Abstract
The pressure gain across a rotating detonation combustor offers an efficiency rise and potential architecture simplification of compact gas turbine engines. However, the combustor walls of the rotating detonation combustor are periodically swept by both detonation and oblique shock waves at several kilohertz, disrupting the boundary layer, resulting in a rather complex convective heat transfer between the fluid and the solid walls. A computationally fast procedure is presented to calculate this extraordinary convective heat flux along the detonation combustor. First, a numerical model combining a two-dimensional method of characteristics approach with a monodimensional reaction model is used to compute the combustor flow field. Then, an integral boundary layer routine is used to predict the main boundary layer parameters. Finally, an empirical correlation is adopted to predict the convective heat-transfer coefficient to obtain the bulk and local heat flux. The procedure has been applied to a combustor operating with premixed hydrogen–air fuel. The results of this approach compare well with high-fidelity unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes three-dimensional simulations, which included wall refinement in an unrolled combustor. The model demonstrates that total pressure has an important influence on heat flux within the combustor and is less dependent on the inlet total temperature. For an inlet total pressure of 0.5 MPa and an inlet total temperature of 300 K, a peak time-averaged heat flux of 6 MW/m2 was identified at the location of the triple point, followed by a decrease downstream of the oblique shock, to about 4 MW/m2. Maximum discrepancy between the reduced-order model and the high-fidelity solver was 16%, but the present reduced-order model required a computational time of only 200 s, that is, about 7000 times faster than the high-fidelity three-dimensional unsteady solver. Therefore, the present tool can be used to optimize the combustor cooling system.
Highlights
Rotating detonation combustors represent a potential efficiency leap for gas turbine power plants [1]
A rotating detonation combustor is characterized by an annular channel where combustible mixture is injected and ignited by a self-sustained spinning detonation front at supersonic speeds
We present a reduced-order model that predicts the convective heat transfer in a rotating detonation combustor (RDC) with a numerical approach that is three orders of magnitude faster than three-dimensional unsteady Reynolds-averaged solvers
Summary
Rotating detonation combustors represent a potential efficiency leap for gas turbine power plants [1]. This boost in efficiency is due to the pressure gain obtained through the detonation process, which leads to a more efficient thermal cycle. A rotating detonation combustor is characterized by an annular channel where combustible mixture is injected and ignited by a self-sustained spinning detonation front at supersonic speeds. Practical implementation is currently constrained by important thermal management issues due to the high-speed flow and high temperature levels reached inside the combustor. The combustor walls are periodically swept by shock waves at several kilohertz, which results in extraordinary heat-flux levels that limit the operability of the combustor.
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.