Abstract

The effects of inert diluents in the fuel mixture of a model swirl stabilized gas turbine combustor, under thermoacoustically unstable limit cycle operation, were studied experimentally. The measurements included particle image velocimetry (PIV), high-speed CH* chemiluminescent imaging, and dynamic pressure signals. The paper focuses on the dynamic phenomenon of the period doubling bifurcation, which came about when the equivalence ratio of undiluted flames was enriched from 0.55 to 0.60 under constant Reynolds number (). The bifurcation featured an emergence of an aerodynamically related timescale in addition to the fundamental timescale that was induced from an unstable acoustic eigenmode. The aerodynamic timescale is introduced by azimuthal convection of a high-heat-release-rate region and is linked in the literature with a precessing motion of the recirculation zone. It was found that on increasing the diluent molar fraction up to 50%, the amplitude and the frequency of the limit cycle fundamental acoustic mode decreased. A mechanism to interpret this suppression is that increasing the diluent molar fraction of the fuel makes the flame more susceptible to quenching because the extinction strain rate of the mixture is decreased. The paper argues that the existence of inert diluents in the fuel can significantly alter the dynamic state of the combustor, because the anchoring locations of the flame greatly depend on the composition-sensitive extinction strain rate of the mixture.

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