Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6336806
-
Patent Number
6,336,806
-
Date Filed
Thursday, July 13, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, January 8, 200222 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Burns, Doane, Swecker & Mathis, L.L.P.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 431 1
- 431 2
- 431 19
- 431 75
- 431 114
- 123 538
- 060 725
- 060 3977
- 060 3906
- 239 6
- 239 690
- 239 708
- 239 692
- 239 101
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
In a method for burning a liquid fuel in a combustion system (10) which comprises a combustion chamber (11) and at least one injection nozzle (13) through which liquid fuel is injected into the combustion chamber (11) in the form of a fuel spray (16) and is burnt there with combustion air being added, disturbance-free operation in a simple manner is distinguished in that, in order to actively suppress hydrodynamic instabilities in the combustion chamber (11), the injected fuel spray (16) is modulated by having an electrical voltage applied to it during the injection process, governed by a selected time function.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the field of combustion technology. It relates to a method for burning a liquid fuel in a combustion system.
2. Description of the Related Art
Thermoacoustic oscillations represent a danger to all types of combustion applications. They lead to high-amplitude pressure fluctuations, to constriction of the operational range, and can increase undesirable emissions. This affects, in particular, combustion systems with little acoustic damping, such as those used in gas turbines. Active control of the combustion oscillations may be required to guarantee high performance with regard to pulsations and emissions over a wide operating range.
Various techniques for controlling and suppressing combustion instabilities by means of an active control system have already been proposed, in which, using either an open or a closed control loop, the supply of fuel and/or combustion air to the burner or to the burners is controlled or modulated in a defined manner. A prior, not previously published application from the applicant relates, for example, to active control of the instabilities in a premixing burner and is illustrated, for example, in
FIG. 1
of EP-B1-0 321 809. In such a premixing burner, the fuel flows in the two outer fuel lines (
8
,
9
in
FIG. 1
of EP-B1-0 321 809) are modulated asymmetrically in an open loop at frequencies between 0.3 Hz and 5 kHz, preferably between 5 Hz and 200 Hz. The modulation process is carried out with the aid of two fuel valves which are inserted in the fuel lines.
A disadvantage with the use of mechanically moving, electrically driven fuel valves is that they have mechanically moving parts which not only limit the range of the modulation frequency but, at the modulation frequencies which are used, are also subject to increased wear and whose functional reliability is subject to limitations. Another disadvantage is the relatively high power required by the valves themselves, which makes considerable additional circuit measures necessary.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The object of the invention is to provide a combustion method and a combustion system which effectively suppress thermoacoustic combustion instabilities in a simple and effective manner and without any mechanically moving parts by modulation over a wide frequency range.
The essence of the invention is for the liquid fuel to be injected with electrostatic assistance. The application of an electrical voltage to the fuel allows the spray angle and the range of the injected fuel spray, the atomization and the resultant droplet size distribution, with the vaporization and distribution of the fuel to be influenced. If this influencing process is carried out in accordance with a predetermined, selected time function, the combustion flame and thus the instantaneous rate at which heat is released can be modulated appropriately. Since the instantaneous rate at which heat is produced represents the most important single factor in the production and suppression of thermoacoustic combustion instabilities, the instabilities can effectively be suppressed by suitable selection of the time function and other modulation variables.
According to one preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention, a high voltage of several kV is used for modulation and is, in particular, a pulsating DC voltage, with a periodic function being used as the time function.
In this case, the high voltage can on the one hand be modulated in an open control loop. This is justified in particular if the instabilities in the combustion chamber have a response which is constant over time and can be suppressed or attenuated by selection of a suitable fixed time function.
If, on the other hand, the instabilities vary with time or as a function of various changing operating parameters, it is expedient and advantageous to monitor the hydrodynamic instabilities continuously by measuring suitable variables, in particular the instantaneous rate at which heat is released or the pressure pulsations, and to carry out the modulation process in a closed control loop, including the measured variables.
The combustion system according to the invention, which comprises a combustion chamber and at least one injection nozzle through which liquid fuel is injected into the combustion chamber, is distinguished in that first means are provided in order to apply an electrical voltage to the liquid fuel during the injection process.
One preferred embodiment of the combustion system according to the invention is distinguished in that the injection nozzle comprises a nozzle bore and a fuel channel which leads to the nozzle bore, in that the fuel in the fuel channel has the modulating electrical voltage applied to it, in that the injection nozzle comprises a nozzle body in which the nozzle bore is arranged, in that the fuel channel is formed between the nozzle body and an insert which is inserted with a gap into a recess in the nozzle body and is electrically insulated from the nozzle body, and in that the modulating electrical voltage is applied between the nozzle body and the insert.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURES
The invention will be explained in more detail in the following text with reference to exemplary embodiments and in conjunction with the drawing, in which:
FIG. 1
shows a schematic arrangement of a combustion system according to a preferred exemplary embodiment of the invention having a closed control loop; and
FIG. 2
shows a longitudinal section through an injection nozzle, suitable for electrostatic modulation, as shown in FIG.
