The present invention is directed to an apparatus and method for burning a mixture of fuel and air. More particularly, the present invention is directed to an apparatus and method for burning a mixture of fuel and air in a gas turbine engine.
Producers of gas turbine engines have made great strides in reducing regulated emissions such as NOx through a number of methods including lean, pre-mixed combustion systems (discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,660,045 issued to Ito et al. on 26 Aug. 1997) wherein a mass of fuel and a mass of air mix prior to ignition. The mass of air in such a system substantially exceeds the stoichiometric mass of air needed to chemically react with the mass of fuel. Further increasing the mass of air flowing through such a system may increase the NOx reduction by further reducing a primary combustion zone temperature. NOx emissions generally form when an excess of oxygen reacts with nitrogen at elevated temperatures. However, increasing the mass of air may also lead to instabilities in combustion.
Adding additional air also assumes availability of additional air. Lean, pre-mixed combustion may still require at least a portion of a mass of air exiting a compressor of the gas turbine for use in cooling a combustion liner surrounding the primary combustion zone. This requirement limits the mass of air available for pre-mixing. Alternative cooling schemes may allow the mass of air to be used both for cooling the combustion liner and for pre-mixing with fuel (U.S. Pat. No. 6,314,716 issued to Abreu et al. on 13 Nov. 2001). These systems may require additional control mechanisms necessary to maintain a desired distribution of air for cooling and pre-mixing.
An alternative combustion design suggests using a radiant surface burner (U.S. Pat. No. 6,330,791 issued to Kendall et al. on 18 Dec. 2001). Radiant burners provide a compact design that allows pre-mixing of fuel and air similar to lean, pre-mixed combustion systems. Past radiant burners have used a porous ceramic structure or fibrous mat made of either ceramic or metallic material. These materials have a tendency to accumulate various particles eventually leading to partial blocking of portions of the porosities.
The apparatus and method of the present invention solves one or more of the problems set forth above.
The present application discloses a fuel burner for a gas turbine engine including a first cylinder having a first array of orifices. A second cylinder having a second array of orifices is coaxial with the first cylinder. The first array of orifices is offset from the second array of orifices.
In addition, the application describes a method of burning a fuel in a gas turbine engine. The method includes supplying a mixture of fuel and air to a first cylinder, flowing said mixture of fuel and air through a first array of orifices in said first cylinder, reducing a pressure of said mixture of fuel and air, impinging a second cylinder with said mixture of fuel and air, transferring heat from said second cylinder to said mixture of fuel and air during said impinging, mixing further said mixture of fuel and air after said transferring, passing said mixture of fuel and air through a second array of orifices in said second cylinder, and igniting said mixture of fuel and air.
In addition, the application also describes a method of cooling a fuel burner for a gas turbine engine. The method includes supplying a mixture of fuel and air to a first cylinder, circulating said mixture of fuel and air with a circulating device in said first cylinder, flowing said mixture of fuel and air through at least one orifice of said circulating device, flowing said mixture of fuel and air through a first array of orifices in said first cylinder, impinging a second cylinder with said mixture of fuel and air; and transferring heat from said second cylinder to said mixture of fuel and air during said impinging.
The combustion system 14 as shown in
As shown in
Similarly, a second cylinder 56 is concentric with and displaced radially from the first cylinder 46. The second cylinder 56 generally has a larger circumference than the first cylinder 46 at any given point along the central axis 48. The second cylinder 56 has a first end portion 58 connecting with the grommet 45 and a second end portion 60 adjacent the second end portion 52 of the first cylinder 46. The second cylinder includes a solid portion 59 defining a second array of orifices 62 extending between the first end portion 58 and the second end portion 60. Any conventional method may be used to create the second cylinder 56 including machining, casting, or forging. In addition, the second cylinder 56 may be made of any material able to withstand temperatures exhibited in a combustion environment such as a ceramic, nickel alloys, or materials coated with a thermal barrier coating. Like the first cylinder 46, the second array of orifices 62 may have hole diameters that vary as a function of location along the central axis 48. The diameter of the second cylinder 56 may also vary along the central axis 48.
