Flashback Mechanisms in Lean Premixed Gas Turbine Combustion

Flashback Mechanisms in Lean Premixed Gas Turbine Combustion
Author: Ali Cemal Benim
Publisher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 134
Release: 2014-12-01
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0128008261

Blending fuels with hydrogen offers the potential to reduce NOx and CO2 emissions in gas turbines, but doing so introduces potential new problems such as flashback. Flashback can lead to thermal overload and destruction of hardware in the turbine engine, with potentially expensive consequences. The little research on flashback that is available is fragmented. Flashback Mechanisms in Lean Premixed Gas Turbine Combustion by Ali Cemal Benim will address not only the overall issue of the flashback phenomenon, but also the issue of fragmented and incomplete research. Presents a coherent review of flame flashback (a classic problem in premixed combustion) and its connection with the growing trend of popularity of more-efficient hydrogen-blend fuels Begins with a brief review of industrial gas turbine combustion technology Covers current environmental and economic motivations for replacing natural gas with hydrogen-blend fuels

Emissions, Combustion Dynamics, and Control of a Multiple Swirl Combustor

Emissions, Combustion Dynamics, and Control of a Multiple Swirl Combustor
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2004
Genre:
ISBN:

To achieve single digit NOx emission from gas turbine combustors and prevent the combustion dynamics encountered in Lean Premixed Combustion, it is essential to understand the correlations among emission characteristics, combustion dynamics, and dynamics and characteristics of swirling flow field. The focus of this dissertation is to investigate the emission characteristics and combustion dynamics of multiple swirl dump combustors either in premixing or non-premixed combustion (e.g. Lean Direct Injection), and correlate these combustion characteristics (emissions, combustion instability and lean flammability) to the fluids dynamics (flow structures and its evolution). This study covers measurement of velocity flow field, temperature field, and combustion under effects of various parameters, including inlet flow Reynolds number, inlet air temperature, swirl configurations, downstream exhaust nozzle contraction ratios, length of mixing tube. These parameters are tested in both liquid and gaseous fuel combustions. Knowledge obtained through this comprehensive study is applied to passive and active controls for improving gas turbine combustion performance in the aid of novel sensor and actuator technologies. Emissions and combustion characteristics are shown closely related to the shape and size of central recirculation zone (CRZ), the mean and turbulence velocity and strain rate, and dynamics of large vortical structures. The passive controls, mostly geometry factors, affect the combustion characteristics and emissions through their influences on flow fields, and consequently temperature and radical fields. Air assist, which is used to adjust the momentum of fuel spray, is effective in reducing NOx and depress combustion oscillation without hurting LBO. Fuel distribution/split is also one important factor for achieving low NOx emission and control of combustion dynamics. The dynamics of combustion, including flame oscillations close to LBO and acoustic combustion instability, can be characterized by OH*/CH* radical oscillations and phase-locked chemiluminescence imaging. The periodic fluctuation of jet velocity and formation of large vortical structures within CRZ are responsible for combustion instability in multiple swirl combustors.

Gas Turbine Emissions

Gas Turbine Emissions
Author: Timothy C. Lieuwen
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 385
Release: 2013-07-08
Genre: Science
ISBN: 052176405X

The development of clean, sustainable energy systems is a preeminent issue in our time. Gas turbines will continue to be important combustion-based energy conversion devices for many decades to come, used for aircraft propulsion, ground-based power generation, and mechanical-drive applications. This book compiles the key scientific and technological knowledge associated with gas turbine emissions into a single authoritative source.

Combustion Instabilities in Gas Turbine Engines

Combustion Instabilities in Gas Turbine Engines
Author: Timothy C. Lieuwen
Publisher: AIAA (American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics)
Total Pages: 688
Release: 2005
Genre: Science
ISBN:

This book offers gas turbine users and manufacturers a valuable resource to help them sort through issues associated with combustion instabilities. In the last ten years, substantial efforts have been made in the industrial, governmental, and academic communities to understand the unique issues associated with combustion instabilities in low-emission gas turbines. The objective of this book is to compile these results into a series of chapters that address the various facets of the problem. The Case Studies section speaks to specific manufacturer and user experiences with combustion instabilities in the development stage and in fielded turbine engines. The book then goes on to examine The Fundamental Mechanisms, The Combustor Modeling, and Control Approaches.

