Abstract

An experimental investigation of self-excited combustion instabilities in a high pressure, lean premixed natural gas jet flame is presented. The combustor is designed with optical access and is instrumented with high frequency pressure transducers at multiple axial and circumferential locations. OH*-chemiluminescence measurements performed at a frequency of 50 kHz were temporally synchronized with the acoustic measurements recorded from the pressure transducer array during the test. Two representative test conditions are analyzed in detail: Flame 1 (F1) that presents longitudinal mode dynamics (p′/pc=3%) and Flame 2 (F2) that presents high amplitude transverse instabilities (p′/pc=15%). Singular Spectrum Analysis (SSA) and Dynamic Mode Decomposition (DMD) analysis indicate a strong correlation of both instabilities to flame-vortex interactions. Longitudinal mode instabilities are correlated with axisymmetric vortex shedding about the combustor axis that result in periodic axial variations in heat release at the 1L frequency. Transverse mode instabilities correspond to asymmetric vortex shedding pattern that drive transverse variations in heat release at the fundamental 1T frequency of the combustion chamber. The phase relationship of the flame emission intensity and the chamber head-end pressure measurement at the 1T frequency indicates presence of a non-stationary transverse mode that rotates about the chamber axis at 55 Hz.

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