MULTINOZZLE COMBUSTION CHAMBER OF AVIATION GAS TURBINE ENGINES AS A BASIS OF ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY. REVIEW

Author(s):  
Vladimir V. Biryuk ◽  
A. A. Gorshkalev ◽  
S. V. Lukachev ◽  
Yu. I. Tsybizov
Author(s):  
Somnath De ◽  
Prasanna Mondal ◽  
Gourav Manohar Sardar ◽  
Rakin Bin Bokhtiar ◽  
Arijit Bhattacharya ◽  
...  

Abstract The main problem for using reliable and stable diffusion combustion in modern gas turbine engines is the production of NOx at a higher level which is not permissible for maintaining the healthy environment. Thus, combustion in lean premixed mode has become the most promising technology in many applications related to power generation gas turbine, industrial burner etc. Although the lean combustion minimizes NOx production, it suffers from an increased risk of lean blowout (LBO) when the requirement of thrust or load is low. It mainly occurs at the lean condition when the equilibrium between the flame speed and the unburnt air-fuel mixture velocity is broken. Current aircraft gas turbine engines operate fuel close to the combustion chamber which leads to the partially premixed combustion. Partially premixed combustion is also susceptible to lean blowout. Therefore, we have designed a swirl-stabilized dump combustor, where different lengths of fuel-air mixing are available. Our present work aims at improving the combustion stability by incorporating a secondary fuel injection through a pilot arrangement connected with the combustion chamber for premixed as well as partially premixed flames. Incorporation of the pilot system adds a small fraction of the total fuel into the combustion chamber directly. This investigation shows significant extension of the LBO limit towards leaner fuel-air mixture while the NOx emission in the combustion chamber is within the permissible limit. This result can be used for aircraft operators during the process of landing when fuel supply has to be decreased to reduce engine thrust or for power plants operating at low loads. The study of control is based on the colour variation of the flame which actually defines the changes in combustion characteristics. For early detection of LBO, the ratio between the intensity of red and blue colour obtained from flame images with a high speed camera is used. As LBO is approached, the ratio of red to blue intensity falls monotonically. When the ratio falls below a preset threshold, a small fraction of the total fuel is added to the central pilot line. This strategy allows the LBO limit to be shifted to a much lower equivalence ratio (maximum 20% and 11% for fully premixed and least premixed flames, respectively) without any significant increase in NOx production. The analysis includes a feedback control algorithm which is computed in MATLAB and the code is embedded in Labview for hardware implementation.


Measurement ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 355-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.V. Mekhrengin ◽  
I.K. Meshkovskii ◽  
V.A. Tashkinov ◽  
V.I. Guryev ◽  
A.V. Sukhinets ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 7-23
Author(s):  
Y. B. Aleksandrov ◽  
T. D. Nguyen ◽  
B. G. Mingazov

The article proposes a method for designing combustion chambers for gas turbine engines based on a combination of the use of calculations in a one-dimensional and three-dimensional formulation of the problem. This technique allows you to quickly design at the initial stage of creating and development of the existing combustion chambers using simplified calculation algorithms. At the final stage, detailed calculations are carried out using three-dimensional numerical calculations. The method includes hydraulic calculations, on the basis of which the distribution of the air flow passing through the main elements of the combustion chamber is determined. Then, the mixing of the gas flow downstream of the flame tube head and the air passing through the holes in the flame tube is determined. The mixing quality determines the distribution of local mixture compositions along the length of the flame tube. The calculation of the combustion process is carried out with the determination of the combustion efficiency, temperature, concentrations of harmful substances and other parameters. The proposed method is tested drawing on the example of a combustion chamber of the cannular type. The results of numerical calculations, experimental data and values obtained using the proposed method for various operating modes of the engine are compared.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viktors Gutakovskis ◽  
Vladimirs Gudakovskis

This chapter discusses the direction of development of promising multimode aviation gas turbine engines (GTE). It is shown that the development of GTE is on the way to increase the parameters engine workflow: gas temperatures in front of the turbine (T*G) and the degree of pressure increase in the compressor (P*C). It is predicted that the next generation engines will operate with high parameters of the working process, T*G = 2000–2200 K, π*C = 60–80. At this temperature of gases in front of the turbine, the working mixture in the combustion chamber (CC) is stoichiometric, which sharply narrows the range of stable operation of the CC and its efficiency drops sharply in off-design gas turbine engine operation modes. To expand the range of effective and stable work, it is proposed to use an advanced aviation GTE: Adaptive Type Combustion Chamber (ATCC). A scheme of the ATCC and the principles of its regulation in the system of a multi-mode gas turbine engine are presented. The concept of an adaptive approach is given in this article. There are two main directions for improving the characteristics of a promising aviation gas turbine engine. One is a complication of the concepts of aircraft engines and the other one is an increase in the parameters of the working process, the temperature of the gases in front of the turbine (T*G) and the degree of increasing pressure behind the compressor (π*C). It is shown how the principles of adaptation are used in these areas. The application of the adaptation principle in resolving the contradiction of the possibility of obtaining optimal characteristics of a high-temperature combustion chamber (CC) of a gas turbine engine under design (optimal) operating conditions and the impossibility of their implementation when these conditions change in the range of acceptable (non-design) gas turbine operation modes is considered in detail. The use of an adaptive approach in the development of promising gas turbine engines will significantly improve their characteristics and take into account unknown challenges.


2018 ◽  
Vol 209 ◽  
pp. 00019
Author(s):  
Michael Yurievich Orlov ◽  
Oleg Vladimirovich Kolomzarov ◽  
Vladislav Mikhailovich Anisimov ◽  
Nikita Igorevich Gurakov ◽  
Nikolai Sergeevich Mironov

The interrelations between the size of the gas turbine engine (GTE) and the size and workflow of the combustion chamber (CC) were considered. On the base of analysis of workflow organization the design of CC with toroidal recirculation mixing zone was proposed. The theoretical justification of chosen design was carried out on the base of comparison of combustion volumes, which formed in traditional CC with swirlers and in proposed CC. The comparison of combustion volumes, schematic display of combustion zones with a discrete flame and a combined combustion zone were given.


1997 ◽  
Vol 28 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 536-542
Author(s):  
A. A. Khalatov ◽  
I. S. Varganov

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