Combustion efficiency and pressure loss balance for the supersonic combustor

Author(s):  
AM Tahsini

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the effects of intake’s compression process of the scramjet on its flight performance. The hydrogen injection to the supersonic cross-flow is considered as the problem configuration. The finite volume solver is developed to simulate the compressible reacting turbulent flow using the proper reaction mechanism as the finite rate chemistry. The combustion efficiency and the drag force are the most important parameters on the scramjet flight performance, and finding the design point to balance the higher combustion efficiency and the lower minimum drag, which depends on the total pressure loss, can be used to optimize the supersonic combustors. The performance of the supersonic intake is considered here using some oblique shock waves with equal flow-deflection angles to compute the combustor’s inlet condition. The variation of combustion efficiency and total pressure loss is presented for different combustor’s inlet conditions. The results are presented for the constant jet to inlet pressure ratios and also for the constant equivalence ratios, in which the last one is much appropriate and utilized to find the optimum design point of the intake and the combustor, for assumed flight condition.

Author(s):  
Feng-Shan Wang ◽  
Wen-Jun Kong ◽  
Bao-Rui Wang

A research program is in development in China as a demonstrator of combined cooling, heating and power system (CCHP). In this program, a micro gas turbine with net electrical output around 100kW is designed and developed. The combustor is designed for natural gas operation and oil fuel operation, respectively. In this paper, a prototype can combustor for the oil fuel was studied by the experiments. In this paper, the combustor was tested using the ambient pressure combustor test facility. The sensors were equipped to measure the combustion performance; the exhaust gas was sampled and analyzed by a gas analyzer device. From the tests and experiments, combustion efficiency, pattern factor at the exit, the surface temperature profile of the outer liner wall, the total pressure loss factor of the combustion chamber with and without burning, and the pollutants emission fraction at the combustor exit were obtained. It is also found that with increasing of the inlet temperature, the combustion efficiency and the total pressure loss factor increased, while the exit pattern factor coefficient reduced. The emissions of CO and unburned hydrogen carbon (UHC) significantly reduced, but the emission of NOx significantly increased.


Author(s):  
David J. Cerantola ◽  
A. M. Birk

A genetic algorithm was implemented to determine preferential solutions of a short annular diffuser exhaust system of length 1.5Do (outer annulus diameters). Five free variables defined the centre body shape and two variables determined the outer wall profile. Diffuser performance was evaluated using three objectives—(i) diffuser pressure recovery, (ii) outlet velocity uniformity, and (iii) total pressure loss—that were calculated from steady state solutions obtained using the computational fluid dynamics software FLUENT 13.0 with the realizable k-ε turbulence model and enhanced wall treatment. Inlet conditions were ReDh = 8.5 × 104 and M = 0.23. After thirty-five generations, a paraboloid-shaped centre body with length 0.74Do and initial annular expansion of approximately 14° produced preferential solutions. A configuration with a converging outer wall above the centre body developed greater outlet flow uniformity and lower total pressure loss whereas a straight outer wall followed by the solid diffuser generated more static pressure recovery.


Author(s):  
Xiayi Si ◽  
Jinfang Teng ◽  
Xiaoqing Qiang ◽  
Jinzhang Feng

Numerical simulations with the steady 3D RANS were performed on the rear stage of a modern high pressure compressor. The labyrinth seal cavity model of the shrouded stator was simplified according to the actual stator structure, which the seal cavity gap is 1% of blade height. Several typical configurations (shrouded stator, idealized stator and cantilevered stators) were designed and carried out, and cantilevered stators contained no gap, small gap (CS1%), design gap (CS2.5%) and large gap (CS4%/CS5%). The results indicate due to the effect of leakage flow from 1% span seal cavity gap, the total pressure loss of SS is larger than IS, while IS instead of SS in the process of the compressor design, the stall margin will be enlarged nearly 6% numerically. At the design point, when the hub gap is 3.5% span clearance CS has the same loss with IS, and when the hub gap is 4.5% span clearance CS has almost the same loss with SS. Among all operation range, the total pressure loss of S1 increases with the increase of the hub clearance. When the hub gap is 0 (CS0), there is no leakage flow and the loss is the least. At the design point, comparing with SS, the total pressure loss coefficient of CS0 decreases 18.34%, CS2.5% decreases 8.46% and IS decreases 6.45%. It means if the cantilevered stator with 2.5% span hub clearance were adopted in the HPC, the performance would be better than the shrouded stator. However, because of the matching condition, the rotor that follows after cantilevered stator should be redesigned according to blade loading and inlet flow angle changed. The performance of cantilevered stator is impacted of various hub clearance, the loss below 25% span increases significantly with hub clearance, the maximum value of outlet flow angle deviation is 2.3 degree. The stator hub peak loading is shifted upstream toward the leading edge when hub clearance size is increased. The total pressure loss coefficient and pressure coefficient at different axial position had the function relation. When the hub clearance increases, the position of double leakage flow start backwards, in the rear part of stator the secondary flow becomes stronger leading to more mixing loss and lower total pressure.