1
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG. 1
shows a schematic illustration of the arrangement of a combustion system according to a preferred exemplary embodiment of the invention and having a closed control loop. The combustion system
10
comprises a combustion chamber
11
in whose interior
12
an injection nozzle
13
for injection of a fuel spray
16
of liquid fuel is arranged. The liquid fuel (for example oil) is supplied to the injection nozzle
13
from the exterior via a fuel line
14
. The necessary combustion air enters the combustion chamber through an air inlet
15
. The fuel nozzle
13
is connected via supply lines to a controlled voltage source
17
, which emits a pulsed or clocked DC voltage in the high-voltage range of several kV, for example 10 to 20 kV. The clock frequency is governed predominantly by the thermoacoustic combustion instabilities which can occur in the combustion chamber
11
, and is selected such that these instabilities are suppressed or are at least highly attenuated. The frequencies may in this case be in the range from several Hz to several kHz. The controlled voltage source
17
may on the one hand be permanently set to the optimum clock frequency or time function. The control loop for suppressing the instabilities is then an open control loop. The voltage source
17
may, however, also—as is shown in
FIG. 1
—be controlled by a sensor element, for example a pressure transducer
19
, which records the instabilities (pressure fluctuations) in the combustion chamber
11
and passes on appropriate signals via a signal line
18
for control purposes to the voltage source
17
. In this case, the control process is carried out in a closed control loop. However, the instantaneous rate at which heat is released may also be measured, for example by measuring the OH radiation intensity, and used for control purposes, instead of the pressure pulsations when using the pressure transducer
19
.
The pulsed high voltage from the voltage source
17
modulates the fuel spray
16
in the injection nozzle
13
(indicated in
FIG. 1
by the periodic vertical lines in the fuel spray). The application of electrostatic voltages to the liquid droplets allows various parameters relating to the fuel spray
16
to be influenced, such as
the spray angle and the range of the spray;
the atomization and the droplet size distribution resulting from it; and
the vaporization of the fuel droplets and the fuel distribution.
For their part, these parameters influence—by varying the ignition delay times, the local equivalence relationships, etc.—the point of fuel consumption and thus the flame position. If the high voltage on the injection nozzle is varied (by the pulsation), this allows the instantaneous rate at which heat is produced in the combustion chamber
11
to be modulated, this being the most important single factor for the production, and thus for the active suppression as well, of the thermoacoustic combustion instabilities.
The high voltage can be applied to the injected fuel in an injection nozzle
13
, a longitudinal section of which is shown in FIG.
2
. The injection nozzle
13
comprises a nozzle bore
23
and a fuel channel
22
which leads to the nozzle bore
23
. The modulating electrical voltage is applied to the fuel in the fuel channel
22
. To this end, the injection nozzle
13
comprises a nozzle body
20
in which the nozzle bore
23
is arranged. The fuel channel
22
is formed between the nozzle body
20
and an insert
21
which is inserted with a gap into a recess in the nozzle body
20
and is electrically insulated from the nozzle body
20
. The modulating electrical voltage U, which is connected via two terminals
24
, is applied between the nozzle body
20
and the insert
21
. The fuel flowing through the fuel channel
22
thus passes through a DC voltage field oriented at right angles to the flow direction and is modulated in the manner described above in accordance with the time function of the applied voltage.
The advantages of such an injection nozzle which can be modulated electrostatically over mechanical solutions such as fast-switching valves or rotating devices are obvious:
there are no moving parts; high modulation frequencies up to several khz can thus be achieved without any problems;
the simple design without any moving parts results in high reliability and low construction and servicing costs;
the fuel mass flow rate remains constant, that is to say no mechanical work is carried out, and the power requirement is thus low;
the acoustic impedance of the fuel line
14
cannot influence the response of the modulation device since the nozzle bore
23
terminates the fuel line
24
; and
the control process can be carried out without any problems both in an open control loop and in a closed control loop.
Claims
- 1. A method for burning a liquid fuel in a combustion system which comprises a combustion chamber and at least one injection nozzle through which liquid fuel is injected into the combustion chamber in the form of a fuel spray and is burnt there with combustion air being added, wherein, in order to actively suppress hydrodynamic instabilities in the combustion chamber, the injected fuel spray is modulated by having an electrical voltage applied to it during the injection process, governed by a selected time function.
- 2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein a high voltage of several kV is used for modulation.
- 3. The method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the high voltage is a pulsating DC voltage.
- 4. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein a periodic function is used as the time function.
- 5. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the modulation is carried out in an open control loop.
- 6. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the hydrodynamic instabilities in the combustion chamber are monitored continuously by measuring variables, and wherein the modulation process is carried out in a closed control loop, including the measured variables.
- 7. The method as claimed in claim 6, wherein the hydrodynamic instabilities in the combustion chamber are monitored continuously by measuring the instantaneous rate at which heat is released or the pressure pulsations, and wherein the modulation process is carried out in the closed control loop, including the measured instantaneous rate at which heat is released or the measured pressure pulsations.
- 8. A combustion system, comprising: a combustion chamber and at least one injection nozzle through which liquid fuel is injected into the combustion chamber, wherein first means are provided in order to apply an electrical voltage to the liquid fuel during the injection process, wherein the first means for applying an electrical voltage to the liquid fuel comprise a controlled voltage source and wherein the combustion chamber contains second means for monitoring or measuring hydrodynamic instabilities, and wherein the second means are operatively connected to the controlled voltage source.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
199 42 387 |
Jul 1999 |
DE |
|
US Referenced Citations (6)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
3749545 |
Velkoff |
Jul 1973 |
A |
4439980 |
Biblarz et al. |
Apr 1984 |
A |
5145355 |
Poinsot et al. |
Sep 1992 |
A |
5297738 |
Lehr et al. |
Mar 1994 |
A |
5695328 |
Defreitas et al. |
Dec 1997 |
A |
5791889 |
Gemmen et al. |
Aug 1998 |
A |
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
0321809 |
Jun 1989 |
EP |