Investigation of reverse flow distributed combustion for gas turbine application
In this paper reverse flow modes of colorless distributed combustion (CDC) have been investigated for application to gas turbine combustors. Rapid mixing between the injected fuel and hot oxidizer has been carefully explored for spontaneous ignition of the mixture to achieve distributed combustion reactions. Distributed reactions can be achieved in premixed, partially premixed or non-premixed modes of combustor operation with sufficient entrainment of burned gases and faster turbulent mixing between the reactants. In the present investigation reverse flow modes consisting of three configurations at thermal intensity of 28Â MW/m3-atm and five configurations at thermal intensity of 57Â MW/m3-atm have been investigated and these high thermal loadings represent characteristic gas turbine combustion conditions. In all the configurations the air injection port is positioned at the combustor exit end, whereas the location of fuel injection ports is changed to give different configurations. The results are presented on the exhaust emissions and radical emissions using experiments, and evaluation of flowfield using numerical simulations. Ultra-low NOx emissions were found for both the premixed and non-premixed combustion modes investigated here. Cross-flow configuration, wherein the fuel is injected at high velocity cross stream to the air jet resulted in characteristics closest to premixed combustion mode. Change in fuel injection location resulted in changing the combustion characteristics from closer to diffusion mode to distributed regime. This feature is beneficial for part load operation where higher stability limit is desirable.
Year of publication: |
2011
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Authors: | Arghode, Vaibhav K. ; Gupta, Ashwani K. |
Published in: |
Applied Energy. - Elsevier, ISSN 0306-2619. - Vol. 88.2011, 4, p. 1096-1104
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Colorless distributed combustion Heat recirculation Residence time distribution Premixed combustion Non-premixed combustion Emissions |
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