This invention relates to pulse combustion, and more particularly to hybrid pulse combustion turbine engines.
In a conventional gas turbine engine, combustion occurs in a continuous, near constant pressure (Rankine cycle), mode. Such conventional gas turbine engine combustion is notoriously inefficient and has led to many efforts to improve efficiency.
It has been proposed to apply the more efficient combustion of near constant volume combustion pulse detonation engines (PDEs) to turbine engine combustors. In a generalized PDE, fuel and oxidizer (e.g., oxygen-containing gas such as air) are admitted to an elongate combustion chamber at an upstream inlet end, typically through an inlet valve as a mixture (e.g., of hydrocarbon fuel droplets or vapor in air). Upon introduction of this charge, the valve is closed and an igniter is utilized to detonate the charge (either directly or through a deflagration to detonation transition). A detonation wave propagates toward the outlet at supersonic speed causing substantial combustion of the fuel/air mixture before the mixture can be substantially driven from the outlet. The result of the combustion is to rapidly elevate pressure within the chamber before substantial gas can escape inertially through the outlet. The effect of this inertial confinement is to produce near constant volume combustion. It has also been proposed to use an essentially deflagration combustion in a PDE. U.S. Patent Publication Nos. 20040123582A1 and 20040123583A1 and European Patent Convention publications EP1435447A1 and EP1435440A1 disclose various configurations of pulsed combustion gas turbine engines.
One aspect of the invention involves a pulsed combustion apparatus. The apparatus includes a conduit and an inner wall. The inner wall has a number of apertures. An interior space is separated from the outer wall by the inner wall. An induction system is positioned to cyclicly admit charges to the interior space. An ignition system is positioned to ignite the charges. Flow directing surfaces are positioned to at least cyclicly direct cooling air through the apertures.
In various implementations, the inner wall may have an array of volumes (pockets). The apertures may include, for each of the pockets: a first aperture between the interior of such pocket and a space between the inner and outer walls; and a second aperture between the interior of the pocket and the interior space. An intermediate wall may be located between the outer wall and the inner wall and may have a number of apertures. The cooling air may be directed through the intermediate wall before reaching the inner wall. The inner wall may include an inner layer and an outer layer secured to the inner layer. The outer layer may have an array of three-dimensional excursion features (e.g., dome-like blisters) cooperating with the inner layer to form the pockets. The ignition system may be effective to induce detonation of the charges.
Another aspect of the invention involves a turbine engine including a case with an axis, a compressor, a turbine, and a circumferential array of combustion chamber conduits. The conduits are downstream of the compressor and upstream of the turbine. The array is supported for continuous rotation relative to the case in a first direction about the axis to cyclicly bring each conduit from a charging zone for receiving a charge from upstream to a discharging zone for downstream discharging of products of combustion of the charge. Each of the conduits includes an outer wall and an inner wall. An interior space is separated from the outer wall by the inner wall and has an array of pockets. Each pocket may have at least one exterior port and at least one interior port.
In various implementations, the inner wall may include a first layer and a second layer secured to an outer surface of the first layer. The second layer may have an array of outward blisters cooperating with the first layer to form the pockets. A third layer may be outboard of the second layer and may have an array of orifices. There may be a first airflow substantially through the compressor and turbine with a first portion of the first airflow passing through the combustor chamber conduits in the charges and a second portion of the first airflow bypassing combustion. A mass flow ratio of the first portion to the second portion may be between 1:1 and 1:3. The engine may be a turbofan engine. The first airflow may be a core airflow and a bypass airflow may bypass the compressor and turbine. A mass flow ratio of the bypass airflow to the core airflow may be between 3:1 and 9:1. The array may be on a free spool and the rotation may be driven by partially tangential direction of products of combustion.
Another aspect of the invention involves a gas turbine engine having a compressor, a turbine coaxial with the compressor along an axis, and a pulsed combustion combustor receiving air from the compressor and outputting combustion gases to the turbine. The combustor includes a number of combustion chamber conduits having first and second portions or chambers held for rotation about the axis through a number of positions, including: at least one charge receiving position for receiving a charge from upstream; at least one initiation position for initiating combustion of the charge; at least one discharge position for downstream discharging of products of combustion of said charge; and at least one cooling position cooling a wall separating the first and second chambers by directing cooling air from the second chamber to the first chamber through a plurality of apertures in the wall.
In various implementations, there may be at least one fuel injector for injecting fuel into air from the compressor to form the charges. The at least one cooling position may overlap a majority of the at least one charge receiving position.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
A new combustor tube configuration may be applied to a turbine engine. Exemplary turbine engines and combustors may be variations on those shown in U.S. Patent Publication Nos. 20040123582A1 and 20040123583A1 and European Patent Convention publications EP1435447A1 and EP1435440A1 (the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein as if set forth at length).
The exemplary combustor includes a ring of combustion conduits 40 which may be operated as pulsed combustion conduits. Exemplary conduits are operated as pulsed detonation devices, although a similar structure may potentially be used with pulsed deflagration. The conduits are mounted in a carousel structure 42 (
Each conduit includes a first volume (chamber) 44 and a second volume (chamber) 46 (
The exemplary carousel comprises a circumferentially extending outboard wall 60 spaced apart from a circumferentially extending inboard wall 62. A circumferential array of radial/longitudinal walls 64 span between the outboard and inboard walls 60 and 62 to generally surround the individual second volumes 46. Thus, the exemplary radial walls are each shared by a pair of adjacent volumes 46, the two radial walls and intervening portions of the outboard and inboard walls 60 and 62 forming the outer “wall” of such volume 46.
