The invention relates to fuel nozzles which are used in turbine engines.
Turbine engines which are used in electrical power generating plants typically burn a combustible fuel. Combustion takes place in a plurality of combustors which are arranged around the exterior periphery of the turbine engine. Compressed air from the compressor section of the turbine engine is delivered into the combustors. Fuel nozzles located within the combustors inject the fuel into the compressed air and the fuel and air is mixed. The fuel-air mixture is then ignited to create hot combustion gases which are then routed to the turbine section of the engine.
Various different fuels can be used in turbine engines. Some common fuels include natural gas and various liquid fuels such as diesel. The fuel nozzles are shaped to deliver appropriate amounts of fuel into the combustors such that a proper fuel-air ratio is maintained, which leads to substantially complete combustion, and therefore high efficiency.
A fuel nozzle for a turbine engine that includes a generally cylindrical main body, and a disc-shaped fuel swirler plate mounted inside the cylindrical main body adjacent an outlet end of the main body. A plurality of fuel delivery apertures extend through the swirler plate, the fuel delivery apertures being angled with respect to the first and second flat surfaces of the swirler plate. The fuel nozzle also includes a nozzle cap attached to the outlet end of the main body, wherein a diameter of the nozzle cap is gradually reduced from a first end which is coupled to the main body to second end which forms an outlet, and wherein an outlet side of the fuel swirler plate and an interior sidewall of the nozzle cap define a swirl chamber.
As explained above, fuel nozzles for a turbine engine are configured to deliver appropriate amounts of fuel into a combustor so that an appropriate fuel-air mixture is obtained. The proper fuel-air mixture ratios ensure substantially complete combustion and result in high efficiency.
As the cost of the fuels has increased, there has been a renewed interest in using alternate, less expensive fuels in turbine engines. Alternate fuels which could be burned in turbine engine, but which are not typically used, include gasified coal, blast furnace gas from steel mills, landfill gases and gas created using other feed stocks. Typically these alternate fuels contain a considerably lower amount of energy per unit volume. For instance, some alternate gases only contain approximately ten percent of the heat energy, per unit volume, as one of the normal fuels such as natural gas or diesel. This means that to provide the same amount of heat energy, it is necessary to burn as much as ten times the volume of the alternate fuels as compared to one of the normal fuels.
Because fuel nozzles are currently designed to deliver a fuel which is high in heat energy, existing nozzle designs are not appropriate for the delivery of fuel at the higher flow rates that are required when burning of the alternate fuels. Current fuel nozzle designs simply cannot deliver a sufficient amount of one of the alternate fuels to properly run the turbine engine.
The fuel being delivered into the combustor of a turbine engine is delivered into the combustor at a pressure which is higher than the pressure within the combustor. As explained above, the combustors are filled with compressed air from the compressor section of the turbine. Thus, it is necessary to pressurize the fuel with a pump before it is delivered into the fuel nozzles. The fuel is typically delivered into the combustor at a pressure which is between 10 and 25 percent higher than the pressure of the air in the combustor. This ensures that the fuel exits the nozzle at a sufficiently high velocity to properly mix with the compressed air, and this also helps to ensure that the fuel is not ignited until it is a sufficient distance from the nozzle itself. Igniting the fuel only after it has moved some distance away from the nozzle helps to ensure that the fuel nozzle is not subjected to extremely high temperatures. It also prevents deterioration or destruction of the fuel nozzles which could occur if combustion of the fuel occurred within the nozzle itself.
The amount of energy used to pressurize the fuel before it is delivered to the nozzle basically represents an energy loss in the turbine. Because only a relatively low volume of the typical fuels are used in a turbine engine, the loss represented by the energy required to pressurize the fuel is not significant in the overall process. However, when an alternate fuel is used, a much greater volume of the fuel must be delivered to the combustor. The amount of energy required to pressurize the much larger volume of the alternate fuel represents a much greater percentage energy loss.
Because of the energy losses involved in pressurizing a large of an alternate fuel, it is desirable to design a fuel nozzle for the alternate fuels such that the fuel nozzle itself causes as little of a pressure loss as possible. This, in turn, lowers the pressure to which the fuel must be raised before it is delivered into the nozzle, thereby lowering the energy loss involved in pressurizing the fuel.
The final installed configuration of a fuel nozzle would include a pilot or starter nozzle, as illustrated in
The fuel delivery apertures 122 in
In the nozzle designs illustrated in
In the embodiment illustrated in
The embodiments in
In an alternate design, as illustrated in
While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiment, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
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