Abstract

The Helmholtz method is developed to predict the self-excited thermoacoustic instabilities in a gas turbine combustor, combining flame describing functions, the measured damping rates under the firing condition, and the non-uniform spatial distributions of the physical parameters. The impact of the hydrodynamic and geometrical parameters on the thermoacoustic instabilities is investigated. The measured damping rates show lower values under a hot condition compared with those in a cold state. The experimental results indicate that the relative errors of the predicted eigenfrequencies and the velocity fluctuation levels are below 10%. The pressure amplitude decreases and the phase increases in the axial direction, indicating a typical 1/4-wavelengh mode. At a higher equivalence ratio, the mode shape in the axial direction becomes steeper due to the elevated fluctuation amplitude at the pressure antinode after enhancing the thermal power. When the air flow rate increases, the discrepancies between the pressure shape on the flame tube side and that on the plenum side are reduced. The velocity fluctuation level increases as the combustor length increases at a constant damping rate. In fact, the velocity fluctuation level first increases and then declines, caused by more significant damping rates when employing longer flame tubes. Self-excited thermoacoustic instabilities can be well predicted using the proposed method.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call