Abstract

Gas-turbine combustion chambers typically consist of nominally identical sectors arranged in a rotationally symmetric pattern. However, in practice, the geometry is not perfectly symmetric. This may be due to design decisions, such as placing dampers in an azimuthally nonuniform fashion, or to uncertainties in the design parameters, which break the rotational symmetry of the combustion chamber. The question is whether these deviations from symmetry have impact on the thermoacoustic-stability calculation. The paper addresses this question by proposing a fast adjoint-based perturbation method. This method can be integrated into numerical frameworks that are industrial standard such as lumped-network models, Helmholtz and linearized Euler equations. The thermoacoustic stability of asymmetric combustion chambers is investigated by perturbing rotationally symmetric combustor models. The approach proposed in this paper is applied to a realistic three-dimensional combustion chamber model with an experimentally measured flame transfer function (FTF). The model equations are solved with a Helmholtz solver. Results for modes of zeroth, first, and second azimuthal order are presented and compared to exact solutions of the problem. A focus of the discussion is set on the loss of mode-degeneracy due to symmetry breaking and the capability of the perturbation theory to accurately predict it. In particular, an “inclination rule” that explains the behavior of degenerate eigenvalues at first order is proven.

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