This invention generally relates to fuel delivery system for a gas turbine engine, and specifically to a fuel delivery system including a catalyst for treating fuel to impart coking resistance.
A gas turbine engine typically includes a compressor, a combustor and a turbine. Air entering the compressor is compressed and directed toward a combustor. Fuel is combined with the high-pressure air and ignited. Combustion gases produced in the combustor drive the turbine.
It is common practice to use fuel as a cooling medium for various systems onboard an aircraft. The usable cooling capacity of a particular fuel is limited by the formation of insoluble products referred to as “coke”. The formation of coke deposits is dependent on the amount of dissolved oxygen present within the fuel due to prior exposure to air. Reducing the amount of oxygen dissolved within the fuel decreases the rate of coke deposition and increases the maximum allowable temperature.
It is known to remove dissolved oxygen using a gas-permeable membrane disposed within the fuel system. As fuel passes along the gas-permeable membrane, an oxygen partial pressure differential drives oxygen molecules in the fuel diffuse out of the fuel and across the gas-permeable membrane.
Disadvantageously, the size of the fuel deoxygenator increases disproportionably with the requirements for removing oxygen. An increase in oxygen removal from 90% to 99% requires nearly a doubling of deoxygenator size. As appreciated, space aboard an aircraft is limited and any increase in device size affects overall configuration and operation.
Accordingly, it is desirable to develop a fuel delivery system for a gas turbine engine that treats fuel to prevent formation of coke producing components providing for an increase the usable cooling capability of a fuel.
This invention is a fuel delivery system for a gas turbine engine including a catalyst for treating fuel to delay formation of coke deposits to increased temperatures.
The fuel delivery system of this invention includes a catalyst that operates in three stages to treat and decompose components within in the fuel to render the fuel non-coking beyond 250° F. The first stage of the catalytic device reacts the dissolved dioxygen with the sulfur compounds typically present within the fuel to form oxidized sulfur compounds like sulfoxides and sulfones. The second stage reacts the most active organic moieties like those containing tertiary hydrogens especially alkyl aromatic tertiary hydrogens with the remaining di-oxygen to form hydroperoxides. The third stage decomposes the hydroperoxides to non-coke inducing organic oxygenates in such a manner as to prevent liberation of oxygen.
Coke is typically formed through a sequence of free radical reactions initiated in some manner, typically by reaction of fuel components with dioxygen. The treatment of the fuel increases the temperature at which coke deposits are formed to increase the usable cooling capacity of the fuel.
Accordingly, the fuel system of this invention increased the usable cooling capability of the fuel by preventing formation of coke through the removal by catalytic reaction of components in the fuel like dioxygen that take part in or initiate the coke forming reactions.
The various features and advantages of this invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of the currently preferred embodiment. The drawings that accompany the detailed description can be briefly described as follows:
Referring to
Fuels have long been used as coolants on aircraft because of the capacity to absorb sensible and latent heat. Sensible heat is the heat required to heat the fuel to a boiling point. Latent heat is the heat required to vaporize the fuel. The capacity to absorb sensible and latent heat is known as the fuels physical heat sink. The physical heat sink is limited by formation of insoluble materials formed as a result of dissolved gases and other components reacting with components of the fuel in the presence of heat.
The fuel delivery system 22 includes a catalytic device 24 for treating fuel and preventing formation of undesirable coke deposits at temperatures beyond about 250° F. A pump 30 pumps fuel from a tank 28 to the catalytic device 24 for treatment of the fuel 34. Once the fuel is treated within the catalytic device 24, the fuel has an increased cooling capacity and is used to cool other systems (schematically indicated at 32). The system 32 may include hydraulic and pneumatic systems, or any other system producing waste heat. Fuel 34 from the catalytic device 24 with increased cooling capacity is flowed through a heat exchanger 26. Heat from the other systems 32 is rejected into the fuel passing through the heat exchanger 26. Fuel emerging from the heat exchanger 26 is routed to the combustor 16.
Referring to
Preferably, the catalytic material 37 is supported on a honeycomb structure 42 disposed within the catalytic device 24. However, the catalytic material 37 may be supported on granules, extrudates, monoliths, wire mesh or other known catalyst support structures. The specific support structure is tailored to the catalytic material, and a worker skilled in the art with the benefit of this disclosure would understand how to support differing types of catalytic material to optimize catalytic reaction with components within the fuel.
An example of the catalytic material 37 is a tethered metal ion that is chemically bonded to a support. One form of tethered metal ion is a metal ion like Fe+3 or Cu+2 that has a coordination capacity of four or more and that has at least two of its coordination capacity satisfied by a chelating molecule that is itself chemically bonded to a fuel insoluble supporting structure. Further, the catalytic material can be in the form of a complex containing two or more metal ions that is chemically bonded to the support structure. Suitable complexes with multiple ions containing the same metal or different metals can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 5,922,920 “Catalytic Production Of Aryl Alkyl Hydroperoxides By Polynuclear Transition Metal Aggregates” and U.S. Pat. No. 5,504,256 “Catalytic Production Of Aryl Alkyl Hydroperoxides By Polynuclear Transition Metal Aggregates” whose disclosures are hereby incorporated in there entirety in this application. The catalytic material can also be an isopolymolybdate, isopolytungstate, a hetropolymolybdate or a heteropolytungstate. A worker having the benefit of this disclosure would understand the specific compositions of catalysts required to facilitate the desired catalytic reactions.
The three stages 36,38, and 40 of the catalytic device 24 break down and react with different components of the fuel. As such the catalytic material 37 in each of the three stages36, 38, and 40 may differ depending on the specific application in order to initiate the desired reactions.
In the first stage 36 of the catalytic device 24, the fuel acts as a reductant for converting any peroxides or dissolved oxygen into coking resistant oxygenates. Fuels used for gas turbine engines contain sulfur. Many organosulfur compounds are excellent oxygen traps. That is organosulfur compounds can react with dissolved oxygen in the fuel to form non-coking components that reduce the amount of free dissolved oxygen within the fuel. The first stage 36 contains a catalyst that facilitates this reaction as well as the reaction of any existing hydroperoxides. Typically sulfur compounds like sulfoxides and sulfones are produced and the amount of dissolved oxygen within the fuel decreased.
The second stage 38 within the catalytic device 24 reacts active organic moieties with di-oxygen to form hydroperoxide. Fuels include organic moieties such as branched paraffins, naphthenes or alkyl aromatics. These components are reacted with di-oxygen to form hydroperoxides.
The third stage 40 decomposes the hydroperoxides present within the fuel and formed in the first and second stages. The hydroperoxides are broken down into non-coke producing organic oxygenates in such a way as to prevent the liberation of di-oxygen back into the fuel.
The fuel within the fuel system 22 is heated to a temperature between approximately 50° C. and 100° C. to facilitate initiation of the desired catalytic reactions. The specific temperature of the fuel and the catalytic device 24 can be tailored to the specific fuel composition and catalytic material 37 in order to create a preferred environment that will encourage the desired catalytic reactions.
Fuel exiting the catalytic device 24 includes a different, and preferred composition that substantially prevents the formation of coke within the fuel system. The increased usable cooling capacity of the fuel exiting the catalytic device 24 provides for increased operating temperatures that improve overall engine efficiency.
The foregoing description is exemplary and not just a material specification. The invention has been described in an illustrative manner, and should be understood that the terminology used is intended to be in the nature of words of description rather than of limitation. Many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. The preferred embodiments of this invention have been disclosed, however, one of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that certain modifications are within the scope of this invention. It is understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described. For that reason the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
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