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Fluid Mechanics of Lean Blowout Precursors in Gas Turbine Combustors
Author(s) -
T. M. Muruganandam,
Jerry M. Seitzman
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of spray and combustion dynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.614
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 1756-8285
pISSN - 1756-8277
DOI - 10.1260/1756-8277.4.1.29
Subject(s) - combustor , mechanics , operability , vortex , materials science , turbine , flow (mathematics) , combustion , aerospace engineering , environmental science , physics , thermodynamics , chemistry , computer science , software engineering , organic chemistry , engineering
Understanding of lean blowout (LBO) phenomenon, along with the sensing and control strategies could enable the gas turbine combustor designers to design combustors with wider operability regimes. Sensing of precursor events (temporary extinction-reignition events) based on chemiluminescence emissions from the combustor, assessing the proximity to LBO and using that data for control of LBO has already been achieved. This work describes the fluid mechanic details of the precursor dynamics and the blowout process based on detailed analysis of near blowout flame behavior, using simultaneous chemiluminescence and droplet scatter observations. The droplet scatter method represents the regions of cold reactants and thus help track unburnt mixtures. During a precursor event, it was observed that the flow pattern changes significantly with a large region of unburnt mixture in the combustor, which subsequently vanishes when a double/single helical vortex structure brings back the hot products back to the inlet of the combustor. This helical pattern is shown to be the characteristic of the next stable mode of flame in the longer combustor, stabilized by double helical vortex breakdown (VBD) mode. It is proposed that random heat release fluctuations near blowout causes VBD based stabilization to shift VBD modes, causing the observed precursor dynamics in the combustor. A complete description of the evolution of flame near the blowout limit is presented. The description is consistent with all the earlier observations by the authors about precursor and blowout events

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