4.7 Article

The effects of injector size on the dynamics and instabilities of lean premixed swirling flame

Journal

AEROSPACE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 123, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ast.2022.107463

Keywords

Flame frequency response; Injector diameter; Gain and phase maps; Acoustically induced vortex

Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Sci-ence and Technology (KAUST) [BAS/1/1370-01-01, BAS/1/1425-01- 01]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52076137, 91941301]

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The thermoacoustic instabilities of external-and self-excited premixed swirling flames under different injector sizes are experimentally studied. High-speed CH* chemiluminescence, formaldehyde laser-induced fluorescence, and particle image velocimetry are used to measure the dynamic characteristics of the flame surface and flow field. The results show that reducing the size of the injector changes the stability of the thermoacoustic system, reducing the phase delay and enhancing the response amplitude. The phase variation caused by changing injector size is found to be the main reason for the induced thermoacoustic instability.
The external-and self-excited premixed swirling flames are experimentally studied to understand the thermoacoustic instabilities under different injector sizes. We use high-speed CH* chemiluminescence, formaldehyde laser-induced fluorescence and particle image velocimetry to measure the dynamic characteristics of the flame surface and flow field. Reducing the size of the injector from 20 mm to 16 mm changes the thermoacoustic system's stability. The flame transfer function shows that reducing the size of the injector significantly reduces the phase delay, enhances the response amplitude, and annihilates the local gain extrema. The low-order network model analysis is performed, and it is found that the phase variation caused by changing injector size is the main reason for the induced thermoacoustic instability. The pixel-by-pixel decomposition of CH* images is used to extract the weighted gain and phase maps of local heat release oscillation. The swirling flame with a small injector size of 16 mm has a short time delay and a slow phase velocity, which results in strong in-phase interference of the local heat release oscillators and enhanced gains. Reducing the size of the injector strengthens the inner and outer shear layers, thereby suppressing the heat release fluctuation of the flame base. The enhanced vorticity supply of the shear layer increases the size and strength of the outer vortex ring, resulting in strong heat release fluctuations at the flame tip, which is responsible for its large unadulterated fluctuation intensity. These changes in the flow field change the relative heat release intensity and fluctuation amplitude between the flame base and tip. The out-of-phase interference among multiple vortices causes weak flame response at high frequencies. (c) 2022 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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