Thermo-Acoustic Coupling and Dynamic Response of a Premixed Methane-Air Flame

Author: Palm, Steven Leslie

Year: 2017

Degree: Dissertation (Ph.D.)

Advisor: Culick, Fred E. C.

Committee Members: Shepherd, Joseph E.; Culick, Fred E. C.; Gharib, Morteza; Blanquart, Guillaume; Yang, Vigor

Option: Aeronautics; Electrical Engineering

DOI: 10.7907/Z9V12309

Abstract

The work herein generally applies to the problem of combustion instability. Combustion instabilities first arose in engineering practice in the 1940s when they were experienced during the development of solid and liquid propellant rocket engines. Later, similar problems arose in gas turbine combustors and afterburners. However, the earliest technical case of the phenomenon dates back to Rijke in 1859 with his "singing" tube.

The presented work focuses on the study of a simple, stagnation plane stabilized, laminar, flat-flame burner. In particular the dynamic response of the burner is examined under excitation by a driven acoustic field. After characterization of the burner’s operational range, the response of the system is measured from 20 Hz to nearly 2000 Hz over the span of operating parameters using an optically filtered PMT and lens combination. A library of the collected and reduced data is generated.

A deeper investigation of the burner dynamics at a given reference operating condition is performed using phase-resolved PLIF. Fluctuations in the spatial distributions of the LIF signals for several target species (OH, CH, CH2O) under acoustic forcing are measured. In addition, visualization of the unsteady reactant flow using precision acetone seeding and PLIF at 277 nm is performed. Subsequent cinematographic sequences are produced along with spatially resolved plots of the combustion response function and the forced Rayleigh index for numerous drive frequencies. A library of the collected and reduced data is assembled.

Analysis of the collected data reveals two principal mechanisms contributing to the unsteady response of the flame. Structure development in (and subsequent convention along) the unsteady shear layer of the laminar jet dominates the response at the outer reaches of the flame. The inner region of the flame is driven largely by the Helmholtz response of the burner nozzle cavity. These two operations mutually contribute to produce the general shape of the combustion response curve. Ultimately, the data is used to construct a simplified model for the combustion response function. The model is enhanced with two additional revisions guided by the improved understanding of the mechanisms involved.

The document ends with numerous appendices describing, in detail, the equipment used, much of which was fabricated specifically for this work. These appendices, in combination with information presented in the chapters, provide substantial detail regarding the experimental configuration and operating conditions. Great effort was made to provide the necessary information to allow replication of the experiments as well as to support future modeling endeavors as a validation dataset.

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