Paul O. Hedman ◽  
Geoffrey J. Sturgess ◽  
David L. Warren ◽  
Larry P. Goss ◽  
Dale T. Shouse

This paper presents results from an Air Force program being conducted by researchers at Brigham Young University (BYU) Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (WPAFB), and Pratt and Whitney Aircraft Co (P&W). This study is part of a comprehensive effort being supported by the Aero Propulsion and Power Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, and Pratt and Whitney Aircraft, Inc. in which simple and complex diffusion flames are being studied to better understand the fundamentals of gas turbine combustion near lean blowout. The program’s long term goal is to improve the design methodology of gas turbine combustors. This paper focuses on four areas of investigation: 1) digitized images from still film photographs to document the observed flame structures as fuel equivalence ratio was varied, 2) sets of LDA data to quantify the velocity flow fields existing in the burner, 3) CARS measurements of gas temperature to determine the temperature field in the combustion zone, and to evaluate the magnitude of peak temperature, and 4) two-dimensional images of OH radical concentrations using PLIF to document the instantaneous location of the flame reaction zones.


1995 ◽  
Vol 117 (3) ◽  
pp. 441-452 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. O. Hedman ◽  
G. J. Sturgess ◽  
D. L. Warren ◽  
L. P. Goss ◽  
D. T. Shouse

This paper presents results from an Air Force program being conducted by researchers at Brigham Young University (BYU) Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (WPAFB), and Pratt and Whitney (P&W). This study is part of a comprehensive effort being supported by the Aero Propulsion and Power Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, and Pratt and Whitney in which simple and complex diffusion flames are being studied to understand better the fundamentals of gas turbine combustion near lean blowout. The program’s long-term goal is to improve the design methodology of gas turbine combustors. This paper focuses on four areas of investigation: (1) digitized images from still film photographs to document the observed flame structures as fuel equivalence ratio was varied, (2) sets of LDA data to quantify the velocity flow fields existing in the burner (3) CARS measurements of gas temperature to determine the temperature field in the combustion zone, and to evaluate the magnitude of peak temperature, and (4) two-dimensional images of OH radical concentrations using PLIF to document the instantaneous location of the flame reaction zones.


Author(s):  
Matthew P. Juniper

Hydrodynamic instabilities in gas turbine fuel injectors help to mix the fuel and air but can sometimes lock into acoustic oscillations and contribute to thermoacoustic instability. This paper describes a linear stability analysis that predicts the frequencies and strengths of hydrodynamic instabilities and identifies the regions of the flow that cause them. It distinguishes between convective instabilities, which grow in time but are convected away by the flow, and absolute instabilities, which grow in time without being convected away. Convectively unstable flows amplify external perturbations, while absolutely unstable flows also oscillate at intrinsic frequencies. As an input, this analysis requires velocity and density fields, either from a steady but unstable solution to the Navier–Stokes equations, or from time-averaged numerical simulations. In the former case, the analysis is a predictive tool. In the latter case, it is a diagnostic tool. This technique is applied to three flows: a swirling wake at Re = 400, a single stream swirling fuel injector at Re ∼ 106, and a lean premixed gas turbine injector with five swirling streams at Re ∼ 106. Its application to the swirling wake demonstrates that this technique can correctly predict the frequency, growth rate and dominant wavemaker region of the flow. It also shows that the zone of absolute instability found from the spatio-temporal analysis is a good approximation to the wavemaker region, which is found by overlapping the direct and adjoint global modes. This approximation is used in the other two flows because it is difficult to calculate their adjoint global modes. Its application to the single stream fuel injector demonstrates that it can identify the regions of the flow that are responsible for generating the hydrodynamic oscillations seen in LES and experimental data. The frequencies predicted by this technique are within a few percent of the measured frequencies. The technique also explains why these oscillations become weaker when a central jet is injected along the centreline. This is because the absolutely unstable region that causes the oscillations becomes convectively unstable. Its application to the lean premixed gas turbine injector reveals that several regions of the flow are hydrodynamically unstable, each with a different frequency and a different strength. For example, it reveals that the central region of confined swirling flow is strongly absolutely unstable and sets up a precessing vortex core, which is likely to aid mixing throughout the injector. It also reveals that the region between the second and third streams is slightly absolutely unstable at a frequency that is likely to coincide with acoustic modes within the combustion chamber. This technique, coupled with knowledge of the acoustic modes in a combustion chamber, is likely to be a useful design tool for the passive control of mixing and combustion instability.


Author(s):  
L. H. Cowell ◽  
R. T. LeCren

A slagging combustor for a coal-fueled gas turbine engine is being developed. The work to date has been accomplished using a bench-scale combustor with one-tenth the heat input required for the full-scale gas turbine unit. The combustor features a fuel-rich slagging primary zone with hot refractory walls. Both single and multiple primary air/fuel injectors have been tested. Aerodynamic jet impaction on a target at one end of the primary zone removes much of the slag. The jet impaction is the result of the single air/fuel injector flow for multiple injectors, the intersection of the multiple jets forms a central jet. There is an additional particulate rejection impact separator between the primary and secondary zones to remove the slag that escapes the primary zone. Secondary air is introduced via multiple jets that rapidly mix with the incoming gas from the particulate removal device, resulting in a minimal formation of thermal NOx and the completion of the combustion process. Variables that have been evaluated include coal-water mixture properties such as top and mean particle size, viscosity, loading and ash fusion temperature, and primary zone parameters such as volume, cross-sectional area, loading, and equivalence ratio. Combustor performance was compared with single or multiple fuel injectors, relating the combustor performance to the spray characteristics of the two injector configurations. Modifications of the single injector were evaluated with the goal of attaining at least the same atomization performance as the smaller injectors used in the multiple injector configuration. Flow visualization, computer modelling, and cold-flow velocity traverses have been employed to aid the development program. The results of the subscale development are being used to design and develop the full-size combustor for integration with the engine.


1997 ◽  
Vol 119 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. K. Rizk ◽  
J. S. Chin ◽  
M. K. Razdan

Satisfactory performance of the gas turbine combustor relies on the careful design of various components, particularly the fuel injector. It is, therefore, essential to establish a fundamental basis for fuel injection modeling that involves various atomization processes. A two-dimensional fuel injection model has been formulated to simulate the airflow within and downstream of the atomizer and address the formation and breakup of the liquid sheet formed at the atomizer exit. The sheet breakup under the effects of airblast, fuel pressure, or the combined atomization mode of the airassist type is considered in the calculation. The model accounts for secondary breakup of drops and the stochastic Lagrangian treatment of spray. The calculation of spray evaporation addresses both droplet heat-up and steady-state mechanisms, and fuel vapor concentration is based on the partial pressure concept. An enhanced evaporation model has been developed that accounts for multicomponent, finite mass diffusivity and conductivity effects, and addresses near-critical evaporation. The presents investigation involved predictions of flow and spray characteristics of two distinctively different fuel atomizers under both nonreacting and reacting conditions. The predictions of the continuous phase velocity components and the spray mean drop sizes agree well with the detailed measurements obtained for the two atomizers, which indicates the model accounts for key aspects of atomization. The model also provides insight into ligament formation and breakup at the atomizer exit and the initial drop sizes formed in the atomizer near field region where measurements are difficult to obtain. The calculations of the reacting spray show the fuel-rich region occupied most of the spray volume with two-peak radial gas temperature profiles. The results also provided local concentrations of unburned hydrocarbon (UHC) and carbon monoxide (CO) in atomizer flowfield, information that could support the effort to reduce emission levels of gas turbine combustors.


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