This invention relates to a catalytic oxidation module for a gas turbine engine, and, in particular, to a catalytic oxidation module comprising a plurality of tubular elements.
Catalytic combustion systems are well known in gas turbine applications to reduce the creation of pollutants in the combustion process. As known, gas turbines include a compressor for compressing air, a combustion stage for producing a hot gas by burning fuel in the presence of the compressed air produced by the compressor, and a turbine for expanding the hot gas to extract shaft power. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,174,159 describes a catalytic oxidation method and apparatus for a gas turbine utilizing a backside cooled design. Multiple cooling conduits, such as tubes, are coated on the outside diameter with a catalytic material and are supported in a catalytic reactor portion of the combustor. A portion of a fuel/oxidant mixture is passed over the catalyst coated cooling conduits and is oxidized, while simultaneously, a portion of the oxidant enters the multiple cooling conduits and cools the catalyst. The exothermally catalyzed fluid then exits the catalytic oxidation system and is mixed with the cooling fluid outside the system, creating a heated, combustible mixture. The tubes used in such catalytic reactors are typically exposed to extreme temperature and vibration conditions which may adversely affect the integrity and service life of the tubes.
These and other advantages of the invention will be more apparent from the following description in view of the drawings that show:
Inside the catalytic combustion module 28, the combustion mixture fluid flow 24 and the cooling fluid flow 26 are separated, for at least a portion of the travel length, L, by one or more conduits, such as tubular elements 30, having respective inlet ends 42 and an outlet ends 44. The tubular elements 30 may be retained in a spaced apart relationship by a tubesheet 33. The tubular elements 30 are coated with a catalyst 32 on the side exposed to the combustion mixture fluid flow 24. The catalyst 32 may include, as an active ingredient, a precious metal, Group VIII noble metals, base metals, metal oxides, or any combination thereof. Elements such as zirconium, vanadium, chromium, manganese, copper, platinum, palladium, osmium, iridium, rhodium, cerium, lanthanum, other elements of the lanthanide series, cobalt, nickel, iron, and the like may be used.
The tubular elements 30 may be coated on respective outside diameter surfaces with a catalyst 32 to be exposed to a combustion mixture fluid flow 24 traveling around the exterior of the elements 30. In a backside cooling arrangement, the cooling fluid flow 26 is directed to travel through the interior of the tubular elements 30. While exposed to the catalyst 32, the combustion mixture fluid flow 24 is oxidized in an exothermic reaction, and the catalyst 32 and the pressure boundary element 30 are cooled by the unreacted cooling fluid flow 26, thereby absorbing a portion of the heat produced by the exothermic reaction.
Alternatively, the tubular elements 30 may be coated on the respective interiors with a catalyst 32 to expose a combustion mixture fluid flow 24 traveling through the interior of the tubular elements 30, while the cooling fluid flow 26 travels around the exterior of the tubular elements 30. Other methods may be used to expose the combustion mixture fluid flow 24 to a catalyst 32, such as constructing a structure to suspend the catalyst in the combustion mixture fluid flow 24, constructing a structure from a catalytic material to suspend in the combustion mixture fluid flow 24, or providing pellets coated with a catalyst material exposed to the combustion mixture fluid flow 24.
After the flows 24,26 exit the catalytic combustion module 28, the flows 24,26 are mixed and combusted in a plenum, or combustion completion stage 36, to produce a hot combustion gas 38. In an embodiment of the invention, the flow of a combustible fuel 20 is provided to the combustion completion stage 36 by the fuel source 18. The hot combustion gas 38 is received by a turbine 40, where it is expanded to extract mechanical shaft power. A common shaft 41 may interconnect the turbine 40 with the compressor 12 as well as an electrical generator (not shown) to provide mechanical power for compressing the ambient air 14 and for producing electrical power, respectively. The expanded combustion gas 43 may be exhausted directly to the atmosphere or it may be routed through additional heat recovery systems (not shown).
The catalytic oxidation module 28 of
However, such configurations have proven unreliable in the past due to conditions such as engine or flow induced dynamics, heat extremes, and differential heat induced expansion among the respective elements 30. For example, the expanded cross section regions 46 of the elements 30 are subject to wear (e.g. fretting or fret corrosion) where the surfaces 48 of the regions 46 contact one another. Although the expanded cross section regions 46 maintain the tubular elements 30 in a spaced relationship at respective outlet ends 44, such a configuration provides little self-containment of the tube elements 30 within in the module 50. For example, if an element 30 becomes dislodged from an upstream tubesheet 33, the expanded cross section region configuration cannot prevent the element 30 from traveling downstream and potentially causing catastrophic damage to the turbine 40 or other parts of the engine 10. A downstream tubesheet may be used to retain the elements at a downstream end of the bundle, but such a tubesheet may be subject to heat extremes and may introduce flashback and flame holding problems at the outlet ends 44.
The elements 30 may be joined, such as by welding or riveting, areas of contact, such as expanded cross section contact points 52, at the outlet ends 44 of the tubular elements 30. However, it has been discovered that elements 30 in the bundle 50 may expand and contract in a longitudinal direction at different rates due to differential heating. Such heat induced relative movement may cause stresses in joined contact points 54 sufficiently high enough to cause the joints, such as welds 56, to fail. If the elements 30 are retained at respective inlet ends 42 by the tubesheet 33 and at respective downstream ends by attachment to a downstream tubesheet, heat induced longitudinal expansion may cause bowing of the tubular elements 30 being restrained at both ends 42, 44 from moving in a longitudinal direction. The inventors have innovatively realized that by forming flexible fingers 58 in the ends 42, 44 of the elements 30, containment of the elements 30 at the ends 42, 44 may be achieved while still being capable of accommodating differential expansion and vibration.
As shown in the perspective view of
The fingers 58 may be joined by forming a weld 56 (for example, using capacitance discharge welding, gas tungsten welding, or brazing techniques) between contact points 52 or contact areas of the abutting fingers 58 near the respective outlet ends 44 of the tubular elements 30. In an embodiment of the invention, the weld 56 may be formed as wide as an arc width 94 of the finger 58, and may extend upstream from the outlet end about 20 to 30 mils. In another embodiment, the fingers 58 may be joined by riveting. The fingers 58 may be formed integrally with a remainder of the tubular element 30 or may be joined, such as be welding, to an end of the tubular element 30, so that the fingers 58 are spaced apart around a perimeter of the end of the element 30 and extend longitudinally away from the end of element 30.
As shown in
In an aspect of the invention, the fingers 58 are defined by slots 74 comprising a rounded bottom portion 76. The rounded bottom portion 76 may be configured as a semicircular shape having a radius 78 corresponding to half a width 80 of the slot 74. Other configurations of slots 74 that may be used are shown in
With reference to
While the preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes and substitutions will occur to those of skill in the art without departing from the invention herein. For example, the fingers may be formed in respective inlet ends of the tubular elements and welded to fingers of adjacent tubular elements. In another aspect, straight tubes, not having an enlarged cross section region may be used. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060225429 A1 | Oct 2006 | US |