Withdrawal: Reaction Zone Characterization of a Low Emission Reverse- Cross Flow Combustor

Author(s):  
Shreshtha K. Gupta ◽  
Santanu Pramanik ◽  
Vaibhav Arghode ◽  
R V. Ravikrishna
Author(s):  
Shreshtha K. Gupta ◽  
Santanu Pramanik ◽  
Vaibhav Arghode ◽  
R V. Ravikrishna

Author(s):  
Preetam Sharma ◽  
Vaibhav Arghode

This study deals with an experimental investigation of a low emission liquid fuelled (ethanol) reverse cross-flow combustor. This investigation is carried out to cater to the need of burning liquid fuels (including alternative fuels) with minimum emissions in gas turbine engines used for both aircraft and land based power generation applications using modern combustion technologies. In the present combustor design, the air inlet and the exhaust ports are located on the same side (and hence the name reverse-flow) whereas the liquid fuel is injected directly into the strong cross-flow of the air using a small diameter round tube to aid fuel atomization. Hence, a conventional atomization system is absent in the investigated combustor. The reverse-flow configuration allows effective internal product gas recirculation to facilitate the preheating and dilution of the oxidizer stream and stabilization of a distributed reaction zone. This apparently suppresses near stoichiometric reactions and hot spot regions resulting in low pollutant (NOx and CO) emissions. In the present case, the heat load is varied (keeping a constant air flow rate) from 3.125 kW to 6.25 kW which results in the thermal intensity variation from 19 MW/m3-atm to 39 MW/m3-atm. Two different tubes with internal diameters (dfuel) of 0.5 mm and 0.8 mm are used for injection of liquid fuel into the cross flow of air. The combustor was also tested in premixed-prevaporized (PP) mode with ethanol for benchmarking. The combustion process was found to be stable with NOx emissions of 1.6 ppm (premixed-prevaporized), 8 ppm (dfuel = 0.5 mm), 9 ppm (dfuel = 0.8 mm). The CO emissions were 5 ppm (premixed-prevaporized), ∼100 ppm (dfuel = 0.5, 0.8 mm), at atmospheric pressure operation (corrected to 15% O2) and ϕ = 0.7, Tadiabatic ∼1830 K. Reaction zone positioning inside the combustor was investigated using OH* chemiluminescence imaging and global flame pictures, and the same was found to be located in the vicinity of the air jet.


Author(s):  
G. Das ◽  
R. E. Omlor

Fiber reinforced titanium alloys hold immense potential for applications in the aerospace industry. However, chemical reaction between the fibers and the titanium alloys at fabrication temperatures leads to the formation of brittle reaction products which limits their development. In the present study, coated SiC fibers have been used to evaluate the effects of surface coating on the reaction zone in the SiC/IMI829 system.IMI829 (Ti-5.5A1-3.5Sn-3.0Zr-0.3Mo-1Nb-0.3Si), a near alpha alloy, in the form of PREP powder (-35 mesh), was used a茸 the matrix. CVD grown AVCO SCS-6 SiC fibers were used as discontinuous reinforcements. These fibers of 142μm diameter contained an overlayer with high Si/C ratio on top of an amorphous carbon layer, the thickness of the coating being ∽ 1μm. SCS-6 fibers, broken into ∽ 2mm lengths, were mixed with IMI829 powder (representing < 0.1vol%) and the mixture was consolidated by HIP'ing at 871°C/0. 28GPa/4h.


2015 ◽  
Vol 78 ◽  
pp. 44-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Oswaldo Roque Ccacya ◽  
Luís Fernando Figueira da Silva
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 171980 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vignesh Suresh ◽  
Ong Qunya ◽  
Bera Lakshmi Kanta ◽  
Lee Yeong Yuh ◽  
Karen S. L. Chong

This work describes the design, fabrication and characterization of a paper-based microfluidic device for ultra-low detection of urea through enzyme catalysis. The microfluidic system comprises an entry port, a fluidic channel, a reaction zone and two electrodes (contacts). Wax printing was used to create fluidic channels on the surface of a chromatography paper. Pre-conceptualized designs of the fluidic channel are wax-printed on the paper substrate while the electrodes are screen-printed. The paper printed with wax is heated to cause the wax reflow along the thickness of the paper that selectively creates hydrophilic and hydrophobic zones inside the paper. Urease immobilized in the reaction zone catalyses urea into releasing ions and, thereby, generating a current flow between the electrodes. A measure of current with respect to time at a fixed potential enables the detection of urea. The methodology enabled urea concentration down to 1 pM to be detected. The significance of this work lies in the use of simple and inexpensive paper-based substrates to achieve detection of ultra-low concentrations of analytes such as urea. The process is non-invasive and employs a less cumbersome two-electrode assembly.


Author(s):  
Ted Conrad ◽  
Aleksandr Bibik ◽  
Dimitriy Shcherbik ◽  
Eugene Lubarsky ◽  
Ben Zinn
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
W. A. Ellingson ◽  
J. G. Sun ◽  
K. L. More ◽  
R. Hines

Melt-infiltrated ceramic matrix composite SiC/SiC material systems are under development for use in combustor liners for low-emission advanced gas turbines. Uncertainty in repeatability of processing methods for these large components (33–76 cm diameter), and hence possible reduced reliability for the end user, requires that appropriate test methods, at both meso- and micro-scale, be used to ensure that the liners are acceptable for use. Nondestructive evaluation (NDE) methods, if demonstrated to reliably detect changes caused by processing, would be of significant benefit to both manufacturer and end user. This paper describes the NDE methods and their applications in detecting a process upset in a melt-infiltrated 33 cm combustor liner and how high-resolution scanning electron microscopy was used to verify the NDE data.


Author(s):  
Daniel R. Richardson ◽  
Naibo Jiang ◽  
Andrew W. Caswell ◽  
Sukesh Roy ◽  
David L. Blunck ◽  
...  

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