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1.
This paper reviews the occurrence of the precessing vortex core (PVC) and other instabilities, which occur in, swirl combustion systems whilst identifying mechanisms, which allows coupling between the acoustics, combustion and swirling flow dynamics to occur.  相似文献   

2.
Multi-element injector configurations, typically comprising numerous small-scale jet nozzles, will be required to enable reliable lean-premixed gas turbine combustion operating with pure hydrogen or high hydrogen content fuels. The integration of large numbers of millimeter-scale injectors in tightly clustered arrays is highly likely to produce peculiar topological states determined by the collective dynamics of strongly interacting premixed hydrogen flames. To understand the influence of inter-element flame interactions in a multi-element nozzle environment, here we experimentally investigate the combustion dynamics of two different pure hydrogen flame ensembles, one relatively coarse array of 293 round jet nozzles, and the other a dense array of 421 nozzles. Measurements of self-induced instability were conducted for both configurations under 60–130 thermal power conditions, in conjunction with phase-synchronized OH PLIF and high-speed OH1 chemiluminescence emission measurements. We demonstrate that for both cases the characteristic dimension of a single injector element is the main determinant of the fundamental frequency of self-induced pressure oscillations, and that the oscillations are primarily driven by the combination of coherent structure-related flame surface rollup and local extinction/pinch-off. Whereas the coarse injector arrangement exhibits well-organized parallel propagation and deformation of isolated vortical structures, the dense array case manifests strong repulsive interactions between adjacent coherent structures, naturally creating lateral flame surface modulations as well as limited streamwise oscillations. Importantly, collision-induced lateral flame dynamics play a mechanistic role in the substantial growth of higher harmonics in the frequency range of 1–2 kHz, leading to the creation of multiple frequency excitation states of commensurate amplitude, which uniquely define the thermoacoustic state of clustered lean-premixed hydrogen flames.  相似文献   

3.
Lean premixed swirl combustion is widely used in gas turbines and many other combustion Processes due to the benefits of good flame stability and blow off limits coupled with low NOx emissions. Although flashback is not generally a problem with natural gas combustion, there are some reports of flashback damage with existing gas turbines, whilst hydrogen enriched fuel blends, especially those derived from gasification of coal and/or biomass/industrial processes such as steel making, cause concerns in this area. Thus, this paper describes a practical experimental approach to study and reduce the effect of flashback in a compact design of generic swirl burner representative of many systems. A range of different fuel blends are investigated for flashback and blow off limits; these fuel mixes include methane, methane/hydrogen blends, pure hydrogen and coke oven gas. Swirl number effects are investigated by varying the number of inlets or the configuration of the inlets. The well known Lewis and von Elbe critical boundary velocity gradient expression is used to characterise flashback and enable comparison to be made with other available data.Two flashback phenomena are encountered here. The first one at lower swirl numbers involves flashback through the outer wall boundary layer where the crucial parameter is the critical boundary velocity gradient, Gf. Values of Gf are of similar magnitude to those reported by Lewis and von Elbe for laminar flow conditions, and it is recognised that under the turbulent flow conditions pertaining here actual gradients in the thin swirl flow boundary layer are much higher than occur under laminar flow conditions. At higher swirl numbers the central recirculation zone (CRZ) becomes enlarged and extends backwards over the fuel injector to the burner baseplate and causes flashback to occur earlier at higher velocities. This extension of the CRZ is complex, being governed by swirl number, equivalence ratio and Reynolds Number. Under these conditions flashback occurs when the cylindrical flame front surrounding the CRZ rapidly accelerates outwards to the tangential inlets and beyond, especially with hydrogen containing fuel mixes. Conversely at lower swirl numbers with a modified exhaust geometry, hence restricted CRZ, flashback occurs through the outer thin boundary layer at much lower flow rates when the hydrogen content of the fuel mix does not exceed 30%. The work demonstrates that it is possible to run premixed swirl burners with a wide range of hydrogen fuel blends so as to substantially minimise flashback behaviour, thus permitting wider used of the technology to reduce NOx emissions.  相似文献   

