This invention relates to gas and liquid fueled turbines, and more specifically, to combustors in industrial gas turbines used in power generation plants.
Gas turbines generally include a compressor, one or more combustors, a fuel injection system and a turbine. Typically, the compressor pressurizes inlet air which is then turned in direction or reverse flowed to the combustors where it is used to cool the combustor and also to provide air to the combustion process. In a multi-combustor turbine, the combustors are located about the periphery of the gas turbine, and a transition duct connects the outlet end of each combustor with the inlet end of the turbine to deliver the hot products of the combustion process to the turbine.
Combustor cap assemblies have evolved over the years from a single fuel nozzle configuration to a multi-nozzle dry low NOx configuration with independent fuel control to each or groupings of the fuel nozzles. This independent fuel control helps to ensure stable combustion over the operating range. The function of the cap is to serve as a physical buffer between the downstream burning zone and the upstream area prior to the fuel and air being mixed. Air and fuel pass axially through each fuel nozzle. Air also passes through multiple apertures in the cap effusion plate thereby cooling the plate.
Current cap designs are subject to thermal fatigue and subsequent cracking, sometimes leading to liberation of pieces of the cap and damage to the hot gas path. Additionally, this cracking is a source of repair cost. It would be desirable to eliminate the cracking of the effusion plate, thereby eliminating or reducing repair costs of the cap and eliminating or reducing the risk of damage to the downstream hot gas path components. Additionally, it would be desirable to utilize the cap as a resonator to thereby decrease the amplitude of combustion dynamics.
In an exemplary embodiment, a combustor cap assembly includes an impingement plate with a plurality of primary fuel nozzle openings arranged in a circular array about a center opening, and a combustor cap secured to the impingement plate. The combustor cap includes a plurality of cap segments independently secured to the impingement plate. The plurality of cap segments are secured in such a way as to allow the cap segment edges to be radially and tangentially movable relative to the impingement plate.
In another exemplary embodiment, a combustor cap is cooperable with an impingement plate in a turbine fuel nozzle and includes a plurality of cap segments independently securable to the impingement plate. The plurality of cap segments are radially and tangentially movable relative to the impingement plate.
In still another exemplary embodiment, a combustor cap assembly includes an impingement plate with a plurality of primary fuel nozzle openings arranged in a circular array about a center opening, and a combustor cap secured to the impingement plate. The combustor cap includes nozzle openings aligned with the plurality of primary fuel nozzle openings in the impingement plate. The cap nozzle openings have a collar extending through the plurality of primary fuel nozzle openings in the impingement plate, where the combustor cap comprises a plurality of cap segments independently secured to the impingement plate, and where the plurality of cap segments are secured such that cap segment edges are radially and tangentially movable relative to the impingement plate. The assembly additionally includes a connector secured to the collar of the cap nozzle openings securing the plurality of cap segments to the impingement plate. The connector securing the plurality of cap segments to the impingement plate is the only rigid attachment between the plurality of cap segments and the impingement plate.
With reference to the drawings, a combustor cap assembly 10 includes an impingement plate 12 with a plurality of primary fuel nozzle openings 14 arranged in a circular array as shown about a center opening 16.
A combustor cap 18 is affixable to the impingement plate 12 and includes nozzle openings 20 that align with the primary fuel nozzle openings 14 in the impingement plate 12. In a preferred embodiment, the combustor cap 18 is constructed of a plurality of cap segments 22 preferably shaped as arc segments arranged in a circular array when secured to the impingement plate 12. The cap segments 22 are independently secured to the impingement plate 12, by the collar 26. This keeps the cap segments 22 in intermittent contact with the impingement plate 12 without constraining the edges of the cap segments 22 from moving radially and tangentially in the plane of the impingement plate 12.
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By segmenting the high temperature portion of the cap assembly and mounting these segmented flow path pieces to a backing structure that also forms the impingement plate, thermal stresses in the combustor cap assembly can be greatly decreased. That is, stresses generated by thermal gradients in the cap are relieved by segmenting the effusion plate as shown and removing the edge constraints. Reducing thermal stresses will serve to reduce or eliminate cracking of the effusion plate, thereby lowering repair costs of the cap and reducing the risk of damage to the downstream hot gas bath components.
While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiments, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.