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Experimental study of the effect of air split ratio on thermoacoustic instability in a centrally-staged swirl burner

Han, Meng ; Han, Xiao ; Wang, Jianchen ; Gao, Xianzhi ; He, Pei ; Feng, Xiaoxing and Zhou, Yuchen LU (2022) In Physics of Fluids 34(6).
Abstract

This study focuses on one of the critical design parameters of lean premixed (LPM) combustors-the air split ratio (ASR) between the pilot and main stages. The effect of the air split ratio on thermoacoustic instability is experimentally studied based on a centrally staged model combustor. It is found that the thermoacoustic instability is suppressed with the ASR higher than 20%. The acoustic modes of ASR lower than 20% are dominated by the main stage mode, while the others are controlled by the pilot stage mode. The time-averaged flame shapes and the flame dynamics are processed and discussed. With the increase in ASR, the pilot flame becomes longer, whereas the main flame becomes shorter. Meanwhile, the pilot and main flames become... (More)

This study focuses on one of the critical design parameters of lean premixed (LPM) combustors-the air split ratio (ASR) between the pilot and main stages. The effect of the air split ratio on thermoacoustic instability is experimentally studied based on a centrally staged model combustor. It is found that the thermoacoustic instability is suppressed with the ASR higher than 20%. The acoustic modes of ASR lower than 20% are dominated by the main stage mode, while the others are controlled by the pilot stage mode. The time-averaged flame shapes and the flame dynamics are processed and discussed. With the increase in ASR, the pilot flame becomes longer, whereas the main flame becomes shorter. Meanwhile, the pilot and main flames become less separated. Moreover, the flame in the outer shear layer (OSL) is extinguished, which is the key to suppressing the thermoacoustic instability. The flame with lower ASR exhibits large-scale periodic axial motion of flame dynamics. The flow fields of ASR = 15% (unstable) and ASR = 30% (stable) are analyzed and discussed to help reveal the differences in thermoacoustic instability between the two cases. It is found that the primary recirculation zone is smaller with ASR = 30%. Higher vorticity and strain rate distributions found in the OSL are believed to quench the flame there. The present study illustrates that a higher air split ratio improves the thermoacoustic stability, which is helpful in designing LPM combustors.

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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Physics of Fluids
volume
34
issue
6
article number
067111
publisher
American Institute of Physics (AIP)
external identifiers
  • scopus:85132025228
ISSN
1070-6631
DOI
10.1063/5.0094071
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
40a61b45-73f0-460b-9053-cd947321e4a3
date added to LUP
2022-09-23 09:11:39
date last changed
2022-09-23 09:11:39
@article{40a61b45-73f0-460b-9053-cd947321e4a3,
  abstract     = {{<p>This study focuses on one of the critical design parameters of lean premixed (LPM) combustors-the air split ratio (ASR) between the pilot and main stages. The effect of the air split ratio on thermoacoustic instability is experimentally studied based on a centrally staged model combustor. It is found that the thermoacoustic instability is suppressed with the ASR higher than 20%. The acoustic modes of ASR lower than 20% are dominated by the main stage mode, while the others are controlled by the pilot stage mode. The time-averaged flame shapes and the flame dynamics are processed and discussed. With the increase in ASR, the pilot flame becomes longer, whereas the main flame becomes shorter. Meanwhile, the pilot and main flames become less separated. Moreover, the flame in the outer shear layer (OSL) is extinguished, which is the key to suppressing the thermoacoustic instability. The flame with lower ASR exhibits large-scale periodic axial motion of flame dynamics. The flow fields of ASR = 15% (unstable) and ASR = 30% (stable) are analyzed and discussed to help reveal the differences in thermoacoustic instability between the two cases. It is found that the primary recirculation zone is smaller with ASR = 30%. Higher vorticity and strain rate distributions found in the OSL are believed to quench the flame there. The present study illustrates that a higher air split ratio improves the thermoacoustic stability, which is helpful in designing LPM combustors. </p>}},
  author       = {{Han, Meng and Han, Xiao and Wang, Jianchen and Gao, Xianzhi and He, Pei and Feng, Xiaoxing and Zhou, Yuchen}},
  issn         = {{1070-6631}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{06}},
  number       = {{6}},
  publisher    = {{American Institute of Physics (AIP)}},
  series       = {{Physics of Fluids}},
  title        = {{Experimental study of the effect of air split ratio on thermoacoustic instability in a centrally-staged swirl burner}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0094071}},
  doi          = {{10.1063/5.0094071}},
  volume       = {{34}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}