• Title/Summary/Keyword: Model co-generation gas turbine combustor

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A Combustion Instability Analysis of a Model Gas Turbine Combustor for Co-generation (열병합발전용 모델 가스터빈 연소기의 연소불안정 해석)

  • Cha, Dong-Jin;Shin, Dong-Myung
    • Proceedings of the SAREK Conference
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    • 2009.06a
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    • pp.1449-1457
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    • 2009
  • Combustion instability is a major issue in design of co-generation gas turbine combustors for efficient operation with low emissions. Combustion instability is induced by the interaction of the unsteady heat release of the combustion process and the change in the acoustic pressure in the combustion chamber. In an effort to develop a technique to predict self-excited combustion instability of co-generation gas turbine combustors, a new stability analysis method based on the transfer matrix method is developed. The method views the combustion system as a one-dimensional acoustic system with a side branch and describes the heat source as the input to the system. This approach makes it possible to use not only the advantages of the transfer matrix method but also well established classic control theories. The approach is applied to a simple co-generation gas turbine combustion system, which shows the validity and effectiveness of the approach.

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Combustion Characteristics and On-site Performance Test of a Double-cone Partial Premixed Nozzle with Various Fuel hole Patterns (이중 콘형 부분예혼합 GT 연료노즐의 연소특성 및 발전플랜트 실증)

  • Kim, Han Seok;Cho, Ju Hyeong;Kim, Min Kuk;Hwang, Jeongjae;Lee, Won June;Min, Kyungwook;Kang, Do Won
    • Journal of the Korean Institute of Gas
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    • v.25 no.6
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    • pp.22-28
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    • 2021
  • Combustion characteristics were examined experimentally for a swirl-stabilized double cone premixed burner nozzle used for industrial gas turbines for power generation. An original model and a variant with a different fuel injection pattern are tested to compare their combustion characteristics such as NOx, CO and stability in pressurized conditions with single burner-flame and in an ambient multi-flame conditions with multi-burners. Test results show that NOx emissions are smaller for the variant, whose number of fuel holes is reduced with the same total area of fuel holes, in ambient and pressurized single-flame conditions with single burner, which results from enhanced fuel/air mixing due to a higher penetration of fuel into the air stream. The multi-burnerflame test results show that NOx emissions are smaller for the variant due to reduced flame interactions, which, on the contrary, slightly reduces the stability margin. On-site test results fromin an actual power plants also show that NOx emissions are reduced for the variant, compared with the original one, which is in agreement with the lab test results stated above.