This invention relates generally to gas turbine engines, and, in particular, to a catalytic combustor comprising concentric tubular pressure boundary elements.
It is known to use catalytic combustion in gas turbine engines to reduce NOx emissions. One such catalytic combustion technique known as lean catalytic, lean burn (LCL) combustion, involves completely mixing fuel and air to form a lean fuel mixture that is passed over a catalytically active surface prior to introduction into a downstream combustion zone. However, the LCL technique requires precise control of fuel and air volumes and may require the use of a complex preburner to bring the fuel/air mixture to lightoff conditions. An alternative catalytic combustion technique is the rich catalytic, lean burn (RCL) combustion process that includes mixing fuel with a first portion of air to form a rich fuel mixture. The rich fuel mixture is passed over a catalytic surface and mixed with a second portion of air in a downstream combustion zone to complete the combustion process.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,174,159 describes an RCL method and apparatus for a gas turbine engine having a catalytic combustor using a backside cooled design. The catalytic combustor includes a plurality of catalytic modules comprising multiple cooling conduits, such as tubes, coated on an outside diameter with a catalytic material and supported in the catalytic 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 fuel/oxidant enters the multiple cooling conduits and cools the catalyst. The exothermally catalyzed fluid then exits the catalytic combustion system and is mixed with the cooling fluid outside the system, creating a heated, combustible mixture.
To reduce the complexity and maintenance costs associated with catalytic modules used in catalytic combustors, simplified designs are needed.
The invention will be more apparent from the following description in view of the drawings that show:
Inside the catalytic combustor 28, the combustion mixture fluid flow 24 and the cooling fluid flow 26 are separated by a pressure boundary element 30. In an aspect of the invention, the pressure boundary element 30 is coated with a catalytic material 32 on the side exposed to the combustion mixture fluid flow 24. The catalytic material 32 may have as an active ingredient of precious metals, 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.
In a backside cooling embodiment, the opposite side of the pressure boundary element 30 confines the cooling fluid flow 26. While exposed to the catalytic material 32, the combustion mixture fluid flow 24 is oxidized in an exothermic reaction, and the catalytic material 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.
After the flows 24,26 exit the catalytic combustor 28, the flows 24,26 are mixed and combusted in a plenum, or combustion completion stage 34, to produce a hot combustion gas 36. The hot combustion gas 36 is received by a turbine 38, where it is expanded to extract mechanical shaft power. In one embodiment, a common shaft 40 interconnects the turbine 38 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 42 may be exhausted directly to the atmosphere or it may be routed through additional heat recovery systems (not shown).
As used herein, the term “concentric” includes pressure boundary elements centered around the central region 48, not just about a central axis 56. Accordingly, the elements 46 may be offset from one another so that the annular region formed therebetween may not be a symmetrical annular region. The term “tubular” is meant to include an element defining a flow channel having a circular, rectangular, hexagonal or other geometric cross section. “Annular space” is meant to refer to a peripheral space defined between a first tubular element and a second tubular element disposed around and spaced away from the first tubular element, such as a tubular element having a circular cross section (e.g., a cylindrical element), concentrically disposed around another cylindrical element to form a peripheral space therebetween.
The combustor 28 may include a manifold assembly 45 attached to an upstream end 54 of the combustor 28 for retaining the pressure boundary elements 46 and receiving and directing fluid flows into the annular spaces 49, 50 between the elements 46. The annular spaces 49, 50 may extend from the manifold assembly 45 to a combustor exit 62. The manifold assembly 45 may include a one-piece assembly, or, in an embodiment, may include a two-piece assembly comprising a manifold 52 and an adapter 51. In another embodiment, a pilot burner 44 may be disposed in the central region 48 to provide a pilot flame for stabilizing flames in the combustion completion stage 34 under various engine loading conditions.
In an aspect of the invention, a first set of spaces 49 may be configured to conduct respective portions 58 of the cooling fluid flow 26, and a second set of spaces 50 may be configured to conduct respective portions 60 of the combustion mixture fluid flow 24. As shown in
In another embodiment, the pressure boundary elements 46 may be configured to form a first set of annular spaces 49 comprising no catalytic material and conducting respective portions 58 of the cooling fluid flow 26 concentrically alternating with a second set of annular spaces 50 including a catalytic material 32 and conducting respective portions 60 of the combustion mixture fluid flow 24. A space 49 having no catalytic material disposed on surfaces defining the space 49 remains catalytically inactive and may conduct a portion of the cooling fluid flow 26 to define a cooling space used to backside cool adjacent catalytically active spaces. Accordingly, the catalytic combustor 28 may comprise a series of concentric tubular pressure boundary elements 46 defining an alternating arrangement of catalytically active annular spaces interspersed by annular cooling spaces. In another aspect of the invention, a pressure boundary element 68 surrounding the central region 48 may include a catalytic material 32 on its inner diameter surface 70 to form a catalytically active channel, or may not include a catalytic material to allow the region to be used as a cooling space.
To provide improved structural rigidity between the pressure boundary elements 46, a support structure 72, may be radially disposed between concentrically adjacent pressure boundary elements 46 within an annular space, such as space 47, defined between elements 46. The support structure 72 radially retains the adjacent pressure boundary elements 46 in a spaced configuration. For example, the support structure 72 may include a corrugated element brazed or welded to one or both of the pressure boundary elements 46 and may extend along an axial length of the combustor 28. In other embodiments, the support structure may include fins or tubular elements disposed in a space 47 between two adjacent elements 46. In an aspect of the invention, the support structure may be disposed in cooling spaces and/or catalytically active spaces. In another aspect, the support structure 72 itself may include a catalytic surface.
As shown in
In another aspect of the invention, staging of the combustible mixture fluid flow 24 to the catalytic combustor 28 may be accomplished by configuring the combustion mixture flow controller 22 to control the combustible mixture fluid flow 24 to a plurality of catalytically active spaces independently of other catalytically active spaces. For example, the combustion mixture flow controller 22 may be configured to control the combustion mixture flow responsive to a turbine load condition so that under partial loading, only a portion of the catalytically active spaces are fueled, and under full loading of the gas turbine, all of the catalytically active spaces are fueled.
In an embodiment depicted in the cross sectional view of
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. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.