The application relates generally to gas turbine engines and, more particularly, to a slinger combustor.
Gas turbine engines used for powering aircrafts comprise a combustor in which fuel is mixed with compressed air and ignited to provide combustion gases for the turbine section of the engine. In a slinger combustion system, fuel is delivered and atomized through spraying fuel through a rotary fuel slinger. The rotary fuel slinger is designed for maximum fuel flow and optimized for cruise condition to improve the combustion efficiency and, thus, reduce smoke and gaseous emission. However, at low power levels, when the slinger rotates at lower speeds, fuel tends to not atomize properly, thereby resulting in low combustion efficiency, and high emission/smoke/particulates/unburned hydrocarbons.
Therefore, conventional rotary slingers have to be operated at high speed for properly atomizing the fuel. When, the slinger is rotated at low speeds, such as during starting and altitude relight conditions, the fuel atomization effect of the slinger is relatively poor.
In one aspect, there is provided a slinger combustor for a gas turbine engine, the slinger combustor comprising: an annular combustor shell concentrically disposed about a central axis and defining an annular combustion chamber having a radially inner annular fuel inlet for receiving a spray of fuel centrifuged by a fuel slinger mounted for rotation about the central axis, a fuel atomization zone extending radially outwardly from the radially inner circumferential fuel inlet and merging into a radially outwardly flaring expansion zone leading to a combustion zone, a plurality of nozzle air inlets defined in the fuel atomization zone of the combustor shell, the nozzle air inlets having a nozzle axis intersecting the stream of fuel centrifuged by the fuel slinger and a tangential component in a direction of rotation of the fuel slinger, and a plurality of dilution holes defined in the combustor shell, the dilution holes having a dilution axis intersecting the combustion zone, and wherein the dilution axis of at least some of the dilution holes has a tangential component in a direction opposite to the direction of rotation of the fuel slinger.
In a second aspect, there is provided a method for mixing fuel and air in an annular combustion chamber defined between front and rear liners mounted about a central axis, comprising: centrifuging fuel in a radially outward direction through a radially inner annular fuel inlet of the combustion chamber, the fuel having a swirl component about the central axis; injecting air into the flow of fuel through air jet holes defined in the front and rear liners at a location adjacent to said radially inner annular fuel inlet, the air being injected with a swirl component in a same direction as that of the swirl component of the fuel, and injecting dilution air through dilution holes defined in the front and rear liners at a location downstream from the air jet holes, the dilution holes being oriented such that the dilution air flowing through at least one of said front and rear liners has a swirl component in a direction opposite to the swirl component of the fuel.
Reference is now made to the accompanying figures, in which:
The combustor 16 is housed in a plenum 25 supplied with compressed air from a compressor diffuser 27. The combustor 16 has an annular combustor shell 24 concentrically mounted about the engine centerline 11 in the plenum 25. The combustor shell 24 may have an upstream or front annular liner 26 and a downstream or rear annular liner 28. The liners 26 and 28 are axially spaced-apart to define therebetween an annular combustion chamber 30. A rotary fuel slinger 20 is mounted for rotation with the engine high pressure shaft 34. The slinger 20 has a ring shaped-body and is axially aligned with a radially inner circumferential fuel inlet opening 36 defined in the combustor shell 24 between the upstream and downstream liners 26 an 28. The rotary fuel slinger 20 is configured to atomize and spray fuel radially outwardly through the circumferential opening 36 for ignition in a combustion zone 38 (
As mentioned herein before, rotary fuel slingers are best suited for high power conditions (e.g. take-off, climb and cruise power levels). At low power levels, fuel may not atomized properly, resulting in lower combustion efficiency. As will be seen herein after, combustion efficiency at low power levels may be improved by injecting air through small jet holes generally in the direction of the fuel injection. The air jets may be oriented to shear the fuel spray sheet from the slinger 20 while atomizing the fuel in addition to the pressure atomization from the slinger. In this way, fuel atomization may be improved at low power and at high power the fuel will be pre-mixed.
Referring now more particularly to
Now referring to
Hence, the combustor shell has numerous nozzle air inlets 52a, 52b in the fuel atomization zone 46 for impinging onto the radially outward fuel spray produced by the slinger 20, in close proximity to slinger fuel outlet, thereby encouraging rapid mixing of air and fuel. The orientation of the axis of the nozzle air inlets 52a, 52b relative to the fuel spray may create the necessary shearing forces between air jets and fuel stream, to encourage secondary fuel droplets breakup, and assist in rapid fuel mixing and vaporization.
As shown in
Dilution/quench jet holes 70a, 70b are respectively defined in the upstream and downstream liners 26, 28 downstream of the effusion holes 60. According to one embodiment, the dilution jet holes 70a, 70b have a length/diameter ratio comprised between about 3.5 to about 4.5. As can be appreciated from
Like the swirler air jets 54 disposed in the fuel atomization zone 46, the dilution air jets 72a, 72b (and thus the dilutions holes) may have axial, radial and tangential components. It can be appreciated from
The above described air dilution flow field contributes to the formation of a low velocity zone 50 (
The combustor shell 26 downstream of the dilution/quench jet holes 70a, 70b may be cooled by effusion cooling. To that end, effusion holes 80a, 80b may be defined in the upstream and downstream liners 26, 28 along a combustor zone extending downstream from the combustion zone 38. As shown in
Also, as shown in
An array of circumferentially distributed high pressure turbine vanes 90 (only one shown in the drawings) is mounted to the downstream outlet end of the combustor shell for directing the combustion gases to a high pressure turbine rotor (not show). Each vane may have a hollow airfoil body for receiving a flow of cooling air. The vane airfoil is designed to maintain the swirl angle coming out from the diffuser 27. Due to the high swirling flow at the exit of the combustor 16, the HPT vane chord length can be reduced significantly.
The array of vanes 90 may be circumferentially segmented. Each segment may comprise a plurality of vanes extending radially between inner 92 and outer shrouds 94. As best shown in
The above description is meant to be exemplary only, and one skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made to the embodiments described without departing from the scope of the invention disclosed. Modifications which fall within the scope of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art, in light of a review of this disclosure, and such modifications are intended to fall within the appended claims.
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