Application of Rainbow Thermometry to the Study of Fuel Droplet Heat-Up and Evaporation Characteristics

1997 ◽  
Vol 119 (3) ◽  
pp. 573-584 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. V. Sankar ◽  
D. H. Buermann ◽  
W. D. Bachalo

Advanced, nonintrusive, laser-based diagnostics are being developed for simultaneously measuring the size, velocity, temperature, and instantaneous regression rates of vaporizing/burning fuel droplets in polydisperse flow environments. The size and velocity of the droplets are measured using a conventional phase Doppler particle analyzer (PDPA), and the droplet temperatures are simultaneously measured with a rainbow thermometer. This integrated diagnostic has been applied to the study of fuel droplet heat-up characteristics in a swirl-stabilized kerosene spray flame. It has also been shown that a novel extension of rainbow thermometry can be used additionally to extract the instantaneous droplet vaporization rate. The feasibility of measuring the instantaneous regression rate has also been demonstrated using controlled experiments with a vaporizing/burning stream of ethanol droplets.

Author(s):  
Subramanian V. Sankar ◽  
Dale H. Buermann ◽  
William D. Bachalo

Advanced, non-intrusive, laser-based diagnostics are being developed for simultaneously measuring the size, velocity, temperature, and instantaneous regression rates of vaporizing/burning fuel droplets in polydisperse flow environments. The size and velocity of the droplets are measured using a conventional phase Doppler particle analyzer (PDPA), whereas the droplet temperatures are simultaneously measured with a rainbow thermometer. This integrated diagnostic has been applied to the study of fuel droplet heat-up characteristics in a swirl-stabilized kerosene spray flame. It has also been shown that a novel extension of rainbow thermometry can be used to additionally extract the instantaneous droplet vaporization rate. The feasibility of measuring the instantaneous regression rate has also been demonstrated using controlled experiments with a vaporizing/burning stream of ethanol droplets.


2005 ◽  
Vol 127 (2) ◽  
pp. 199-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Achintya Mukhopadhyay ◽  
Dipankar Sanyal

An algorithm for solution of a model for heating and evaporation of a fuel droplet has been developed. The objective of the work is to develop a computationally economic solution module for simulating droplet evaporation that can be incorporated in spray combustion CFD model that handles a large number of droplets. The liquid-phase transient diffusive equation has been solved semi-analytically, which involves a spatially closed-form and temporally discretized solution procedure. The model takes into account droplet surface regression, nonunity gas-phase Lewis number and variation of latent heat with temperature. The accuracy of the model is identical to a Finite Volume solution obtained on a very fine nonuniform grid, but the computational cost is significantly less, making this approach suitable for use in a spray combustion code. The evaporation of isolated heptane droplet in a quiescent ambient has been investigated for ambient pressures of 1 to 5 bar.


2013 ◽  
Vol 316-317 ◽  
pp. 17-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng Tung Chong ◽  
Simone Hochgreb

A model gas turbine burner was employed to investigate spray flames established under globally lean, continuous, swirling conditions. Two types of fuel were used to generate liquid spray flames: palm biodiesel and Jet-A1. The main swirling air flow was preheated to 350 °C prior to mixing with airblast-atomized fuel droplets at atmospheric pressure. The global flame structure of flame and flow field were investigated at the fixed power output of 6 kW. Flame chemiluminescence imaging technique was employed to investigate the flame reaction zones, while particle imaging velocimetry (PIV) was utilized to measure the flow field within the combustor. The flow fields of both flames are almost identical despite some differences in the flame reaction zones.


Fuel ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 268 ◽  
pp. 117407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jigang Wang ◽  
Xiaoyu Huang ◽  
Xinqi Qiao ◽  
Dehao Ju ◽  
Chunhua Sun

2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (2) ◽  
pp. 248-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. K. Aggarwal ◽  
H. C. Mongia

This paper deals with the multicomponent nature of gas turbine fuels under high-pressure conditions. The study is motivated by the consideration that the droplet submodels that are currently employed in spray codes for predicting gas turbine combustor flows do not adequately incorporate the multicomponent fuel and high-pressure effects. The quasi-steady multicomponent droplet model has been employed to investigate conditions under which the vaporization behavior of a multicomponent fuel droplet can be represented by a surrogate pure fuel droplet. The physical system considered is that of a multicomponent fuel droplet undergoing quasi-steady vaporization in an environment characterized by its temperature, pressure, and composition. Using different vaporization models, such as infinite-diffusion and diffusion-limit models, the predicted vaporization history and other relevant properties of a bicomponent droplet are compared with those of a surrogate single-component fuel droplet over a range of parameters relevant to gas turbine combustors. Results indicate that for moderate and high-power operation, a suitably selected single-component (50 percent boiling point) fuel can be used to represent the vaporization behavior of a bicomponent fuel, provided one employs the diffusion-limit or effective-diffusivity model. Simulation of the bicomponent fuel by a surrogate fuel becomes increasingly better at higher pressures. In fact, the droplet vaporization behavior at higher pressures is observed to be more sensitive to droplet heating models rather than to liquid fuel composition. This can be attributed to increase in the droplet heatup time and reduction in the volatility differential between the constituent fuels at higher pressures. For ignition, lean blowout and idle operations, characterized by low pressure and temperature ambient, the multicomponent fuel evaporation cannot be simulated by a single-component fuel. The validity of a quasi-steady high-pressure droplet vaporization model has also been examined. The model includes the nonideal gas behavior, liquid-phase solubility of gases, and variable thermo-transport properties including their dependence on pressure. Predictions of the high-pressure droplet model show good agreement with the available experimental data over a wide range of pressures, implying that quasi-steady vaporization model can be used at pressures up to the fuel critical pressure.


1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 959-965 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tsung Leo Jiang ◽  
Huei-Huang Chiu

The interaction between a burning fuel droplet and satellite oxidizer droplets is studied analytically. The effects of droplet spacing and droplet size ratio on the flame configuration of a burning fuel droplet with a satellite oxidizer droplet are analyzed in a high-temperature oxidizing environment by using the bispherical coordinate system. Three combustion modes including normal combustion, conjugate combustion, and composite combustion are identified at appropriate droplet size ratio and droplet spacing. The burning rate of the fuel droplet is found to be greater than that of an isolated burning fuel droplet, and to increase with the decreasing distance between two droplets. This result has shown a positive effect on the interaction between fuel and oxidizer droplets, in contrast to that of two interacting fuel droplets where the burning rate decreases with decreasing droplet spacing. The combustion configuration of a fuel droplet surrounded by six satellite oxidizer droplets symmetrically is also examined by the method of images. The flame that encloses the fuel droplet is found to be “compressed” and distorted to a nonspherical shape due not only to the group effect among oxidizer droplets but also to the interaction of bipropellant droplets. The results indicate that the burning rate of a fuel droplet increases and the flame size decreases significantly as a result of an increased supply of oxidizer vapor provided by the surrounding oxidizer droplets. Therefore properly optimized bipropellant combustion is potentially able to achieve a desired combustion performance with a much smaller combustor than a conventional spray burner.


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