4.
Development of models that can help predict flashback limits of premixed flames at an affordable computational cost is essential for the safe and efficient design of combustion chambers. For flames with strong preferential diffusion effects, usually the focus has been on the development of at least a three dimensional flamelet database that can predict the enthalpy and mixture fraction mapped on to the reaction progress variable. However, in this study, we show that a 3D FGM table is sufficient to predict flashback limits for lean laminar methane-air flames but is not sufficient to predict the same for lean hydrogen flames and an over-prediction of 100% could occur in the calculation of the flashback limits. We trace the root cause of this over-prediction to be related to the thickness of the reaction zone in the progress variable for hydrogen flames. This results in the development of a novel correction factor for the progress variable source term using 1D flame simulations where the flame experiences strong enthalpy gradients. In the end, we successfully show for the first time that the flashback limits for hydrogen flames can be predicted accurately using flamelet generated manifolds with a source term corrector function.  相似文献   

5.
This study reports measurements of stability limits and exhaust NO mole fractions of technically-premixed swirl ammonia-air flames enriched with either methane or hydrogen. Experiments were conducted at different pressures from atmospheric to 5 bar, representative of commercial micro gas turbines. The full range of ammonia fractions in the fuel blend, xNH3, was considered, from 0 (pure methane or hydrogen) to 1 (pure ammonia), covering very lean (φ = 0.25) to rich (φ = 1.60) equivalence ratios. Results show that increasing pressure widens the range of stable equivalence ratios for pure ammonia-air flames. Regardless of pressure, there is a critical ammonia fraction above which the range of stable equivalence ratios suddenly widens. This is because flashback does not occur anymore when the equivalence ratio is progressively increased towards stoichiometric and rich blowout occurs instead. This critical ammonia fraction increases with pressure and is larger for ammonia-hydrogen than for ammonia-methane. Provided that enough hydrogen is blended with ammonia (xNH3 < 0.9), flames with very lean equivalence ratios (φ < 0.7) can be stabilized and these yield competitively low NO emissions (<200 ppm), regardless of pressure. For this reason, very lean swirl ammonia-hydrogen-air flames are promising candidates for micro gas turbines. However, N2O emissions have the potential to be unacceptably large for these operating conditions if heat loss is too large or residence time is too short. As a consequence, the post flame region must be considered carefully. Due to the lower reactivity of methane compared to that of hydrogen, very lean swirl ammonia-methane-air flames could not be stabilized and good NO performance is limited to rich equivalence ratios for ammonia-methane fuel blends. The equivalence ratio above which good NO performance depends on pressure and bulk velocity.  相似文献   

6.
Lean premixed combustion using swirl flame stabilisation is widespread amongst gas turbine manufacturers. The use of swirl mixing and flame stabilisation is also prevalent in many other non-premixed systems. Problems that emerge include loss of stabilisation as a function of combustor geometry and thermo-acoustic instabilities. Coherent structures and their relationship with combustion processes have been a concern for decades due to their complex nature.This paper thus adopts an experimental approach to characterise large coherent structures in swirl burners under isothermal conditions so as to reveal the effects of swirl in a number of geometries and cold flow patterns that are relevant in combustion. Aided by techniques such as Hot Wire Anemometry, High Speed Photography and Particle Image Velocimetry, the recognition of several structures was achieved in a 100 kW swirl burner model.Several varied, interacting, structures developed in the field as a consequence of the configurations used. New structures never observed before were identified, the results not only showing the existence of very well defined large structures, but also their dependency on geometrical and flow parameters. The PVC is confirmed to be a semi-helical structure, contrary to previous simulations performed on the system. The appearance of secondary recirculation zones and suppression of the vortical core as a consequence of geometrical constrictions are presented as a mechanism of flow control. The asymmetry of the Central Recirculation Zone in cold flows is observed in all the experiments, with its elongation dependent on Re and swirl number used.  相似文献   

