scholarly journals INSTABILITY, FREQUENCY AND VOLTAGE IN MANAUS

Author(s):  
Talitha do Nascimento Brito ◽  
Manoel Henrique Reis Nascimento ◽  
Francisco Rodrigues Maia
Author(s):  
Michael A. Vaudrey ◽  
William R. Saunders ◽  
Bryan Eisenhower

Feedback control system design, for general single-in-single-out (SISO) applications, requires accurate knowledge of the loop transfer function. Active combustion control design is usually implemented using such SISO architectures, but is quite challenging because the thermoacoustic response results from a relatively unknown, self-excited system and nonlinear processes that must be understood before learning the gain/phase relationship of the system precisely at the instability frequency. However, recent experiments have shown that it is possible to obtain accurate measurements of the relevant loop transfer (frequency response) functions at frequencies adjacent to the instability frequency. Using a simple tube combustor, operating with a premixed, gaseous, burner-stabilized flame, the loop frequency response measurements have been used to develop a methodology that leads to ‘test-based predictions’ of the absolute phase settings and ‘best’ gain settings for a proportional, phase-shifting controller commanding an acoustic actuator in the combustor. The contributions of this methodology are twofold. First, it means that a manual search for the required phase setting of the controller is no longer necessary. In fact, this technique allows the absolute value of controller phase to be determined without running the controller. To the authors’ knowledge, this has not been previously reported in the literature. In addition, the ‘best’ gain setting of the controller, based on this new design approach, can be defined as one that eliminates or reduces the limit cycle amplitude as much as possible within the constraint of avoiding generation of any controller-induced instabilities. (This refers to the generation of ‘new’ peaks in the controlled acoustic pressure spectrum.) It is shown that this tradeoff in limit cycle suppression and avoidance of controller-induced instabilities is a manifestation of the well-known tradeoff in the sensitivity/complementary sensitivity function for feedback control solutions. The focus of this article is limited to the presentation of the design method and does not discuss the detailed nonlinear phenomena that must be understood to determine the optimal gain/phase settings at the limit cycle frequency for a real (versus theoretical) combustor system. A companion paper describes how the proposed design method can be used to generate an AI controller that maintains stabilizing control for a range of changing operating conditions.


Author(s):  
Jisu Yoon ◽  
Seongpil Joo ◽  
Min Chul Lee ◽  
Jeongjin Kim ◽  
Jaeyo Oh ◽  
...  

Recently, energy resource depletion and unstable energy prices have become global issues. Worldwide pressure to secure and make more gas and oil available to support global power needs has increased. To meet these needs, alternative fuels composed of various types of fuels have received attention, including biomass, dimethyl ether (DME), and low rank coal. For this reason, the fuel flexibility of the combustion system becomes more important. In this study, H2 and CH4 were selected as the main fuel composition variables and the OH-chemiluminescence measurement technique was also applied. This experimental study was conducted under equivalence ratio and fuel composition variations with a model gas turbine combustor to examine the relation between combustion instability and fuel composition. The combustion instability peak occurs in the H2/CH4 50:50 composed fuel and the combustion instability frequency shifted to higher harmonic of longitudinal mode based on the H2 concentration of the fuel. Based on instability mode and flame length calculation, the effect of the convection time during the instability frequency increasing phenomenon was found in a partially premixed gas turbine combustor. The time-lag analysis showed that the short convection time in a high H2 concentration fuel affects the feedback loop period reduction and, in these conditions, high harmonics of longitudinal mode instability occurs. This fundamental study on combustion instability frequency shifting characteristics was conducted for H2/CH4 composed fuel and the results contribute key information for the conceptual design of a fuel flexible gas turbine and its optimum operation conditions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 133 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Bishop ◽  
Serhiy Yarusevych

The effect of wall streamlining on flow development over a circular cylinder was investigated experimentally in an adaptive-wall wind tunnel. Experiments were carried out for a Reynolds number of 57,000 and three blockage ratios of 5%, 8%, and 17%. Three test section wall configurations were investigated, namely, geometrically straight walls (GSW), aerodynamically straight walls (ASW), and streamlined walls (SLW). The results show that solid blockage effects are evident in cylinder surface pressure distributions for the GSW and ASW configurations, manifested by an increased peak suction and base suction. Upon streamlining the walls, pressure distributions for each blockage ratio investigated closely match distributions expected for low blockage ratios. Wake blockage limits wake growth in the GSW configuration at 7.75 and 15 diameters downstream of the cylinder for blockages of 17% and 8%, respectively. This adverse effect can be rectified by streamlining the walls, with the resulting wake width development matching that expected for low blockage ratios. Wake vortex shedding frequency and shear layer instability frequency increase in the GSW and ASW configurations with increasing blockage ratio. The observed invariance of the near wake width with wall configuration suggests that the frequency increase is caused by the increased velocity due to solid blockage effects. For all the blockage ratios investigated, this increase is rectified in the SLW configuration, with the resulting Strouhal numbers of about 0.19 matching that expected for low blockage ratios at the corresponding Reynolds number. Blockage effects on the shear layer instability frequency are also successfully mitigated by streamlining the walls.


