Study of Flame Stability in a Step Swirl Combustor

Author:

Durbin M. D.1,Vangsness M. D.1,Ballal D. R.1,Katta V. R.2

Affiliation:

1. University of Dayton, Dayton, OH 45469

2. Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc., Dayton, OH 45430

Abstract

A prime requirement in the design of a modern gas turbine combustor is good combustion stability, especially near lean blowout (LBO), to ensure an adequate stability margin. For an aeroengine, combustor blow-off limits are encountered during low engine speeds at high altitudes over a range of flight Mach numbers. For an industrial combustor, requirements of ultralow NOx emissions coupled with high combustion efficiency demand operation at or close to LBO. In this investigation, a step swirl combustor (SSC) was designed to reproduce the swirling flow pattern present in the vicinity of the fuel injector located in the primary zone of a gas turbine combustor. Different flame shapes, structure, and location were observed and detailed experimental measurements and numerical computations were performed. It was found that certain combinations of outer and inner swirling air flows produce multiple attached flames, aflame with a single attached structure just above the fuel injection tube, and finally for higher inner swirl velocity, the flame lifts from the fuel tube and is stabilized by the inner recirculation zone. The observed difference in LBO between co- and counterswirl configurations is primarily a function of how the flame stabilizes, i.e., attached versus lifted. A turbulent combustion model correctly predicts the attached flame location(s), development of inner recirculation zone, a dimple-shaped flame structure, the flame lift-off height, and radial profiles of mean temperature, axial velocity, and tangential velocity at different axial locations. Finally, the significance and applications of anchored and lifted flames to combustor stability and LBO in practical gas turbine combustors are discussed.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Aerospace Engineering,Fuel Technology,Nuclear Energy and Engineering

Reference20 articles.

1. Bradley, D., Gaskell, P. H., and Lau, A. K. C., 1990, “A Mixedness-Reactedness Flamelet Model for Turbulent Diffusion Flames,” Twenty-Third Symposium (International) on Combustion, The Combustion Institute, p. 685.

2. Chen, R. H., and Driscoll, J. F., 1988, “The Role of the Recirculation Vortex in Improving Fuel-Air Mixing Within Swirling Flames,” Twenty-Second Symposium (International) on Combustion, The Combustion Institute, p. 281.

3. Durbin M. D. , and BallalD. R., 1996, “Studies of Lean Blowout in a Step Swirl Combustor,” ASME JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING FOR GAS TURBINES AND POWER, Vol. 118, pp. 72–78.

4. Gollahalli, S. R., Savas, O., Huang, R. F., and Rodriguez Azara, J. L., 1985, “Structure of Attached and Lifted Gas Jet Flames in Hysteresis Region,” Twenty-First Symposium (International) on Combustion, The Combustion Institute, p. 295.

5. Katta, V. R., and Roquemore, W. M., 1993, “Numerical Method for Simulating Fluid-Dynamic and Heat-Transfer Changes in Jet Engine Injector Feed-Arm Due to Fouling,” Journal of Thermophysics and Heat Transfer, p. 651.

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