TY - JOUR
T1 - A comparison of partially premixed methane/air combustion in confined vane-swirl and jet-swirl combustors
AU - Zhao, Xiaoyao
AU - Peng, Weikang
AU - Yu, Xiao
AU - Shi, Baolu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - The characteristics of partially premixed methane/air combustion in aconfined geometry are experimentally investigated in two types of swirling flows introduced by using avane swirl (VS) and tangential jet swirl (TJS), respectively. To make acomparison, acoaxial jet (CJ) burner is also employed. The fuel and air are individually injected through their own inlets, partially premixed in amixing chamber, and then burned in aconfined cylindrical combustor. In VS and CJ combustors, the fuel is axially injected from the center; while in the TJS combustor the fuel is injected through either acentral inlet or tangential inlet. The geometry swirl number varies from 0 to 3.38. The flame structures, extinction limits, temperature distribution, NOx, CO concentrations and flow velocities are systematically examined to compare the flame characteristics. The detailed observations show that the swirl plays asignificant role in the fuel mixing, flame stabilization, and flame structures. As fuel is axially injected, ayellow flame is established at low airflow rate regardless of the swirl number values. As the airflow rate increases, ablue flame is obtained; the flame extinguishes at avery low global equivalence ratio of 0.25 in the VS and TJS combustors. When fuel and air are tangentially injected, ablue flame similar to premixed one is established; asteady flame is obtained from lean to rich limits (equivalence ratio of 0.5 to 1.68). The temperature is distributed more uniformly in the high swirl TJS combustor, particularly for the one adopts pure tangential jets of fuel and air, in which the measured NOx and CO concentrations are the lowest. The differences were mainly attributed to different mixing modes.
AB - The characteristics of partially premixed methane/air combustion in aconfined geometry are experimentally investigated in two types of swirling flows introduced by using avane swirl (VS) and tangential jet swirl (TJS), respectively. To make acomparison, acoaxial jet (CJ) burner is also employed. The fuel and air are individually injected through their own inlets, partially premixed in amixing chamber, and then burned in aconfined cylindrical combustor. In VS and CJ combustors, the fuel is axially injected from the center; while in the TJS combustor the fuel is injected through either acentral inlet or tangential inlet. The geometry swirl number varies from 0 to 3.38. The flame structures, extinction limits, temperature distribution, NOx, CO concentrations and flow velocities are systematically examined to compare the flame characteristics. The detailed observations show that the swirl plays asignificant role in the fuel mixing, flame stabilization, and flame structures. As fuel is axially injected, ayellow flame is established at low airflow rate regardless of the swirl number values. As the airflow rate increases, ablue flame is obtained; the flame extinguishes at avery low global equivalence ratio of 0.25 in the VS and TJS combustors. When fuel and air are tangentially injected, ablue flame similar to premixed one is established; asteady flame is obtained from lean to rich limits (equivalence ratio of 0.5 to 1.68). The temperature is distributed more uniformly in the high swirl TJS combustor, particularly for the one adopts pure tangential jets of fuel and air, in which the measured NOx and CO concentrations are the lowest. The differences were mainly attributed to different mixing modes.
KW - Vane swirl
KW - flame structure
KW - jet swirl
KW - partially premixed combustion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85117088290&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00102202.2021.1943371
DO - 10.1080/00102202.2021.1943371
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85117088290
SN - 0010-2202
VL - 195
SP - 212
EP - 231
JO - Combustion Science and Technology
JF - Combustion Science and Technology
IS - 2
ER -