7.
This paper presents observations and analysis of the time-dependent behavior of a 10 kW partially pre-mixed, swirl-stabilized methane-air flame exhibiting self-excited thermo-acoustic oscillations. This analysis is based on a series of measurements wherein particle image velocimetry (PIV) and planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) of the OH radical were performed simultaneously at 5 kHz repetition rate over durations of 0.8 s. Chemiluminescence imaging of the OH* radical was performed separately, also at 5 kHz over 0.8 s acquisition runs. These measurements were of sufficient sampling frequency and duration to extract usable spatial and temporal frequency information on the medium to large-scale flow-field and heat-release characteristics of the flame. This analysis is used to more fully characterize the interaction between the self-excited thermo-acoustic oscillations and the dominant flow-field structure of this flame, a precessing vortex core (PVC) present in the inner recirculation zone. Interpretation of individual measurement sequences yielded insight into various physical phenomena and the underlying mechanisms driving flame dynamics. It is observed for this flame that location of the reaction zone tracks large-scale fluctuations in axial velocity and also conforms to the passage of large-scale vortical structures through the flow-field. Local extinction of the reaction zone in regions of persistently high principal compressive strain is observed. Such extinctions, however, are seen to be self healing and thus do not induce blowout. Indications of auto-ignition in regions of unburned gas near the exit are also observed. Probable auto-ignition events are frequently observed coincident with the centers of large-scale vortical structures, suggesting the phenomenon is linked to the enhanced mixing and longer residence times associated with fluid at the core of the PVC as it moves through the flame.  相似文献   

8.
In this paper, experimental and numerical methods were used to study the combustion characteristics of a counter-rotating double-stage swirling syngas combustor at constant fuel flow rate, and the effect on it of hydrogen content of syngas. In the experiment, the speed and temperature in the combustor were respectively obtained with PIV and temperature rake, while Reynolds stress equation model and the detailed chemical reaction mechanism of syngas were adopted in the numerical method. The calculation results were in good agreement with the experimental data. Research results indicated that in the working conditions of different hydrogen contents, the flow field structures in the combustor are almost the same, and the maximum temperatures at the outlet remain almost the same. However, as hydrogen content in the fuel increases, the axial velocity in the central area of flow field is increasing, and the outlet temperature distribution coefficient decreases first and then increases. In addition, it was also found in the study that the distribution structure of temperature on the central section of the combustor is almost impervious to the changes in hydrogen content, but with numerical differences, i.e. the higher hydrogen content in the fuel, the farther the stabilization position of flames in the central area is away from the head. It was also indicated in the study that the conventional combustor is no longer applicable to the combustion of syngas, especially the hydrogen-rich fuel. And the work provided the improvement scheme of hydrogen-containing fuel for gas turbine combustor.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of hydrogen addition on the forced response of H2/CH4 flames are analyzed in a dual-nozzle swirl-stabilized combustor. The hydrogen volumetric content in the fuel is varied from 0% to 40%. Flame transfer function (FTF) is used to compare the forced response of the flames. The FTF gain featuring the local maximum and minimum values, which occurred commonly in the FTFs under all hydrogen contents, is determined by two different mechanisms: the change in the flame angle and the flame roll-up phenomenon. Among two mechanisms, the flame roll-up phenomenon has a more important role in determining the FTF characteristics. In addition, hydrogen addition attenuates the local maximum gains and decreases the FTF phase slope. The change in the flame roll-up behavior, which is induced by a short and compact flame distribution at high hydrogen contents, is the primary reason of these differences in the FTF.  相似文献   

10.
Injecting hydrogen into the natural gas network to reduce CO2 emissions in the EU residential sector is considered a critical element of the zero CO2 emissions target for 2050. Burning natural gas and hydrogen mixtures has potential risks, the main one being the flame flashback phenomenon that could occur in home appliances using premixed laminar burners. In the present study, two-dimensional transient computations of laminar CH4 + air and CH4 + H2 + air flames are performed with the open-source CFD code OpenFOAM. A finite rate chemistry based solver is used to compute reaction rates and the laminar reacting flow. Starting from a flame stabilized at the rim of a cylindrical tube burner, the inlet bulk velocity of the premixture is gradually reduced to observe flashback. The results of the present work concern the effects of wall temperature and hydrogen addition on the flashback propensity of laminar premixed methane-hydrogen-air flames. Complete sequences of flame dynamics with gradual increases of premixture velocity are investigated. At the flame flashback velocities, strong oscillations at the flame leading edge emerge, causing broken flame symmetry and finally flame flashback. The numerical results reveal that flashback tendency increase with increasing wall temperature and hydrogen addition rate.  相似文献   

