{"title":"区域喷气飞机发动机扇形燃烧室喷雾燃烧的大涡模拟——双壁衬板对NOx形成的影响","authors":"H. Moriai, K. Hori, R. Kurose, S. Komori","doi":"10.1615/tsfp9.340","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Large-eddy simulation (LES) is applied to a turbulent spray combustion field in a sector combustor for a regional jet aircraft engine under development, and the effects of liner-cooling air flow outlet location (i.e., effect of single/double wall liners) on the combustion behaviour and NOx emission are investigated. The combustor is designed based on RQL (Rich burn, Quick quench, Lean burn) concept to reduce NOx emission. In the LES, Jet-A1 is used as liquid fuel, and individual droplet motion is tracked in a Lagrangian manner with a parcel model. As the turbulent combustion model, an extended flamelet/progress-variable approach, in which heat transfer between droplets and ambient gas including radiation and heat loss from walls can be taken into account, is employed. A detailed chemistry mechanism of Jet-A1 with 1537 reactions and 274 chemical species is used. The radiative heat transfer is computed by the discrete ordinate (DO) method. The LES results show general agreement with the experimental data, and the double wall liner design seems desirable for low NOx RQL combustor. INTRODUCTION Due to increasing environmental awareness worldwide, aircraft emission (NOx, CO, PM, etc.) control have become more stringent in recent years. The aircraft exhaust gas amount is severely limited by the regulations adopted by CAEP (Committee on Aviation Environmental Protection). By CAEP/6 regulations which came into effect in 2008, NOx emission is reduced by 12% and by CAEP/8 regulations which will come into effect in 2014 NOx will be reduced by further 15%. NOx regulation is expected to be more stringent in the future steadily (Moriai and Miyake, 2008). With this background, the low NOx combustor technology is very important in the development of the latest aircraft engines. However, the precise predictions of emission from the combustor including combustion characteristics are so difficult that the development cycles including hardware design, fabricating and evaluation tests are generally repeated many times to meet specification requirements and end up with huge cost and time. Therefore, if many hardware tests are substituted with numerical simulations, significant development cost reduction is possible. Because the internal flow of the combustor is composed of complex phenomena, including spray atomization, turbulent mixing, and chemical reactions, numerical simulation is very difficult. In recent years, LES (Large-eddy simulation) that can simulate unsteady turbulent flow well attracts attention. The purpose of this study is, therefore, to apply the LES to a turbulent spray combustion field in a sector combustor for a regional jet aircraft engine under development, and to predict the spray combustion behaviour and emissions such as NOx and soot. Special attentions are focused on the effect of liner-cooling air flow outlet location (i.e., effect of single/double wall liner designs) on the NOx emission. NUMERICAL METHODS Large-Eddy Simulation In this work, the compressible reacting flow equations with two-way coupling between the continuous phase (gas phase) and dispersed phase (fuel droplets) were solved using an unstructured large-eddy simulation (LES) solver: FrontFlow/Red as extended by Kyoto University, CRIEPI and NuFD (Numerical Flow Designing, Co., Ltd.), referred to as FFR-Comb. The numerical methods used here are basically the same as those written in our previous paper (Morial et al., 2013), but the compressible scheme in Demirdžić et al. (1993) is newly employed (Tachibana et al., 2015). As turbulent combustion model, a flamelet/progress-variable approach which is originally 1 June 30 July 3, 2015 Melbourne, Australia 9 2C-2","PeriodicalId":196124,"journal":{"name":"Proceeding of Ninth International Symposium on Turbulence and Shear Flow Phenomena","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"LARGE-EDDY SIMULATION OF SPRAY COMBUTION IN A SECTOR COMBUSTOR FOR REGIONAL JET AIRCRAFT ENGINE - EFFECT OF DOUBLE-WALL LINER ON NOx FORMATION -\",\"authors\":\"H. Moriai, K. Hori, R. Kurose, S. 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The radiative heat transfer is computed by the discrete ordinate (DO) method. The LES results show general agreement with the experimental data, and the double wall liner design seems desirable for low NOx RQL combustor. INTRODUCTION Due to increasing environmental awareness worldwide, aircraft emission (NOx, CO, PM, etc.) control have become more stringent in recent years. The aircraft exhaust gas amount is severely limited by the regulations adopted by CAEP (Committee on Aviation Environmental Protection). By CAEP/6 regulations which came into effect in 2008, NOx emission is reduced by 12% and by CAEP/8 regulations which will come into effect in 2014 NOx will be reduced by further 15%. NOx regulation is expected to be more stringent in the future steadily (Moriai and Miyake, 2008). With this background, the low NOx combustor technology is very important in the development of the latest aircraft engines. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