The first array of orifices 54 and second array of orifices 62 are offset from one another. In the present application offset means that any single orifice from the first array of orifices 54 will not overlap any single orifice from the second array of orifices 62 as shown specifically in
The mixing conduit 32, as best shown in
The fuel supply line 28 feeds fuel to a fuel nozzle 73 positioned at an entrance portion 74 of the mixing conduit 32. The fuel supply 28 line also feeds a pilot mass of fuel (not shown) to a fuel gallery 76. As shown in
The present combustion system 14 provides a low-cost method of achieving jet combustion to reduce emissions of NOx and other regulated emissions. The jet combustion also provides lower incidents of combustion oscillation found in current lean, pre-mixed combustion systems. By using the first array of orifices 54 and second array of orifices 62, small particles are not as likely to block the mixture of fuel and air from flowing through the fuel burner 26.
Operation of the combustion system 14 involves introducing the fuel through the fuel nozzle 73 into the mixing conduit 32. The liquid fuel nozzle 84 may atomize the fuel using one of numerous techniques such as air blast atomization. As the fuel moves through the mixing conduit 32, compressed air from the compressor section 12 is introduced through the array of mixing orifices 66 creating a swirling motion (not shown). Fuel becomes entrained in the swirling compressed air creating a mixture of fuel and air. The vortex generator tabs 64 and vortex energizing slots 70 may further increase homogeneity of the mixture of fuel and air. Increasing the homogeneity reduces localized hot spots when the mixture of fuel and air combusts. These hot spots often result in formation of NOx emissions. The mixing nozzle 72 accelerates the mixture of fuel and air as it passes into the fuel burner 26. During the acceleration, the fuel and air mixture also experiences a drop in pressure.
Upon entering the fuel burner 26, the mixture of fuel and air passes through the first array of orifices 54 of the first cylinder 46. The circulating device 55 circulates the mixture of fuel and air that passes through the first cylinder 46 to the second end portion 52 of the first cylinder 46. The orifice 57 of the circulating device 55 allows a portion of the mixture of fuel and air to pass through and cool the second end portion 60 of the second cylinder 56. The circulating device 55 may also reduce stagnation of the mixture of fuel and air near the second end portion 52 of the first cylinder 46. The mixture of fuel and air may lose a majority of its pressure in relation to an initial pressure at the entrance portion 74 of the mixing conduit 32.
Making the first array of orifices 54 offset from the second array of orifices 62 allows all of the mixture of fuel and air passing through the first array of orifices 54 to perpendicularly impact the inside of the second cylinder 56 with turbulent jets of the mixture of fuel and air. The gap 61 between the first cylinder 46 and second cylinder 56 sets up turbulence to allow substantially all of the mixture of fuel and air to further mix. The gap 61 may be sized such that after impacting the second cylinder 56 the mixture of fuel and air attain sufficient temperature and energy to both maintain stable combustion as the mixture enters the combustion zone 24. Furthermore, the turbulent jets impacting the inside of the second cylinder 56 and the turbulence in the gap 61 of the mixture of fuel and air increase the cooling of the second cylinder.
Pressure in the gap 61 eventually drives the mixture of fuel and air through the second array of orifices 62. The mixture of fuel and air exits the gap 61 as highly mixed, pre-heated jets or plumes of the mixture of fuel and air. The pilot fuel issuing from the slot 80 forms a rich combustion mixture for maintaining flame stability. The rotational component of velocity may further enhance stability by creating a toroidal, diffusion flame (not shown) about the first end portion 58 of the second cylinder 56. In addition, the solid portion 59 between the second array of orifices 62 creates multiple independent ignition points and multiple recirculation regions (not shown) both of which promote stable combustion throughout the combustion zone 24.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the disclosed fuel burner for a gas turbine engine without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2654219 | Zaba | Oct 1953 | A |
3890088 | Ferri | Jun 1975 | A |
5660045 | Ito et al. | Aug 1997 | A |
6314716 | Abreu et al. | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6330791 | Kendall et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6684641 | Moriya et al. | Feb 2004 | B2 |
20020148226 | Kendall et al. | Oct 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050198966 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |