Experimental Investigation Of Self-Excited Combustion Instabilities In A Lean, Premixed, Gas Turbine Combustor At High Pressure

Abstract

Self-excited combustion instabilities in a high pressure, single-element, lean, premixed, natural gas (NG) dump-combustor are investigated. The combustor is designed for optical access and instrumented with high frequency pressure transducers at multiple axial locations. A parametric survey of operating conditions including inlet air temperature and equivalence ratio has been performed, resulting in a wide range of pressure fluctuation amplitudes (p′) of the mean chamber pressure (pCH). Two representative cases, flames A and B with p′/pCH = 23% and p′/pCH = 12%, respectively, both presenting self-excited instabilities at the fundamental longitudinal (1L) mode of the combustion chamber, are discussed to study the coupling mechanism between flame-vortex interactions and the acoustic field in the chamber. 10 kHz OH∗-chemiluminescence imaging was performed to obtain a map of the global heat release distribution. Phase conditioned and Rayleigh index analysis as well as dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) is performed to highlight the contrasting mechanisms that lead to the two distinct instability regimes. Flame interactions with shear layer vortex structures downstream of the backwardfacing step of the combustion chamber are found to augment the instability magnitude. Flame A engages strongly in this coupling, whereas flame B is less affected and establishes a lower amplitude limit cycle.

Publication Date

11-1-2018

Publication Title

Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power

Volume

140

Issue

11

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4039760

Socpus ID

85051375126 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85051375126

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