Abstract

A switch from fossil fuels to hydrogen is currently not feasible mostly due to supply and infrastructure issues. One of the possible approaches, and this is now practiced to a limited extent in industrial gas turbines, is to blend relatively small amounts of hydrogen with fossil fuels curbing the carbon dioxide emissions. However, studies assessing the influence of modest amounts of hydrogen blending with hydrocarbon fuels on soot processes yielded contradictory results. Most of these experimental and numerical studies were performed on laminar diffusion flames and studies on turbulent flames are scarce. One of the confounding factors in assessing the influence of hydrogen is selection of a control experiment in which the fossil fuel is blended with the same amount of an inert diluent. Using helium in the control experiment is preferable because of its similar transport properties and heat capacity to those of hydrogen. Hence, we studied the soot processes in a model gas turbine combustor in which the flame is stabilized by an air swirl. Swirl-stabilized platform ensures that with and without hydrogen/helium dilution, the hydrodynamics of the combustor stays fixed. Base fuel ethylene is supplemented with hydrogen or helium by the same amount to separate the dilution affects and assess the direct chemical interaction of hydrogen related to soot formation. Soot volume fraction and primary soot particle diameters were measured by auto-compensating laser induced-incandescence for all cases. Flow field data obtained using stereoscopic particle image velocimetry is utilized to ascertain the hydrodynamic effects on soot distribution due to addition of lighter species. Soot formation was found to be enhanced by the addition of hydrogen when allowance was made for the dilution effect using the helium doped flame experiments. Possible causes of this observation including the molecular diffusivities of hydrogen and helium, and chemical interaction are discussed.

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