4.4 Article

A Comparative Study of Natural Gas and Biogas Combustion in A Swirling Flow Gas Turbine Combustor

Journal

COMBUSTION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 194, Issue 13, Pages 2613-2640

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/00102202.2021.1882441

Keywords

Biogas and natural gas combustion; alternative fuel; combustion performance; swirl number; fuel injector; gas-turbine emissions

Funding

  1. IIUM computational mechanics laboratory

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study simulated non-premixed combustion of natural gas and biogas in an industrial gas turbine combustor, evaluating combustion performance parameters and identifying conditions where biogas could be a viable alternative fuel.Comparing combustion performances of the two gases, it was found that under specific conditions, biogas can perform comparably to natural gas with lower NO emissions but higher CO emissions.
In this study, non-premixed combustion of a traditional fuel-natural gas, and an alternative fuel-biogas, is simulated in a swirling flow industrial gas turbine combustor geometry which includes the combustor liner and the outside casing in order to replicate the flow and combustion in a real gas turbine combustor. The 3D combustion simulations are validated and the results for combustion of both gases are analyzed to compare and evaluate the viability of biogas as an alternative fuel for use in industrial gas turbine combustors. The combustion performance is evaluated based on multiple combustion performance optimization parameters, namely, the combustion efficiency, pattern factor, and pollutant emissions (CO and NO). The effects of two design parameters: swirl number and fuel injector diameter on the combustion performance optimization parameters are examined. The results have been analyzed to identify the best case for each combustion performance optimization parameter and a suitable trade-off case for both gases is proposed. Additionally, the comparison of the combustion performances of both gases revealed that despite possessing much lower methane and hence lower heating value (LHV), a combination of swirl number and fuel injector diameter for biogas of a specific composition results in a combustion performance comparable to natural gas along with lower NO emission, although at the expense of higher CO emission. Therefore, biogas can potentially be utilized as an alternative fuel in industrial gas turbine combustors, and methods for reducing CO emission can be devised.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available