Author(s):  
Mohammad Mojaddam ◽  
Ali Hajilouy-Benisi ◽  
Mohammad Reza Movahhedy

In this research the design methods of radial flow compressor volutes are reviewed and the main criterions in volute primary designs are recognized and most effective ones are selected. The effective parameters i.e. spiral cross section area, circumferential area distribution, exit cone and tongue area of the compressor volute are parametrically studied to identifythe optimum values. A numerical model is prepared and verified through experimental data which are obtained from the designed turbocharger test rig. Different volutes are modeled and numerically evaluated using the same impeller and vane-less diffuser. For each model, the volute total pressure ratio, static pressure recovery and total pressure loss coefficients and the radial force on the impeller are calculated for different mass flow rates at design point and off-design conditions. The volute which shows better performanceand causes lower the net radial force on the impeller, at desiredmass flow rates is selected as an optimal one. The results show the volute design approach differences at the design point and off-design conditions. Improving the pressure ratio and reducing total pressure loss at design point, may result inthe worse conditions at off-design conditions as well as increasing radial force on the impeller.


1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (2) ◽  
pp. 410-417 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. I. Yaras

The paper presents detailed measurements of the incompressible flow development in a large-scale 90 deg curved diffuser with strong curvature and significant streamwise variation in cross-sectional aspect ratio. The flow path approximates the so-called fishtail diffuser utilized on small gas turbine engines for the transition between the centrifugal impeller and the combustion chamber. Two variations of the inlet flow, differing in boundary layer thickness and turbulence intensity, are considered. Measurements consist of three components of velocity, static pressure and total pressure distributions at several cross-sectional planes throughout the diffusing bend. The development and mutual interaction of multiple pairs of streamwise vortices, redistribution of the streamwise flow under the influence of these vortices, the resultant streamwise variations in mass-averaged total-pressure and static pressure, and the effect of inlet conditions on these aspects of the flow are examined. The strengths of the vortical structures are found to be sensitive to the inlet flow conditions, with the inlet flow comprising a thinner boundary layer and lower turbulence intensity yielding stronger secondary flows. For both inlet conditions a pair of streamwise vortices develop rapidly within the bend, reaching their peak strength at about 30 deg into the bend. The development of a second pair of vortices commences downstream of this location and continues for the remainder of the bend. Little evidence of the first vortex pair remains at the exit of the diffusing bend. The mass-averaged total pressure loss is found to be insensitive to the range of inlet-flow variations considered herein. However, the rate of generation of this loss along the length of the diffusing bend differs between the two test cases. For the case with the thinner inlet boundary layer, stronger secondary flows result in larger distortion of the streamwise velocity field. Consequently, the static pressure recovery is somewhat lower for this test case. The difference between the streamwise distributions of measured and ideal static pressure is found to be primarily due to total pressure loss in the case of the thick inlet boundary layer. For the thin inlet boundary layer case, however, total pressure loss and flow distortion are observed to influence the pressure recovery by comparable amounts.


1980 ◽  
Vol 102 (3) ◽  
pp. 357-363 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. J. Stevens ◽  
G. J. Williams

Low speed tests have been carried out to investigate the performance and mechanism of flow in two annular diffusers having center bodies of uniform diameter and conically diverging outer walls. In the first part of the investigation the diffusers were tested over a range of naturally developed inlet velocity profiles ranging from near-uniform to fully developed flow. Information is presented concerning the pressure recovery, total pressure loss, and characteristics of the outlet flow. Measurements have also been made of the mean velocity profile and turbulence structure at a number of stations along the length of the diffusers. The second part of the test program was devoted to studying the effects of increased inlet turbulence. The results show a marked improvement in the stability of the outlet flow and gains in pressure recovery, up to a maximum of 20 percent, with only small increases in total pressure loss.


