Investigation of the fuel distribution in a shockless explosion combustor

FC Yücel, F Habicht, A Jaeschke… - … for Gas Turbines …, 2021 - asmedigitalcollection.asme.org
Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power, 2021asmedigitalcollection.asme.org
Shockless explosion combustor (SEC) is a promising concept for implementing pressure
gain combustion into a conventional gas turbine cycle. This concept aims for a quasi-
homogeneous auto-ignition that induces a moderate rise in pressure. Since the ignition is
not triggered by an external source but driven primarily by chemical kinetics, the
homogeneity of the auto-ignition is very sensitive to local perturbations in equivalence ratio,
temperature, and pressure that produce undesired local premature ignition. Therefore, the …
Abstract
Shockless explosion combustor (SEC) is a promising concept for implementing pressure gain combustion into a conventional gas turbine cycle. This concept aims for a quasi-homogeneous auto-ignition that induces a moderate rise in pressure. Since the ignition is not triggered by an external source but driven primarily by chemical kinetics, the homogeneity of the auto-ignition is very sensitive to local perturbations in equivalence ratio, temperature, and pressure that produce undesired local premature ignition. Therefore, the precise injection of a well-defined fuel profile into a convecting air flow is crucial to ensure a quasi-homogeneous ignition of the entire mixture. The objective of this work is to demonstrate that the injected fuel profile is preserved throughout the entire measurement section. For this, two different control trajectories are investigated. Optical measurement techniques are used to illustrate the effect of turbulent transport and dispersion caused by boundary layer effects on the fuel concentration profile. Results from line-of-sight measurements by tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy indicate that the transport of the fuel-air mixture is dominated by turbulent diffusion. However, comparisons to numerical calculations reveal the effect of dispersion toward the bounds of the fuel concentration profile. The spatially resolved distributions of the fuel concentration inside the combustor gained from acetone planar laser induced fluorescence (PLIF) replicates a typical velocity distribution of turbulent pipe flow in radial direction visualizing boundary layer effects. Comparing both methods provides deep insights into the transport processes that have an impact on the operation of the SEC.
The American Society of Mechanical Engineers
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