Experimental Evaluation of Small GTE Test Bed

Author(s):  
Jiří Pečinka ◽  
Adolf Jílek ◽  
Gabriel T. Bugajski

Staff at the University of Defence in Brno, Czech Republic, designed and constructed a test cell for small gas turbine engines as detailed in GT2012-69419. Once construction was completed, the test cell was instrumented and put through a series of tests to confirm the design suitability, calibrate data acquisition channels, establish correction parameters for measurement values, and examine real operating conditions. This paper details the methodology of those tests with a focus on used equipment, noise emissions, air and gas flow and the associated impact on engine thrust. Lastly, measurement results are presented and compared with the design predictions.

Author(s):  
Jacob Elms ◽  
Alison Pawley ◽  
Nicholas Bojdo ◽  
Merren Jones ◽  
Rory Clarkson

Abstract The ingestion of multi-mineral dusts by gas turbine engines during routine operations is a significant problem for engine manufacturers because of the damage caused to engine components and their protective thermal barrier coatings. A complete understanding of the reactions forming these deposits is limited by a lack of knowledge of compositions of ingested dusts and unknown engine conditions. Test bed engines can be dosed with dusts of known composition under controlled operating conditions, but past engine tests have used standardised test dusts that do not resemble the composition of the background dust in the operating regions. A new evaporiterich test dust was developed and used in a full engine ingestion test, designed to simulate operation in regions with evaporiterich geology, such as Doha or Dubai. Analysis of the engine deposits showed that mineral fractionation was present in the cooler, upstream sections of the engine. In the hotter, downstream sections, deposits contained new, high temperature phases formed by reaction of minerals in the test dust. The mineral assemblages in these deposits are similar to those found from previous analysis of service returns. Segregation of anhydrite from other high temperature phases in a deposit sample taken from a High Pressure Turbine blade suggests a relationship between temperature and sulfur content. This study highlights the potential for manipulating deposit chemistry to mitigate the damage caused in the downstream sections of gas turbine engines. The results of this study also suggest that the concentration of ingested dust in the inlet air may not be a significant contributing factor to deposit chemistry.


Author(s):  
J. Pečinka ◽  
A. Jílek

This paper describes the design considerations and calculations of a mobile low-cost test cell for small gas turbine engines (GTE). The test bed was designed for the TS-20 jet engine, originated in a gas turbine starter and should be used mostly for educational purposes and for experimental validation of analytical computations. Limitations of the project were the engine air mass flow rate, low noise emissions for possibility of performance close to urban area, low cost and good mobility of the test cell. The design of the test cell structure, inlet and exhaust silencers from the aero-thermodynamic and sound suppression point of view is presented. The calculation results and respective design solutions are offered.


Author(s):  
Hejie Li ◽  
Guanghua Wang ◽  
Nirm Nirmalan ◽  
Samhita Dasgupta ◽  
Edward R. Furlong

A novel technique is developed to simultaneously measure hot surface and gas temperatures based on passive absorption/emission spectroscopy (PAS). This non-intrusive, in situ technique is the extension of multi-wavelength pyrometry to also measure gas temperature. The PAS technique uses hot surface (e.g., turbine blade) as the radiation source, and measures radiation signals at multiple wavelengths. Radiation signals at wavelengths with minimum interference from gas (mostly from water vapor and CO2) can be used to determine the hot surface temperature, while signals at wavelengths with gas absorption/emission can be used to determine the gas temperature in the line-of-sight. The detection wavelengths are optimized for accuracy and sensitivity for gas temperature measurements. Simulation results also show the effect of non-uniform gas temperature profile on measurement results. High pressure/temperature tests are conducted in single nozzle combustor rig to demonstrate sensor proof-of-concept. Preliminary engine measurement results shows the potential of this measurement technique. The PAS technique only requires one optical port, e.g., existing pyrometer or borescope port, to collect the emission signal, and thus provide practical solution for gas temperature measurement in gas turbine engines.


Author(s):  
Rampada Rana ◽  
Alosri Prajwal ◽  
Gullapalli Sivaramakrishna ◽  
Raju Dharappa Navindgi ◽  
Nagalingam Muthuveerappan

Abstract Over the years, the requirements of higher specific thrust and lower specific fuel consumption have been necessitating a continual increase in the maximum temperature and pressure in gas turbine engines. However, such an increase has a direct impact on the structural integrity of various modules of the engine; combustor being one of the severely affected modules. This makes the combustor designer’s task of achieving the targeted life of liner, the hottest component of combustor, a challenging one. Estimation of liner metal temperature, thereby arriving at the combustor life, is an essential part of the design process. In the present study, CHT analysis of a radial annular combustor has been carried out. RANS based analysis of a sector combustor with periodicity in flow and geometry has been performed at realistic engine operating conditions using ANSYS Fluent. Predicted liner metal temperatures have been compared with the measured data and a close agreement has been noted between them, the maximum variation being ± 10%.