At an upstream end of the carousel, the first volume 44 is essentially an outboard annular sector and the associated volume 46 is essentially an annular sector immediately inboard thereof and separated therefrom by a wall of a duct portion 66. From adjacent the upstream/inlet end 47 at the car, the first volume 44 cross-section may transition from the annular sector to another shape such as a circle at the upstream end/inlet 53 of the tube 52.
The first and second volume upstream ends 47 and 49 are proximate an aft, downstream portion of a fixed manifold 80 (
Outside of the charging sector, in ignition/discharging sector, the manifold has a blocking element 120 (
Ignition and discharge may occur when each first volume 44 is so sealed. The engine includes means for initiating the combustion of the fuel/air charges in the combustion chambers. Exemplary means initiate this as soon as the first volume 44 is closed off at the beginning of the ignition/discharging sector.
Combustion gases discharged from the tube outlet ends 54 encounter turning vanes 140 which may be unitarily formed with the carousel disk. In the exemplary embodiment, an equal number of turning vanes 140 are alternatingly interspersed with the tubes 52 and may comprise extensions of the walls of the tubes interspersed with the walls 64 diverting flow through the second passageways. Adjacent vanes divert the discharge flows by an angle relative to the tube axis 506 and local longitudinal centerplane of the engine. In the exemplary embodiment, this diversion applies sufficient torque to the carousel to rotate the carousel at a desired rotational speed. In an exemplary engine, an exemplary steady state rotational speed of the carousel is 2,000-18,000 RPM. The specific operating range will be influenced by engine dimensional considerations in view of carousel structural integrity and the number of charge/discharge cycles per rotation. A narrower range of 6,000-12,000 target RPM is likely with the lower third of this range more likely for a two cycle/rotation engine and the upper third for a one cycle/rotation engine. In operation, these speeds will likely be substantially lower than the high spool speed and approximately the same or moderately lower than the low spool speed. An initial rotation may be provided by the engine starter motor or by a dedicated starter motor for the combustor.
Various inventive aspects relate to cooling of the combustion conduits.
In an exemplary embodiment, in at least a portion of the charging and purge portions of the cycle, a flow 180 (represented in
The enhanced surface area provided by the wall structure 160 draws substantial cooling from the flows 184 and 186. These cooling flows may be driven by a pressure differential between the volumes 46 and 44. Such a pressure differential may be achieved via appropriate positioning of the duct rim 90 to provide an appropriate initial balance of flows into the volumes. Additionally, the compressor blade immediately ahead of the forward/upstream inlet end 49 may be warped such that a higher pressure flow is directed into the inboard annulus that feeds volume 46 surrounding the combustor tube volume 44. Thus a positive pressure differential across the wall of combustor tube 52 assures cooling airflow into the volume 44 during the refresh cycle. The tube wall geometry promotes cooling in two ways: air entering the blisters 170 through the apertures 174 impinges on the outer surface (backside) of the inner layer 166 and then exits through the apertures 176 to form an unfueled laminar film on the combustion side of inner layer 166.
Especially during ignition and discharge, the pressure increase within the first volume/passageway 44 may cause a reverse flow outward through the wall structure 160. The flow reversal may be minimized by bell-mouthing the edges of apertures 174 and 176 to create a preferential inflow coefficient of discharge (CD). The bell-mouthed apertures would restrict reverse flow when the combustion event causes a pressure rise in volume 44. Additionally, the refresh cycle is substantially longer than the period of time associated with the combustion and blow-down (discharge) event. Thus, the flow time history of the air adjacent to the combustion tube wall 52 will be inboard from volume 46 to volume 44 for the majority of the time and the reverse flow during the brief elevated pressure period of the combustion event will be severely restricted by the bell mouth shaping of apertures 174 and 176. The net effect is a strong cooling action on the inner layer 166 of the combustion tube 52.
In exemplary embodiments, there may be between four and sixty combustion conduits, more narrowly, twenty and forty. Exemplary conduit lengths are between six inches (15 cm) and forty inches (102 cm), more narrowly, twelve inches (30 cm) and thirty inches (76 cm). The exemplary first passageway 44 cross-sectional areas are between 1.0 inch2 (6.5 cm2) and twenty inch2 (129 cm2), more narrowly, 2.0 inch2 (12.9 cm2) and eight inch2 (51.6 cm2). An exemplary discharging sector is between 5° and 120°, more narrowly, 10° and 100°. However, the key limitation regarding the charging sector is the time required to charge the combustion conduits at a given radius from the engine centerline and rotational speed. This gives rise to the possibility of multiple charge/discharge cycles during one 360° rotation of the carousel. In such a situation there could be multiple charging and discharging sectors.
One or more embodiments of the present invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the details of any particular application will influence the configuration of the combustor. Various features of the combustor may be fully or partially integrated with features of the turbine or the compressor. If applied in a redesign of an existing combustor or turbine engine, details of the existing combustor or engine may implement details of the implementation. The principles may be applied to a variety of existing or yet-developed pulsed combustion devices. The principles may be applied in applications beyond turbine engines. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO 03023281 | Mar 2003 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060096293 A1 | May 2006 | US |