Vortex Combustor for Low NOx Emissions when Burning Lean Premixed High Hydrogen Content Fuel

Vortex Combustor for Low NOx Emissions when Burning Lean Premixed High Hydrogen Content Fuel
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2009
Genre:
ISBN:

A trapped vortex combustor. The trapped vortex combustor is configured for receiving a lean premixed gaseous fuel and oxidant stream, where the fuel includes hydrogen gas. The trapped vortex combustor is configured to receive the lean premixed fuel and oxidant stream at a velocity which significantly exceeds combustion flame speed in a selected lean premixed fuel and oxidant mixture. The combustor is configured to operate at relatively high bulk fluid velocities while maintaining stable combustion, and low NOx emissions. The combustor is useful in gas turbines in a process of burning synfuels, as it offers the opportunity to avoid use of diluent gas to reduce combustion temperatures. The combustor also offers the possibility of avoiding the use of selected catalytic reaction units for removal of oxides of nitrogen from combustion gases exiting a gas turbine.

Structure, Stability and Emissions of Lean Direct Injection Combustion, Including a Novel Multi-point Ldi System for Nox Reduction

Structure, Stability and Emissions of Lean Direct Injection Combustion, Including a Novel Multi-point Ldi System for Nox Reduction
Author: Rodrigo Villalva Gómez
Publisher:
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

Experimental research on lean direct injection (LDI) combustors for gas turbine applications is presented. LDI combustion is an alternative to lean premixed combustion which has the potential of equivalent reduction of oxides of nitrogen (NOx) emissions and of peak combustor exit temperatures, but without some drawbacks of premixed combustors, such as flashback and autoignition. Simultaneous observations of the velocity field and reaction zone of an LDI swirl-stabilized combustor with a mixing tube at atmospheric conditions, with the goal of studying the flame stabilization mechanism, are shown. The flame was consistently anchored at the shear layer formed by the high-speed reactants exiting the mixing tube and the low speed recirculation region. Individual image analysis of the location of the tip of the recirculation zone and tip of the reaction region confirmed previously observed trends, but showed that calculation of the distance between these two points for corresponding image pairs yields results no different than when calculated from random image pairs. This most likely indicates a lag in the anchoring of the flame to changes in the recirculation zone, coupled with significant stochastic variation. An alternate LDI approach, multi-point LDI (MLDI), is also tested experimentally. A single large fuel nozzle is replaced by multiple small fuel nozzles to improve atomization and reduce the total volume of the high-temperature, low velocity recirculation zones, reducing NOx formation. The combustor researched employs a novel staged approach to allow good performance across a wide range of conditions by using a combination of nozzle types optimized to various power settings. The combustor has three independent fuel circuits referenced as pilot, intermediate, and outer. Emissions measurements, OH* chemiluminescence imaging, and thermoacoustic instability studies were run in a pressurized combustion facility at pressures from 2.0 to 5.3 bar.Combustor performance was analyzed for three fuel staging configurations, using local equivalence ratio of the individual circuits as a predictive parameter. Pilot-only mode enabled combustor operation at very low overall equivalence ratios while limiting NOx formation in idle power settings due to its configuration approximating a rich-quench-lean combustor. Pilot and intermediate staging tests demonstrated the range of equivalence ratios that are effective in reducing NOx formation while keeping other pollutants in check; very low equivalence ratio results in high unburned hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide, while very high equivalence ratios result in a detrimental effect as more fuel is routed through the intermediate fuel circuit. Using all three fuel circuits simultaneously in high power operation resulted in very low NOx levels (emissions index at or below 0.5 g/kg), particularly when fuel distribution was such that local equivalence ratio was equal among all circuits. The observed NOx levels compared favorably with other MLDI designs which do not have the operational flexibility of the combustor tested. Thermoacoustic instabilities occurred in the MLDI combustor for some test conditions. The local equivalence ratio of the intermediate fuel circuit was found to be one of the major predictor of the onset of instabilities. Detailed analysis of a two-circuit instability (pilot and intermediate) is presented.

Gas Turbine Combustion Instability

Gas Turbine Combustion Instability
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 10
Release: 1996
Genre:
ISBN:

Combustion oscillations are a common problem in development of LPM (lean premix) combustors. Unlike earlier, diffusion style combustors, LPM combustors are especially susceptible to oscillations because acoustic losses are smaller and operation near lean blowoff produces a greater combustion response to disturbances in reactant supply, mixing, etc. In ongoing tests at METC, five instability mechanisms have been identified in subscale and commercial scale nozzle tests. Changes to fuel nozzle geometry showed that it is possible to stabilize combustion by altering the timing of the feedback between acoustic waves and the variation in heat release.