4.7 Article

A combined oscillation cycle involving self-excited thermo-acoustic and hydrodynamic instability mechanisms

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 33, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0057521

Keywords

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Funding

  1. SIEMENS Industrial Turbomachinery Ltd.
  2. EPSRC [EP/K026801/1, EP/R029369/1]
  3. ARCHER UK National Supercomputing Service
  4. EPSRC [EP/R029369/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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This paper investigates the combined effects of thermo-acoustic and hydrodynamic instability mechanisms on self-excited combustion instabilities in gas turbine combustors. Through compressible large eddy simulation, the study successfully captures oscillation phenomena and confirms agreement with experimental data. Analysis reveals the impact of mass flow rate and equivalence ratio fluctuations on governing feedback loops, as well as the control of hydrodynamic phenomena by oscillation of the swirl number. The study also describes the temporal relationship between flame surface area, mixture fraction, and heat release rate.
The paper examines the combined effects of several interacting thermo-acoustic and hydrodynamic instability mechanisms that are known to influence self-excited combustion instabilities often encountered in the late design stages of modern low-emission gas turbine combustors. A compressible large eddy simulation approach is presented, comprising the flame burning regime independent, modeled probability density function evolution equation/stochastic fields solution method. The approach is subsequently applied to the PRECCINSTA (PREDiction and Control of Combustion INSTAbilities) model combustor and successfully captures a fully self-excited limit-cycle oscillation without external forcing. The predicted frequency and amplitude of the dominant thermo-acoustic mode and its first harmonic are shown to be in excellent agreement with available experimental data. Analysis of the phase-resolved and phase-averaged fields leads to a detailed description of the superimposed mass flow rate and equivalence ratio fluctuations underlying the governing feedback loop. The prevailing thermo-acoustic cycle features regular flame liftoff and flashback events in combination with a flame angle oscillation, as well as multiple hydrodynamic phenomena, i.e., toroidal vortex shedding and a precessing vortex core. The periodic excitation and suppression of these hydrodynamic phenomena is confirmed via spectral proper orthogonal decomposition and found to be controlled by an oscillation of the instantaneous swirl number. Their local impact on the heat release rate, which is predominantly modulated by flame-vortex roll-up and enhanced mixing of fuel and oxidizer, is further described and investigated. Finally, the temporal relationship between the flame surface area, flame-averaged mixture fraction, and global heat release rate is shown to be directly correlated.

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