11.
Experimental studies were conducted on an actual aeronautical fuel injector, at conditions close as possible of the idle regime of the aircraft (P = 0.3 MPa and T = 500 K), to characterize the flame stability and pollutant emissions of two-phase kerosene/air flames. The objective was to investigate the effects of H2 and reformer gases (RG containing H2) enrichment of kerosene at constant power for the adaptation to an aircraft engine. Two different gas injection configurations have been tested (partially premixed, PP, and fully premixed, FP) to evaluate the consequences of the fuel injection mode on gas enrichment. We demonstrate the main interest and the benefits of RGs for aeronautical gas turbines. Through chemical mechanisms, they increase the flame stability and strongly reduce CO emissions without dramatically increasing NOx emissions, in comparison with the injection of pure hydrogen. Their overall behavior is independent from the injection configuration.  相似文献   

12.
Advanced hydrogen gas turbine is a promising technology to achieve near-zero emission of carbon dioxide and higher cycle efficiency. With the increased firing temperature and pressure ratio, nitrogen reinjection combined with dry premixed combustion is promising to achieve the challenging low NOx emission. In this study, the effects of nitrogen dilution and fuel/air premixing characteristics on the flame characteristics and NOx emission are investigated first through simulating one-dimensional premixed flames with a 13-species and 39-reaction mechanism at the elevated engine operation conditions. The variation of flame thicknesses and laminar flame speeds with nitrogen dilution is investigated. The NOx formation is characterized by the flame-front NOx and the constant NOx formation rates in the post-flame region. It is shown that the flame-front NOx is an order of 1 ppm and does not change significantly (within 20%) with nitrogen dilution. In contrast, the NOx formation rates in the post-flame region decrease monotonically with nitrogen dilution due to the decrease of oxygen concentration. A detailed analysis of NOx formation reveals that the N2O pathway is significant and it can account for at least 20% of the NOx formation in the post-flame region. Then an analytic model considering both the extended Zeldovich mechanism and the N2O pathway is constructed by assuming the involved radicals being in chemical equilibrium. The model can be employed to efficiently estimate the NOx formation in fully premixed hydrogen gas turbines. Next, the effects of fuel/air premixing characteristics on the mean NOx formation rate in the post-flame region are quantified by reconstructing the PDF of mixture fraction. It is shown that without the nitrogen dilution, the NOx formation rate increases dramatically with fuel/air unmixedness due to the existence of local hot spots. Nitrogen dilution can dramatically reduce the NOx formation rate at the same level of unmixedness through reducing the local hot spots. Moreover, nitrogen dilution reduces the sensitivity of the NOx formation rate to fuel/air unmixedness, which greatly alleviates the mixing requirement for the premixing nozzles in gas turbines. Finally, a model for the estimation of NOx emission is constructed, which builds the connection between NOx emission, nitrogen dilution, unmixedness and flow residence time in combustors.  相似文献   

13.
Influence of hydrogen addition on appearance of swirling and non-swirling inverse diffusion flame (IDF) along with emissions characteristics are investigated experimentally. The combustion characteristics including flame length, axial and radial temperature variation, and noise level are analysed for hydrogen addition in methane by mass basis for constant energy input and by volume basis for constant volumetric fuel flow rate. Hydrogen addition in methane IDF produces shorter flame by compressing entrainment zone, mixing zone, reaction zone, and post-combustion zone. Hydrogen addition shift these zones towards fuel and air exit from the burner. Enrichment of methane with hydrogen on a mass basis up to 6% reduces CO emission considerably and increases NOx emission moderately. Effect of H2 addition on combustion and emission characteristics is more prominent in non-swirling IDF. Combustion noise is augmented with the hydrogen addition and the magnitude of sound level depends on the hydrogen concentration.  相似文献   

