Investigations of microwave stimulation of turbulent flames with implications to gas turbine combustors
(2017) 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting- Abstract
Efficient and clean production of electrical energy and mechanical (shaft) energy for use in industrial and domestic applications, surface- and ground transportation and aero-propulsion is currently of significant general concern. Fossil fuels are mainly used for transportation and aero-propulsion, but also for power generation. Combustion of fossil fuels typically give rise to undesired emissions such as unburned hydrocarbons, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, soot and nitrogen oxides. The most widespread approach to minimize these is to apply various lean-burn technologies, and sometimes also dilute the fuel with hydrogen. Although efficient in reducing emissions, lean-burn often results in combustion instabilities and igniteon issues,... (More)
Efficient and clean production of electrical energy and mechanical (shaft) energy for use in industrial and domestic applications, surface- and ground transportation and aero-propulsion is currently of significant general concern. Fossil fuels are mainly used for transportation and aero-propulsion, but also for power generation. Combustion of fossil fuels typically give rise to undesired emissions such as unburned hydrocarbons, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, soot and nitrogen oxides. The most widespread approach to minimize these is to apply various lean-burn technologies, and sometimes also dilute the fuel with hydrogen. Although efficient in reducing emissions, lean-burn often results in combustion instabilities and igniteon issues, and thus become challenging itself. Another desired aspect of today’s engines is to increase the fuel flexibility. One possible technique that may be useful for circumventing these issues is plasma-assisted combustion, i.e. to supply a small amount of electric energy to the flame to stimulate the chemical kinetics. Although not new, this approach has not yet been fully explored, partly because of it’s complexity, and partly because of apparent sufficiency. Recently, however, several research studies of this area have emerged. This paper attempts to provide a brief summary of microwave-assisted combustion, in which microwaves are utilized to supply the electrical energy to the flame, and to demonstrate that this method is useful to enhance flame stabilization, delay lean blow-off, and to increase combustion efficiency. The main effect of microwaves (or electrical energy) is to enhance the chemical kinetics, resulting in increased reactivity and laminar and turbulent flame speeds. Here we will demonstrate that this will improve the performance of gas turbine combustors.
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- author
- Fureby, C. ; Hurtig, T. ; Zettervall, N. LU ; Ehn, A. LU ; Petersson, P. LU ; Li, Zhongshan LU ; Nilsson, E. J.K. LU ; Larfeldt, J. LU and Aldén, M. LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2017
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- host publication
- AIAA SciTech Forum - 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting
- article number
- AIAA 2017-1779
- publisher
- American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
- conference name
- 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting
- conference location
- Grapevine, United States
- conference dates
- 2017-01-09 - 2017-01-13
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85017282306
- ISBN
- 9781624104473
- DOI
- 10.2514/6.2017-1779
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 18758548-f079-4f9d-b6e7-8622011f0ea2
- date added to LUP
- 2017-05-05 12:48:01
- date last changed
- 2022-03-09 02:47:54
@inproceedings{18758548-f079-4f9d-b6e7-8622011f0ea2, abstract = {{<p>Efficient and clean production of electrical energy and mechanical (shaft) energy for use in industrial and domestic applications, surface- and ground transportation and aero-propulsion is currently of significant general concern. Fossil fuels are mainly used for transportation and aero-propulsion, but also for power generation. Combustion of fossil fuels typically give rise to undesired emissions such as unburned hydrocarbons, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, soot and nitrogen oxides. The most widespread approach to minimize these is to apply various lean-burn technologies, and sometimes also dilute the fuel with hydrogen. Although efficient in reducing emissions, lean-burn often results in combustion instabilities and igniteon issues, and thus become challenging itself. Another desired aspect of today’s engines is to increase the fuel flexibility. One possible technique that may be useful for circumventing these issues is plasma-assisted combustion, i.e. to supply a small amount of electric energy to the flame to stimulate the chemical kinetics. Although not new, this approach has not yet been fully explored, partly because of it’s complexity, and partly because of apparent sufficiency. Recently, however, several research studies of this area have emerged. This paper attempts to provide a brief summary of microwave-assisted combustion, in which microwaves are utilized to supply the electrical energy to the flame, and to demonstrate that this method is useful to enhance flame stabilization, delay lean blow-off, and to increase combustion efficiency. The main effect of microwaves (or electrical energy) is to enhance the chemical kinetics, resulting in increased reactivity and laminar and turbulent flame speeds. Here we will demonstrate that this will improve the performance of gas turbine combustors.</p>}}, author = {{Fureby, C. and Hurtig, T. and Zettervall, N. and Ehn, A. and Petersson, P. and Li, Zhongshan and Nilsson, E. J.K. and Larfeldt, J. and Aldén, M.}}, booktitle = {{AIAA SciTech Forum - 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting}}, isbn = {{9781624104473}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics}}, title = {{Investigations of microwave stimulation of turbulent flames with implications to gas turbine combustors}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/6.2017-1779}}, doi = {{10.2514/6.2017-1779}}, year = {{2017}}, }