4.7 Article

High-repetition-rate planar measurements in the wake of a reacting jet injected into a swirling vitiated crossflow

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 163, Issue -, Pages 241-257

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2015.10.001

Keywords

Staged combustion system (SCS); Reacting jet in crossflow (RJICF); High repetition rate (HRR); Wake vortices; OH-PLIF; 2D PIV

Funding

  1. United States Department of Energy under the University Turbine Systems Research (UTSR) Program [DE-FE0007099]
  2. United States Department of Energy, Advanced Hydrogen Turbine Development Program [DE-FC26-05NT42644]
  3. National Research Council Postdoctoral Fellowship Program

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Staged combustion has been explored for power generation gas turbine engines to increase engine efficiency with minimal contribution to pollutant formation. Secondary fuel injection into the vitiated flow from the primary combustion process is one approach. In this work, advanced diagnostic measurements were performed on an experimental representation of such a system, with a transverse jet injection into a swirling vitiated crossflow. High-repetition-rate simultaneous particle image velocimetry (PIV) and OH planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) were performed at three measurement planes perpendicular to the jet axis. The measurements provided qualitative as well as quantitative information on the evolution of complex flow structures and transient events such as re-ignition, local extinction and vortex-flame interactions in the turbulent reacting flow. Transverse jets composed of H-2 mixed with N-2 and premixed natural gas and air were injected through a tube protruding into the crossflow. The vitiated crossflow is produced by a low swirl burner (LSB). The crossflow exhibits considerable swirl at the location of the transverse jet injection. Two momentum flux ratios, J = 3 and J = 8 were employed to study the effect of momentum flux ratio on the stabilization of reaction fronts. The time-averaged flow field show a pair of steady wake vortices, which were found to be much larger for J = 8 than for the J = 3 case. The region with the maximum time-averaged OH-PLIF intensity was found to be localized between the wake vortex pairs. The wake Strouhal number was found to be invariant with respect to the momentum flux ratio. Based on the experimental data, it is hypothesized that the shear layer and wake field vortices play a significant role in stabilizing a steady reaction front within the near-wake region of the jet. (C) 2015 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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