将大涡模拟(LES)应用于正在研制的某型支线喷气发动机扇形燃烧室湍流喷雾燃烧场,研究了内衬冷却气流出口位置(即单/双壁内衬的影响)对燃烧行为和NOx排放的影响。燃烧室基于RQL(富燃、快淬、贫燃)理念设计,减少NOx排放。在LES中,Jet-A1被用作液体燃料,单个液滴的运动以拉格朗日方式用包裹模型进行跟踪。紊流燃烧模型采用扩展的火焰/过程变量方法,考虑液滴与环境气体之间的传热,包括壁面的辐射和热损失。利用了Jet-A1的1537个反应和274种化学物质的详细化学机理。采用离散坐标法(DO)计算辐射换热。LES结果与实验数据基本一致,双壁衬板设计是低NOx RQL燃烧室的理想选择。由于全球环保意识的提高,近年来飞机排放(NOx, CO, PM等)的控制变得更加严格。航空环境保护委员会(CAEP)对飞机的废气排放量进行了严格的限制。根据2008年生效的CAEP/6法规,NOx排放量将减少12%,而根据将于2014年生效的CAEP/8法规,NOx排放量将进一步减少15%。预计未来氮氧化物监管将更加严格(Moriai和Miyake, 2008)。在此背景下,低氮氧化物燃烧室技术在新型航空发动机的研制中显得尤为重要。然而,包括燃烧特性在内的燃烧室排放的精确预测是非常困难的,包括硬件设计、制造和评估测试在内的开发周期通常需要多次重复才能满足规范要求,从而导致巨大的成本和时间。因此,如果用数值模拟代替许多硬件测试,则可以显著降低开发成本。由于燃烧室内部流动是由复杂的现象组成的,包括喷雾雾化、湍流混合和化学反应,因此数值模拟非常困难。近年来,能够很好地模拟非定常湍流的大涡模拟技术引起了人们的关注。因此,本研究的目的是将LES应用于正在开发的支线喷气飞机发动机扇形燃烧室中的湍流喷雾燃烧场,并预测喷雾燃烧行为和排放,如氮氧化物和烟灰。特别关注的是内衬冷却气流出口位置(即单/双壁内衬设计的影响)对NOx排放的影响。本文采用京都大学、CRIEPI和NuFD (NUMERICAL flow design, Co., Ltd)开发的非结构化大涡模拟(LES)求解器FrontFlow/Red(简称FFR-Comb),求解了连续相(气相)和分散相(燃料液滴)双向耦合的可压缩反应流动方程。本文使用的数值方法与我们之前的论文(Morial et al., 2013)基本相同,但新采用了Demirdžić et al.(1993)中的可压缩方案(Tachibana et al., 2015)。作为湍流燃烧模型,一个小火焰/进程变量方法,最初是2015年6月1日30日7月3日澳大利亚墨尔本9 2C-2
LARGE-EDDY SIMULATION OF SPRAY COMBUTION IN A SECTOR COMBUSTOR FOR REGIONAL JET AIRCRAFT ENGINE - EFFECT OF DOUBLE-WALL LINER ON NOx FORMATION -
Large-eddy simulation (LES) is applied to a turbulent spray combustion field in a sector combustor for a regional jet aircraft engine under development, and the effects of liner-cooling air flow outlet location (i.e., effect of single/double wall liners) on the combustion behaviour and NOx emission are investigated. The combustor is designed based on RQL (Rich burn, Quick quench, Lean burn) concept to reduce NOx emission. In the LES, Jet-A1 is used as liquid fuel, and individual droplet motion is tracked in a Lagrangian manner with a parcel model. As the turbulent combustion model, an extended flamelet/progress-variable approach, in which heat transfer between droplets and ambient gas including radiation and heat loss from walls can be taken into account, is employed. A detailed chemistry mechanism of Jet-A1 with 1537 reactions and 274 chemical species is used. The radiative heat transfer is computed by the discrete ordinate (DO) method. The LES results show general agreement with the experimental data, and the double wall liner design seems desirable for low NOx RQL combustor. INTRODUCTION Due to increasing environmental awareness worldwide, aircraft emission (NOx, CO, PM, etc.) control have become more stringent in recent years. The aircraft exhaust gas amount is severely limited by the regulations adopted by CAEP (Committee on Aviation Environmental Protection). By CAEP/6 regulations which came into effect in 2008, NOx emission is reduced by 12% and by CAEP/8 regulations which will come into effect in 2014 NOx will be reduced by further 15%. NOx regulation is expected to be more stringent in the future steadily (Moriai and Miyake, 2008). With this background, the low NOx combustor technology is very important in the development of the latest aircraft engines. However, the precise predictions of emission from the combustor including combustion characteristics are so difficult that the development cycles including hardware design, fabricating and evaluation tests are generally repeated many times to meet specification requirements and end up with huge cost and time. Therefore, if many hardware tests are substituted with numerical simulations, significant development cost reduction is possible. Because the internal flow of the combustor is composed of complex phenomena, including spray atomization, turbulent mixing, and chemical reactions, numerical simulation is very difficult. In recent years, LES (Large-eddy simulation) that can simulate unsteady turbulent flow well attracts attention. The purpose of this study is, therefore, to apply the LES to a turbulent spray combustion field in a sector combustor for a regional jet aircraft engine under development, and to predict the spray combustion behaviour and emissions such as NOx and soot. Special attentions are focused on the effect of liner-cooling air flow outlet location (i.e., effect of single/double wall liner designs) on the NOx emission. NUMERICAL METHODS Large-Eddy Simulation In this work, the compressible reacting flow equations with two-way coupling between the continuous phase (gas phase) and dispersed phase (fuel droplets) were solved using an unstructured large-eddy simulation (LES) solver: FrontFlow/Red as extended by Kyoto University, CRIEPI and NuFD (Numerical Flow Designing, Co., Ltd.), referred to as FFR-Comb. The numerical methods used here are basically the same as those written in our previous paper (Morial et al., 2013), but the compressible scheme in Demirdžić et al. (1993) is newly employed (Tachibana et al., 2015). As turbulent combustion model, a flamelet/progress-variable approach which is originally 1 June 30 July 3, 2015 Melbourne, Australia 9 2C-2