14.
To understand the combustion performance of using hydrogen/methane blended fuels for a micro gas turbine that was originally designed as a natural gas fueled engine, the combustion characteristics of a can combustor has been modeled and the effects of hydrogen addition were investigated. The simulations were performed with three-dimensional compressible k-ε turbulent flow model and presumed probability density function for chemical reaction. The combustion and emission characteristics with a variable volumetric fraction of hydrogen from 0% to 90% were studied. As hydrogen is substituted for methane at a fixed fuel injection velocity, the flame temperatures become higher, but lower fuel flow rate and heat input at higher hydrogen substitution percentages cause a power shortage. To apply the blended fuels at a constant fuel flow rate, the flame temperatures are increased with increasing hydrogen percentages. This will benefit the performance of gas turbine, but the cooling and the NOx emissions are the primary concerns. While fixing a certain heat input to the engine with blended fuels, wider but shorter flames at higher hydrogen percentages are found, but the substantial increase of CO emission indicates a decrease in combustion efficiency. Further modifications including fuel injection and cooling strategies are needed for the micro gas turbine engine with hydrogen/methane blended fuel as an alternative.  相似文献   

15.
Hydrogen/air swirling premixed flames with different equivalence ratios are studied using direct numerical simulation. A fourth-order explicit Runge–Kutta method for time integration and an eighth-order central differencing scheme for spatial discretization are used to solve the full Navier–Stokes (N–S) equation system. A 9 species 19-step reduced mechanism for hydrogen/air combustion is adopted. The flames are stabilized with the help of a recirculation zone characterizing a high swirling flow. The vortex structures of the swirling premixed flames are presented. The flame structures are investigated in terms of the flame front curvature and tangential strain rate probability density functions (pdfs). The local flamelet temperature profiles are also extracted randomly along the flame front and compared with the corresponding laminar flame temperature profile. In order to study preferential diffusion effects, direct numerical simulation of two additional freely propagating planar flames in isotropic turbulence is conducted. Preferential diffusion effects observed in the planar flames are suppressed in the swirling flames. Further analysis confirms that the coherent small-scale eddies play important roles in the interactions between turbulence and the flame front. They are able to change the dynamic properties of the flame font and lead to enhanced burning intensity in the flame front with negative curvature for both stoichiometric and fuel-lean flames.  相似文献   

16.
To promote the utilization of hydrogen (H2) in existing gas turbines, dimethyl ether (DME) was used to co-fire with H2 in a model combustor. The swirl combustion characteristics of DME/H2 mixtures were measured under the varying H2 content up to 0.7. The results show that the flow velocity elevates as the H2 content increases, which is associated with the increased flame temperature. The OH level firstly increases and subsequently keeps nearly unchanged as the H2 content increases. Meanwhile, the OH area nonlinearly increases with the increasing H2 content. Moreover, the increasing H2 content induces almost linearly decreased lean blowout limit (LBO), increased NO emission, and intensified combustion acoustics. Furthermore, the combustion characteristics of the 0.46DME/0.54H2 mixture and CH4 with the same volumetric heat value were compared. The 0.46DME/0.54H2 flame displays lower LBO and higher NO emission than the CH4 flame, which mainly results from the higher reactivity of 0.46DME/0.54H2 mixture.  相似文献   

17.
This article aims at investigating the effect of hydrogen addition on the temperature and pollutant emissions of turbulent unconfined swirling methane/air flame. A computational approach utilizing the steady laminar flamelet and the realizable k–ε combustion and turbulence models, respectively, has been used. The turbulence–combustion interaction has been modeled by a β-shaped presumed probability density function. The percentage of hydrogen in the fuel stream is modeled at a wide range from 0% to 50% of the fuel volume flow rate. Results show that with the increase of volumetric hydrogen percentage in the fuel stream the flame structure changes considerably. The size of maximum temperature region decreases significantly to a small region at flame tip and peak temperature rises which leads to increase in NO emission levels. The flame with 10% hydrogen is observed to be slightly of the general trend. This is deemed to be due to the change in flow field as a result of change in fuel density, while the amount of hydrogen is not effective enough to change the combustion characteristics of the flame.  相似文献   

