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Increasing Operational Stability in Low NOX GT Combustor Using Fuel Rich Concentric Pilot Combustor

  • Yeshayahou Levy

    EMAIL logo
    , Vladimir Erenburg

    , Valery Sherbaum

    , Vitali Ovcharenko

    , Leonid Rosentsvit

    , Boris Chudnovsky

    , Amiel Herszage

    and Alexander Talanker

Published/Copyright: March 27, 2012
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International Journal of Turbo & Jet-Engines
From the journal Volume 29 Issue 1

Abstract

Lean combustion is a method in which combustion takes place under low equivalence ratio and relatively low combustion temperatures. As such, it has the potential to lower the effect of the relatively high activation energy nitrogen-oxygen reactions which are responsible for substantial NOX formation during combustion processes. However, lowering temperature reduces the reaction rate and deteriorates combustion stability. The objective of the present study is to reduce the lower equivalence ratio limit of the stable combustion operational boundary in lean Gas Turbine (GT) combustors while still maintaining combustion stability.

A lean premixed gaseous combustor was equipped with a surrounding concentric pilot flame operating under rich conditions, thus generating a hot stream of combustion products with significant amount of reactive radicals. The main combustor's fuel-air composition was varied from stoichiometric to lean mixtures. The pilot's mixture composition was also varied by changing the air flow rate, within a limited rich mixtures range. The pilot fuel flow rate was always lower than five percent of the total fuel supply at the specific stage of the experiments.

About the authors

Yeshayahou Levy
Vladimir Erenburg
Valery Sherbaum
Vitali Ovcharenko
Leonid Rosentsvit
Boris Chudnovsky
Amiel Herszage
Alexander Talanker
Received: 2012-01-19
Accepted: 2012-02-1
Published Online: 2012-03-27
Published in Print: 2012-03-27

©2012 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

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