2018 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 339-350
Author(s):  
Yingwen Yan ◽  
Yunpeng Liu ◽  
Liang Huang ◽  
Jinghua Li

Abstract The effects of different inlet parameters such as inlet temperature and pressure on combustion performance in a single-head combustor were experimentally investigated in this study. The combustion efficiency, total pressure loss, and CO and NO emissions at the outlet of a single-head rectangular combustor with different types of swirlers were separately measured. The experimental results showed that the inlet parameters had obvious effects on the combustion performance, with critical values of 600 K for the inlet temperature and 3.5 bar for the inlet pressure. The combustion efficiency noticeably increased with an increase in the inlet pressure or temperature below these values; however, when either of the inlet parameters was above the critical value, the combustion efficiency was approximately 100 %; that is, the combustion efficiency changed little with an increase in inlet temperate or pressure. When the inlet temperature or pressure increased, NO emission increased but CO emission decreased. By fitting curves to analyze the experimental data, the empirical relationships between the emissions and the inlet temperature were observed to be $CO\; \propto \;{e^{ - T}}, NO\; \propto \;{e^T}$, and those between the emissions and the inlet pressure were $CO\, \propto \,{e^{a + bP + c{P^2}}}, NO\, \propto \,{e^P}$. The total pressure loss increased with the inlet temperature.


Author(s):  
Yangbo Deng ◽  
Xi Jiang ◽  
Fengmin Su

The combustion characteristics of the advanced vortex combustor (AVC) burning H2 fuel are studied numerically. First, using the 19-step reaction mechanism, the flame morphology of the pre-mixed H2/Air combustion under the different conditions, is computed. The calculation results are in agreement with experimental data from the literature. Second, a numerical model of a lean premixed H2/Air combustion is set up, based on the 19-step reaction mechanism. A numerical simulation is carried out to study the combustion characteristics of the AVC. The results show that the combustion can be steadily maintained, with the equivalence ratio of the H2/Air main flow kept at 0.45. At the same time, the total pressure loss coefficient is 2.77% and the combustion efficiency is 99.8%. The total pressure loss, vortex configuration and stability, combustion efficiency of the AVC are influenced by the equivalence ratio, total pressure and static pressure of main flow in the AVC.


Author(s):  
Judy A. Busby ◽  
Roger L. Davis ◽  
Daniel J. Dorney ◽  
Michael G. Dunn ◽  
Charles W. Haldeman ◽  
...  

This paper presents results of a combined experimental/computational investigation into the effects of vane-blade spacing on the unsteady aerodynamics of a transonic turbine stage. Time-resolved data were taken in a shock-tunnel facility in which the flow was generated with a short-duration source of heated and pressurized air. This data is compared with the results obtained from four unsteady Navier-Stokes solvers. The time-resolved flow for three axial spacings is examined. For each vane-blade spacing, the inlet conditions were nearly identical and the vane exit flow was transonic. Surface-mounted high-response pressure transducers at midspan were used to obtain the pressure measurements. The computed two-dimensional unsteady airfoil surface pressure predictions are compared with the Kulite pressure transducer measurements. The unsteady and axial spacing effects on loading and performance are examined. In general the numerical solutions compared very favorably with each other and with the experimental data. The overall predicted stage losses and efficiencies did not vary much with vane/blade axial spacing. The computations indicated that any increases in the blade relative total pressure loss were offset by a decrease in vane loss as the axial spacing was decreased. The decrease in predicted vane total pressure loss with decreased axial spacing was primarily due to a reduction in the wake mixing losses. The increase in predicted blade relative total pressure loss with a decrease in axial spacing was found to be mainly due to increased vane wake/blade interaction.


Author(s):  
Cong Chen ◽  
Huaping Liu ◽  
Fu Chen

This paper presents a numerical and experimental result of the end-wall vortex generator jets for controlling corner separation and enhancing the aerodynamic performance in a high subsonic (Ma = 0.7) compressor cascade. The experiments were carried out on a compressor cascade at design point ( i = 0°) and off-design points ( i = −2°, 2°, and 4°). At design point, the total pressure loss coefficient could be reduced up to 12.1%.With the increase in the incidence, the control effect is enhanced first and then reduced. The maximum total pressure loss reduction is up to 14.6% when the incidence is 2°. The numerical study is further conducted to analyze the flow pattern and the vortex structure. The jet vortex is formed downstream of the jet hole using the vortex generator jets, the cross flow on the end wall is also suppressed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document