Author(s):  
John Blouch ◽  
Hejie Li ◽  
Mark Mueller ◽  
Richard Hook

The LM2500 and LM6000 dry-low-emissions aeroderivative gas turbine engines have been in commercial service for 15 years and have accumulated nearly 10 × 106 hours of commercial operation. The majority of these engines utilize pipeline quality natural gas predominantly comprised of methane. There is; however, increasing interest in nonstandard fuels that contain varying levels of higher hydrocarbon species and/or inert gases. This paper reports on the demonstrated operability of LM2500 and LM6000 DLE engines with nonstandard fuels. In particular, rig tests at engine conditions were performed to demonstrate the robustness of the dual-annular counter-rotating swirlers premixer design, relative to flameholding with fuels containing high ethane, propane, and N2 concentrations. These experiments, which test the ability of the hardware to shed a flame introduced into the premixing region, have been used to expand the quoting limits for LM2500 and LM6000 gas turbine engines to elevated C2+ levels. In addition, chemical kinetics analysis was performed to understand the effect of temperature, pressure, and fuel compositions on flameholding. Test data for different fuels and operating conditions were successfully correlated with Damkohler number.


Author(s):  
John Blouch ◽  
Hejie Li ◽  
Mark Mueller ◽  
Richard Hook

The LM2500 and LM6000 dry-low-emissions (DLE) aeroderivative gas turbine engines have been in commercial service for 15 years and have accumulated nearly 10 million hours of commercial operation. The majority of these engines utilize pipeline quality natural gas predominantly comprised of methane. There is, however, increasing interest in nonstandard fuels that contain varying levels of higher hydrocarbon species and/or inert gases. This paper reports on the demonstrated operability of LM2500 and LM6000 DLE engines with nonstandard fuels. In particular, rig tests at engine conditions were performed to demonstrate the robustness of the dual-annular counter-rotating swirlers (DACRS) premixer design, relative to flameholding with fuels containing high ethane, propane, and N2 concentrations. These experiments, which test the ability of the hardware to shed a flame introduced into the premixing region, have been used to expand the quoting limits for LM2500 and LM6000 gas turbine engines to elevated C2+ levels. In addition, chemical kinetics analysis was performed to understand the effect of temperature, pressure, and fuel compositions on flameholding. Test data for different fuels and operating conditions were successfully correlated with Damkohler number.


Author(s):  
Victor I. Romanov ◽  
Vladimir V. Lupandin ◽  
Anatoliy V. Kovalenko ◽  
Anatoliy I. Shelestyuk

The paper describes the experience gained in designing, developing and operation of gas turbine engines for gas pumping units on the marine gas turbine engine’s base. More than 800 Mashproekt gas turbines of various power output have been in service in gas pumping application since 1980. This paper shows the SPE Mashproekt designing and developing approach for gas turbines to be installed in gas pumping units along with their full-scale testing in the test bed of close gas loop type equipped with gas compressor and gas coolers to simulate operation of the gas pumping unit in the real gas pipeline conditions. The gas turbines for gas pumping application on the 2.5 MW, 6 MW, 10 MW, 16 MW and 25 MW engines base were developed in the period of 1990–1995 for replacement of the existing old gas turbine line-up and installation in the new gas pumping units at the compressor stations in Russia and Ukraine. We are replacing engines with Mashproekt gas turbines at the following gas pumping units: Russian GTN-25, Ukrainian GPA-6.3, GPA-16 and “Coberra-182” (Great Britain) gas pumping units. The comparison of the technical characteristics of these replacements is given in the paper. Technical data on 2.5–25 MW Mashproekt gas turbines for gas pumping units is also presented in this paper.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (4) ◽  
pp. 65-71
Author(s):  
Yu.A. Kvasha ◽  

This work is devoted to the development of approaches to the numerical simulation of 3D turbulent gas flows in different ducts of aircraft gas turbine engines, in particular in inlet device ducts. Inlet devices must provide large values of the total pressure recovery factor and flow uniformity at the engine compressor inlet. The aim of this work is the verification of the operability of a technique developed earlier for the calculation of the parameters of a 3D turbulent flow in complex-shape ducts. The basic approach is a numerical simulation of 3D turbulent gas flows on the basis of the complete averaged Navier¬–Stokes equations and a two-parameter turbulence model. The proposed technique of numerical simulation of a 3D gas flow was tested by calculating a 3D laminar flow in a square pipe bent at a right angle. The calculated flow pattern is in satisfactory agreement with the experimental data on the flow structure in a pipe elbow reported in the literature. Based on a numerical simulation of a 3D turbulent flow in the air duct of one of the air intake configurations for an aircraft turboprop engine, the efficiency of that configuration is assessed. The calculated flow parameter nonuniformity at the air intake outlet, i. e., at the compressor inlet, is compared with that obtained earlier for another air intake configuration for the same engine. It is pointed out that the air intake configuration considered earlier provides a much more uniform flow parameter distribution at the engine compressor inlet. On the whole, this work shows that the quality of subsonic air intakes for aircraft gas turbine engines can be assessed using the proposed numerical technique of 3D gas flow simulation. The results obtained may be used in the aerodynamic improvement of inlet devices for aircraft engines of different types.


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