18.
The tip vortex of a wind turbine rotor blade is the result of a distribution of aerodynamic loads and circulation over the blade tip. The current knowledge on the generation of the tip vorticity in a 3D rotating environment still lacks detailed experimental evidence, particularly for yawed flow. The aim of this paper is to investigate how circulation at the blade tip behaves and how vorticity is eventually released in the wake, for both axial and 30° yawed flow conditions through the combination of experimental and numerical simulations. Stereo particle image velocimetry is used to measure the flow field at the tip of a 2m diameter, two‐bladed rotor at the TU Delft Open Jet Facility, for both axial and yawed flow; numerical simulations of the experiments are performed using a 3D, unsteady potential flow free‐wake vortex model. The generation mechanisms of the tip vorticity are established. The spanwise circulation along the blade exhibits a similar variation in both axial and yaw cases. A comparison of the chordwise directed circulation variation along the chord between axial and yawed flow is also presented and shown to be different. The analysis is based on contour integration of the velocity field. The tip vortex trajectory for axial flow confirms previous observations on the MEXICO rotor. The experimental results for yawed conditions have clearly shown how vorticity is swept radially away from the blade under the influence of the in‐plane radial component of flow. Such phenomena were only partially captured by the numerical model. The results of this work have important implications on the modelling of blade tip corrections. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

19.
The article describes an experimental study and comparison of the combustion behavior and determines the stability map of turbulent premixed H2-enriched oxy-methane flames in a model gas turbine combustor. Static stability limits, in terms of flashback and blow-out limits, are recorded over a range of hydrogen fraction (HF) at a fixed oxygen fraction (OF) of 30% and a particular inlet bulk velocity, and the results are compared with the non-enriched case (HF = 0%). The static stability limits are also recorded for different inlet bulk velocity (4.4, 5.2, and 6 m/s) and the results are compared to explore the effect of flow dynamics on operability limits of H2-enriched flames. The stability maps are presented as a function of equivalence ratio (0.3–1.0) and HF (0%–75%) plotted on the contours of adiabatic flame temperature (AFT), power density (PD), inlet Reynolds number (Re) and reacting mixture mass flow rate (m˙) to understand the physics behind flashback and blow-out phenomena. The results indicated that both the flashback and blow-out limits tend to move towards the leaner side with increasing HF due to the improved chemical kinetics. The stability limits are observed to follow the Reynolds number indicating its key role in controlling flame static stability limits. The results showed that H2 enrichment is effective in the zone from HF = 20% up to HF = 50%, and O2 enrichment is also effective in a similar zone from OF = 20% up to 50%, with wider stability boundaries for H2 enrichment. Axial and radial temperature profiles are presented to explore the effect of HF on the progress of chemical reactions within the combustor and to serve as the basis for validation of numerical models. Flame shapes are recorded using a high-speed camera and compared for different inlet velocities to explore the effects of H2-enrichment and equivalence ratio on flame stability. The equivalence ratio at which a transition of flame stabilization from the inner shear layer (ISL) to the outer recirculation zone (ORZ) occurs is determined for different inlet bulk velocities. The value of the transition equivalence ratio is found to decrease while increasing the inlet bulk velocity. Flame shapes near flashback limit, as well as near blow-out limit, are compared to explore the mechanisms of flame extinctions. Flame shapes are compared at fixed adiabatic flame temperature, fixed inlet velocity and fixed flow swirl to isolate their effects and investigate the effect of kinetic rates on flame stability. The results showed that the adiabatic flame temperature does not govern the flame static stability limits.  相似文献   

20.
A three dimensional spatially developing hydrogen/air premixed flame in a micro combustor with a moderate Reynolds number and a high swirl number is studied using direct numerical simulation. The inflow mixture is composed of hydrogen and air at an equivalent ratio of 1.0 in the jet core region, and pure air elsewhere. The maximum axial velocity at the inlet is 100 m/s. A fourth-order explicit Runge–Kutta method for time integration and an eighth-order central differencing scheme for spatial discretization are used to solve the full Navier–Stokes (N–S) equation system. A 9 species 19-step reduced mechanism for hydrogen/air combustion is adopted. Vortex and turbulence characteristics are examined. Two instabilities, namely Kalvin–Helmholtz instability and centrifugal instability, are responsible for the transition from laminar flow to turbulence. A cone-like vortex breakdown is observed both in the isothermal swirling flow and in the swirling flame. One dimensional premixed laminar flame is studied, the structure of which is compared with that of the multi-dimensional one. Probability density functions of the curvature and tangential strain rate are presented. It is shown that the flame curvature has a near zero mean, and the flame aligns preferentially with extensive strain. Finally, the turbulent premixed flame regime diagram is used to characterize the flame. It is found that most of the flame elements lie in the laminar flame regime and the thin reaction zones regime.  相似文献   

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