Experimental evaluation of premixing: prevaporizing fuel injection concepts for a gas turbine catalytic combustor
Author(s) -
Robert Tacina
Publication year - 1977
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/7084698
Subject(s) - combustor , nozzle , vaporization , fuel injection , inlet , materials science , jet fuel , liquid fuel , fuel gas , combustion , turbojet , gas turbines , jet (fluid) , turbine , mechanics , environmental science , chemistry , aerospace engineering , physics , thermodynamics , mechanical engineering , engineering , composite material , organic chemistry
Experiments were performed to evolve and evaluate a premixing-prevaporizing fuel system to be used with a catalytic combustor for possible application in an automotive gas turbine. Spatial fuel distribution and degree of vaporization were measured using Jet A fuel. Three types of air blast injectors, an air assist nozzle and a simplex pressure atomizer were tested. Air swirlers with vane angles up to 30 deg were used to improve the spatial fuel distribution. The work was done in a 12-cm (4.75-in.) diameter tubular rig. Test conditions were: a pressure of 0.3 and 0.5 MPa (3 and 5 atm), inlet air temperatures up to 800 K (980 F), velocity of 20 m/sec (66 ft/sec) and fuel-air ratios of 0.01 and 0.025. Uniform spatial fuel distributions that were within plus or minus 10 percent of the mean were obtained. Complete vaporization of the fuel was achieved with air blast configurations at inlet air temperatures of 550 K (530 F) and higher. The total pressure loss was less than 0.5 percent for configurations without air swirlers and less than 1 percent for configurations with a 30 deg vane angle air swirler.
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