The present invention is directed to gas turbines, and more particularly to a lean direct injection (LDI) combustion system using a shell and tube heat exchanger concept to carry fuel and air to the combustor.
Most combustion processes have, in some way or another, a recirculating flow field. The recirculating flow field tends to stabilize the combustion reaction zone, but an unnecessarily large recirculation zone can result in high nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions for combustion systems.
Lean direct injection for combustion has been shown to have the potential to reduce NOx emissions. However, constructing a combustor to simply and uniformly inject many fuel and air streams presents a challenge. Non-premixed combustors typically use multiple fuel passages to inject fuel from a diffusion tip into air passing through an outer ring of the diffuser tip. This requires multiple diffuser tips with multiple separate air and fuel passages all mounted in a complicated head end assembly.
The shell and tube LDI combustion system of the present invention provides a means for easily constructing a combustion system made up of many LDI injector sets with uniform air and fuel flow through all the passages using a concept similar to a shell and tube heat exchanger design. A shell and tube heat exchanger consists of a shell with a bundle of tubes inside it. One fluid flows through the tubes and another fluid flows over the tubes, through the shell, to transfer heat between the two fluids.
The present invention is directed to a lean direct injection (LDI) combustion system using a shell and tube heat exchanger concept to construct a shell and tube lean direct injector (“LDI”) used with the combustion system. According to the present invention, one side of the LDI injector, either the shell or the tube, carries an oxidizer, such as air, to a combustor, while the other side of the LDI injector carries fuel to the combustor. The tubes carry the oxidizer (or fuel, or diluent or combinations thereof) to the combustor, while straight or angled holes drilled or otherwise cut into an end plate of the combustor allow the fuel (or oxidizer, or diluent or combinations thereof) to enter the combustor from the shell. Heat exchanger construction techniques, such as brazing or welding, are used to assemble the components of the LDI combustion system.
The shell and tube LDI 14 is comprised of a shell 16 and a bundle or plurality of tubes 18 positioned inside of the shell 16. In the embodiment of the LDI 14 shown in
The plurality of tubes 18 within shell 16 extend completely across the interior of shell 16 from a first end plate 20 of shell 16 to a second end plate 22 of shell 16. The first end plate 20 has a plurality of holes 24 drilled or otherwise cut into it in which first ends 26 of tubes 18 terminate. The plurality of holes 24 in end plate 20 correspond in number to the plurality of tubes 18 within shell 16. The second end plate 22 of shell 16 also has a plurality of holes 30 drilled or otherwise cut into it in which second ends 36 of tubes 18 terminate.
Adjacent to end plate 22 of shell 16 is an end plate or cap 32 of combustor 12. End plate 32 is shown in phantom in
Air enters combustor 12 through the tube side 18 of LDI 14 of the embodiment of the combustion system 10 shown in
Fuel enters combustor 12 through the shell side 16 of LDI 14. The shell 16 includes a fuel inlet 28 through which fuel is pumped into shell 16. The end plate 22 of shell 16 also includes a plurality of fuel holes 29 corresponding to a plurality of fuel holes 38 in end plate 32 of combustor 12. The fuel flowing through fuel holes 29 and then fuel holes 38 is injected into combustor 12, where it is mixed with air injected into combustor 12 from air holes 34 connected to tubes 18. As can be seen from
The tubes 18 and shell 16 can be brazed or welded together. The air holes 34 and fuel holes 38 can be drilled or cut through end plate 32 using any conventional method. In the configuration shown in
The shell side 16 of LDI 14 is sized to contain as many LDI injector tubes 18 as desired. The combustion system 10 could contain one large shell and tube LDI 14, such that the end plate 22 of the LDI 14 is the cap 32 of combustor 12, or the combustor 10 could contain a number of smaller shell and tube LDI's 14 mounted adjacent to each other in a pattern about the cap 32 of combustor 12.
In one alternative embodiment of combustion system 10, the fuel would be carried on the tube side 18 and the air carried on the shell side 16, such that air injects into fuel. Additionally, either the fuel or air side could have a premixed air/fuel mixture instead of using pure fuel or pure air so that mixing of the air and fuel in the combustor 12 is more rapid. The fuel side or the air side could also contain some combination of diluents as a way to introduce diluents into the combustor 12.
An alternative embodiment of the combustion system 10 of the present invention could use multiple sets of tubes and/or segregated shell sections (internally partitioned) within the shell and tube LDI 14 to allow for the use of multiple different air/fuel/diluent combinations through multiple different LDI combinations. One example of this kind of embodiment is shown in
Further embodiments of the combustion system 10 of the present invention could use flattened tubes 118 leading to air holes 130, surrounded by a larger number of fuel holes 129, as shown in
The shell assembly 56 is comprised of a large cylinder 60 with a hollow center within which the tube assembly 58 (
The tube assembly 58 is comprised of a first end plate 66, a second end plate 68 and a bundle or plurality of tubes 70 extending between end plates 66 and 68. First end plate 66 has a plurality of holes 72 drilled or otherwise cut into it for receiving air or fuel from an upstream plenum 69. Second end plate 68 has a plurality of holes 76 and 78 for injecting air and fuel into combustor 52. The tubes 70 extend between holes 72 and 76. The configuration of holes 72 and 76 is similar to that of holes 34 and 38 shown in
Attached to shell assembly 56 are two additional flanges 86 and 88 (
The shell and tube LDI combustion system of the present invention provides lower NOx emissions than current MNQC nozzles. Tests have shown NOx levels using the combustion system are less than half those obtained using MNQC nozzles at similar conditions. This could provide a significant emissions advantage and/or reduction in the need for diluents. The combustion system of the present invention also provides better distribution of fuel and air for improved combustion. It allows for scaling down injector sizes to very small sizes or scaling up to large sizes. It can be used in place of current MNQC technology, or in place of current diffusion tips in DLN technology. It can also be used in place of current MNQC nozzles in any sungas engine or in place of diffusion tips in any current DLN combustor.
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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