High-Speed 4D Flame-Flow Measurements of a Bluff-Body Stabilized Premixed Flame

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Reyes ◽  
Kareem A. Ahmed ◽  
Brynmor Davis ◽  
Darin A. Knaus ◽  
Daniel Micka
Author(s):  
Patrick Nau ◽  
Zhiyao Yin ◽  
Oliver Lammel ◽  
Wolfgang Meier

Phosphor thermometry has been developed for wall temperature measurements in gas turbines and gas turbine model combustors. An array of phosphors has been examined in detail for spatially and temporally resolved surface temperature measurements. Two examples are provided, one at high pressure (8 bar) and high temperature and one at atmospheric pressure with high time resolution. To study the feasibility of this technique for full-scale gas turbine applications, a high momentum confined jet combustor at 8 bar was used. Successful measurements up to 1700 K on a ceramic surface are shown with good accuracy. In the same combustor, temperatures on the combustor quartz walls were measured, which can be used as boundary conditions for numerical simulations. An atmospheric swirl-stabilized flame was used to study transient temperature changes on the bluff body. For this purpose, a high-speed setup (1 kHz) was used to measure the wall temperatures at an operating condition where the flame switches between being attached (M-flame) and being lifted (V-flame) (bistable). The influence of a precessing vortex core (PVC) present during M-flame periods is identified on the bluff body tip, but not at positions further inside the nozzle.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Gonzalez Hernandez ◽  
Afshin Goharzadeh ◽  
Mahmoud Meribout ◽  
Lyes Khezzar

Abstract This study presents an experimental investigation of two-phase swirl flow interacting with a circular bluff body. A horizontal and transparent multiphase flow loop is employed to investigate the dynamic of swirl flow close to the circular bluff body. Using high-speed photography, air-core development during the transition period is characterized. Analysis of both instantaneous and averaged images provides key information on air-core length and diameter for steady state conditions. The distance from air-core tip to the disk depends on a critical gas-liquid ratio (GLRc). The presence of air pocket behind the circular bluff body depends on a critical distance to the disk.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (12) ◽  
pp. 2679-2693 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huan Li ◽  
Xuhui He ◽  
Hanfeng Wang ◽  
Si Peng ◽  
Shuwei Zhou ◽  
...  

Experiments on the aerodynamics of a two-dimensional bluff body simplified from a China high-speed train in crosswinds were carried out in a wind tunnel. Effects of wind angle of attack α varying in [−20°, 20°] were investigated at a moderate Reynolds number Re = 9.35 × 104 (based on the height of the model). Four typical behaviors of aerodynamics were identified. These behaviors are attributed to the flow structure around the upper and lower halves of the model changing from full to intermittent reattachment, and to full separation with a variation in α. An alternate transition phenomenon, characterized by an alteration between large- and small-amplitude aerodynamic fluctuations, was detected. The frequency of this alteration is about 1/10 of the predominant vortex shedding. In the intervals of the large-amplitude behavior, aerodynamic forces fluctuate periodically with a strong span-wise coherence, which are caused by the anti-symmetric vortex shedding along the stream-wise direction. On the contrary, the aerodynamic forces fluctuating at small amplitudes correspond to a weak span-wise coherence, which are ascribed to the symmetric vortex shedding from the upper and lower halves of the model. Generally, the mean amplitude of the large-amplitude mode is 3 times larger than that of the small one. Finally, the effects of Reynolds number were examined within Re = [9.35 × 104, 2.49 × 105]. Strong Reynolds number dependence was observed on the model with two rounded upper corners.


Author(s):  
Nikhil Ashokbhai Baraiya ◽  
Baladandayuthapani Nagarajan ◽  
Satynarayanan R. Chakravarthy

In the present work, the proportion of carbon monoxide to hydrogen is widely varied to simulate different compositions of synthesis gas and the potential of the fuel mixture to excite combustion oscillations in a laboratory-scale turbulent bluff body combustor is investigated. The effect of parameters such as the bluff body location and equivalence ratio on the self-excited acoustic oscillations of the combustor is studied. The flame oscillations are mapped by means of simultaneous high-speed CH* and OH* chemiluminescence imaging along with dynamic pressure measurement. Mode shifts are observed as the bluff body location or the air flow Reynolds number/overall equivalence ratio are varied for different fuel compositions. It is observed that the fuel mixtures that are hydrogen-rich excite high amplitude pressure oscillations as compared to other fuel composition cases. Higher H2 content in the mixture is also capable of exciting significantly higher natural acoustic modes of the combustor so long as CO is present, but not without the latter. The interchangeability factor Wobbe Index is not entirely sufficient to understand the unsteady flame response to the chemical composition.


Energies ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yiheng Tong ◽  
Shuang Chen ◽  
Mao Li ◽  
Zhongshan Li ◽  
Jens Klingmann

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Adam L. Comer ◽  
Cheng Huang ◽  
Swanand Sardeshmukh ◽  
Brent A. Rankin ◽  
Matthew E. Harvazinski ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (18) ◽  
pp. 6149
Author(s):  
Oleg A. Gobyzov ◽  
Mikhail N. Ryabov ◽  
Artur V. Bilsky

The problem of secondary atomization of droplets is crucial for many applications. In high-speed flows, fine atomization usually takes place, and the breakup of small droplets determines the final products of atomization. An experimental study of deformation and breakup of 15–60 µm size droplets in an accelerated flow inside a converging–diverging nozzle is considered in the paper. Particle image velocimetry and shadow photography were employed in the experiments. Results of gas and liquid phase flow measurements and visualization are presented and analyzed, including gas and droplets’ velocity, shape and size distributions of droplets. Weber numbers for droplets’ breakup are reported. For those small droplets at low Weber numbers, the presence of well-known droplets’ breakup morphology is confirmed, and rare “pulling” breakup mode is detected and qualitatively described. For the “pulling” breakup mode, a consideration, explaining its development in smaller droplets through shear stress effect, is provided.


Author(s):  
Vineeth Nair ◽  
R. I. Sujith

The dynamic transitions preceding combustion instability and lean blowout were investigated experimentally in a laboratory scale turbulent combustor by systematically varying the flow Reynolds number. We observe that the onset of combustion-driven oscillations is always presaged by intermittent bursts of high-amplitude periodic oscillations that appear in a near random fashion amidst regions of aperiodic, low-amplitude fluctuations. The onset of high-amplitude, combustion-driven oscillations in turbulent combustors thus corresponds to a transition in dynamics from chaos to limit cycle oscillations through a state characterized as intermittency in dynamical systems theory. These excursions to periodic oscillations become last longer in time as operating conditions approach instability and finally the system transitions completely into periodic oscillations. Such intermittent oscillations emerge through the establishment of homoclinic orbits in the phase space of the global system which is composed of hydrodynamic and acoustic subsystems that operate over different time scales. Such intermittent burst oscillations are also observed in the combustor on increasing the Reynolds number further past conditions of combustion instability towards the lean blowout limit. High-speed flame images reveal that the intermittent states observed prior to lean blowout correspond to aperiodic detachment of the flame from the bluff-body lip. These intermittent oscillations are thus of prognostic value and can be utilized to provide early warning signals to combustion instability as well as lean blowout.


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