Numerical Investigation of Unsteady Combustor Turbine Interaction For Flexible Power Generation

F. Presti, Marwick Sembritzky, Benjamin Winhart, Pascal Post, F. Mare, A. Wiedermann, Johannes Greving, Robert Krewinkel
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Abstract

With the growing importance of regenerative power generation and especially of a hydrogen-based economy, the full potential of gas turbines of the smaller output class (< 10 MW) can be ideally exploited to provide peak coverage of the energy need whilst stabilising the electric grids in the mid- and low-voltage range. Such machines can be typically started in a relatively short time (similarly to aero engines) and are capable, at the same time, of delivering dispatchable power-on-demand. A safe, stable and profitable operation under highly unsteady conditions poses renewed challenges for an optimal thermal management (especially in the HP stages) as well as control and surveillance of the machines. The understanding and hence predictability of the propagation of the temperature inhomogeneities originating at the combustor outlet remains hence a primary objective of current research, as persistent distortion patterns could be adopted at the turbine exhaust as diagnostic indications of a malfunction of the combustor, for example. In the present study low-frequency disturbances introduced by a periodic load variation have been simulated and superimposed to the inhomogeneous, unsteady flow entering a 3-stage, high-pressure industrial gas turbine fed by a can-type combustion chamber comprising 6 silo-burners. The effects of the unsteadiness realized at the combustor exit have been investigated by means of Detached Eddy Simulations, whereby a density-based solution approach with detailed thermodynamics has been employed. The periodic disturbances at the turbine inlet have been obtained by means of an artificially generated, unsteady field, resulting from a two-dimensional snapshot of the flow field at the combustor exit. Also, a combustor failure has been mimicked by reducing (respectively increasing) the mean temperature in some of the turbine inlet regions corresponding to the outlet of two burners. The propagation and amplitude changes of temperature fluctuations have been analyzed in the frequency domain. Tracking of the temperature fluctuations’ maxima at the lowest frequencies revealed characteristic migration patterns indicating that the corresponding fluctuations persist with a non-negligible amplitude up to the last rows. A distinct footprint could also be observed at the same locations when a combustor failure was simulated, showing that, in principle, the early detection of combustor failures is indeed possible.
柔性发电非定常燃烧室-涡轮相互作用的数值研究
随着可再生能源发电的重要性日益增加,特别是氢基经济,可以理想地利用较小输出级别(< 10兆瓦)的燃气轮机的全部潜力,以提供能源需求的峰值覆盖,同时稳定中低压范围内的电网。这种机器通常可以在相对较短的时间内启动(类似于航空发动机),同时能够按需提供可调度的电力。在高度不稳定的条件下,安全、稳定和盈利的运行对优化热管理(特别是在高压阶段)以及机器的控制和监控提出了新的挑战。因此,理解和预测源自燃烧室出口的温度不均匀性的传播仍然是当前研究的主要目标,例如,可以在涡轮排气处采用持续的扭曲模式作为燃烧室故障的诊断指标。在本研究中,模拟了由周期性负荷变化引入的低频扰动,并将其叠加到进入由6个筒仓燃烧器组成的罐式燃烧室的三级高压工业燃气轮机的不均匀非定常流中。利用分离涡模拟的方法研究了在燃烧室出口实现的非定常的影响,其中采用了基于密度的详细热力学求解方法。涡轮进气道的周期性扰动是通过对燃烧室出口流场的二维快照所产生的人工非定常场来获得的。此外,通过降低(分别提高)与两个燃烧器出口相对应的涡轮进口区域的平均温度来模拟燃烧器故障。在频域分析了温度波动的传播和幅度变化。对温度波动在最低频率下的最大值的跟踪揭示了特征迁移模式,表明相应的波动以不可忽略的幅度持续到最后一行。当模拟燃烧器故障时,还可以在相同的位置观察到明显的足迹,这表明,原则上,早期检测燃烧器故障确实是可能的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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