Author(s):  
J. Matthew Carson ◽  
William T. Baumann ◽  
William R. Saunders

Thermoacoustic instabilities in combustors have been suppressed using phase-shift algorithms pulsing an on-off actuator at the limit cycle frequency (flc) or at the subharmonics of flc. It has been suggested that control at a subharmonic rate may extend the actuator lifetime and possibly require less actuator bandwidth. This paper examines the mechanism of subharmonic control in order to clarify the principles of operation and subsequently identify potential advantages for combustion control. Theoretical and experimental arguments show that there must be a Fourier component of the subharmonic control signal at flc in order to stabilize the limit cycling behavior. It is also demonstrated that the magnitude of that Fourier component must be equivalent to the signal magnitude for a linear phase-shift controller that operates directly at flc. The concept of variable-subharmonic control is introduced whereby the actuator is pulsed at the instability frequency to initially stabilize the system and then is pulsed at a subharmonic frequency to maintain stability. These results imply that an actuator used for subharmonic control cannot be effective unless its bandwidth spans the instability frequency. The advantage of reduced cycling may still be realized but will require higher control authority to produce the same effect as an actuator pulsed at the instability frequency.


Author(s):  
Michael Bishop ◽  
Serhiy Yarusevych

The effect of wall streamlining on flow development over a circular cylinder was investigated experimentally in an adaptive-wall wind tunnel. Experiments were carried out for a Reynolds number of 57,000 and three blockage ratios of 5%, 8%, and 17%. Three test section wall configurations were investigated, namely, geometrically straight walls (GSW), aerodynamically straight walls (ASW), and streamlined walls (SLW). The results show that solid blockage effects are clearly evident in cylinder surface pressure distributions for the GSW and ASW configurations, manifested by an increased peak suction and base suction. Upon streamlining the walls, pressure distributions for each blockage ratio investigated closely match distributions expected for low blockage ratios. Wake blockage limits wake growth in the GSW configuration at 7.75 and 15 diameters downstream of the cylinder for blockages of 17% and 8%, respectively. This adverse effect can be rectified by streamlining the walls, with the resulting wake width development matching that expected for low blockage ratios. Wake vortex shedding frequency and shear layer instability frequency increase in the GSW and ASW configurations with increasing blockage ratio. The observed invariance of the near wake width with wall configuration suggests that the frequency increase is caused by the increased velocity due to solid blockage effects. For all the blockage ratios investigated, this increase is rectified in the SLW configuration, with the resulting Strouhal numbers of about 0.19 matching that expected for low blockage ratios at the corresponding Reynolds number. Blockage effects on the shear layer instability frequency are also successfully mitigated by streamlining the walls.


Author(s):  
Daniel Guyot ◽  
Christian Oliver Paschereit ◽  
Surya Raghu

In this work the performance of a fluidic actuator in an active combustion control scheme is demonstrated. The actuator was tested in two different burner configurations, a bluff body burner and a generic swirl-stabilized burner, where it modulated parts of the fuel flow. The oscillation frequency was controlled by varying the inlet mass flow of the actuator. Fluidic actuators are of special interest for fuel-based active control schemes featuring high frequency fuel flow modulation, as they are much more durable then conventional valves due to the absence of fast moving parts. Hot wire measurements were performed to investigate the fluidic actuator’s oscillation characteristics without combustion. The actuator was then incorporated into a bluff body burner and a swirl-stabilized burner, respectively, where it modulated parts of the fuel flow blended with nitrogen. Pressure and heat release fluctuations in the combustor were recorded and images of the flame were taken. For both burners the heat release response of the flame to fuel flow modulation was first studied during stable combustion. The spectra of the heat release signals showed a clear peak corresponding to the fluidics’ oscillation frequency, thus validating the ability of the actuator to influence the combustion process. As the next step, each of the two combustors was operated at conditions that featured a strong low-frequency combustion instability when no fuel was modulated. In case of the bluff body burner applying fuel modulation resulted in attenuation of the combustion instability for some oscillation frequencies. The attenuation was highest when modulating the fuel flow in between the fundamental instability frequency and its subharmonic. Modulating the fuel flow at the subharmonic, however, resulted in an amplification of the instable mode. Also when applied to the swirl burner, the fludics’ fuel flow modulation caused a significant reduction of the pressure oscillations, although the actuator could only be operated at oscillation frequencies much lower than the instability frequency due to the attached tubes. The results obtained in this work show that the fluidic actuator in use allows for fuel modulation and hence combustion control without the need for complex and fast moving parts, thus ensuring a long actuator lifetime. This makes the fluidic actuator highly appropriate for application in industrial gas turbines.


Author(s):  
R. Gordon Kirk ◽  
John Sterling ◽  
William Sawyers ◽  
Mitchell Saville ◽  
T. Bradley McNiff ◽  
...  

The elimination of sub-synchronous vibration is a major task of rotating machinery engineers. The industry has used applied imbalance to improve stability of vertical pumps which would otherwise be totally unstable. The current interest is for the application of a small imbalance to determine the influence on the level of instability frequency components for a small high speed turbocharger rotor. The initial experimental results for the application of a known imbalance on the compressor end of a high speed turbocharger, indicates a reduced level for the lower instability mode.


Author(s):  
Fadi M. Alsaleem ◽  
Mohammad I. Younis

In this work, we demonstrate the concept of a new type of mass sensor detector. The detector is designed to act as a switch that is triggered if the measured mass exceeds a threshold value. The basic idea of the proposed switch is based on utilizing the escape phenomenon that the nonlinear electrostatic force introduces to the dynamics of a capacitive microcantilever. The detector is excited electrostatically with a frequency near the primary or the sub-harmonics (twice the natural frequency) resonances a way from the instability frequency band (escape phenomenon). By absorbing a threshold mass of a target material, the natural frequency of the cantilever will change in a way that it starts to oscillate in the unstable zone and hence hits the substrate. This action could be utilized to activate, for example, an alarming system indicating that the measured material has exceeded the allowable threshold mass (concentration) value.


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