4.7 Article

Air swirl effect on spray characteristics and droplet dispersion in a twin-jet crossflow airblast injector

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 33, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0054430

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The paper reports on spray characterization in a novel twin-jet airblast injector, focusing on the effect of injector air swirl on droplet characteristics and dispersion behavior. The addition of air swirl significantly affects spray topology and droplet size downstream of the injector exit, leading to improved atomization quality and high spray dispersion. The results provide insight into the physics behind the improved atomization due to air swirl and demonstrate the injector's ability to achieve atomization quality and high spray dispersion over a wide operating range.
Spray characterization in a novel twin-jet airblast injector is reported in this paper with the focus on the study of the effect of injector air swirl on droplet characteristics and dispersion behavior. The operational principle of the injector is based on achieving atomization of two liquid jets, injected in a radially opposite direction from a central hub by high-speed annular swirling cross-stream flow of air. Liquid jet atomization within model atomizers and the resulting spray study have not gained much attention in spite of its practical importance, for example, in lean premixed prevaporized combustors. In the present work, droplet size and three-component velocity measurements are measured in the above injector using the phase Doppler particle analyzer technique. Air velocity without liquid injection is also obtained using the laser Doppler velocimetry technique. For given inlet air and liquid mass flow rates, experiments are conducted in the absence and presence of annular air swirl corresponding to swirl number, S=0 and 0.74, respectively. The addition of air swirl is found to dramatically affect the spray topology and also the measured spray characteristics as the droplet size reduces significantly downstream of the injector exit, which is explained. Droplet dispersion is studied by evaluating droplet size velocity correlation and also droplet Stokes number. The results not only provide insight into the physics behind improved atomization due to air swirl, but also demonstrate the ability of the novel injector to achieve atomization quality and high spray dispersion over a wide operating range.

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