58456 - Amplitude-Dependent Damping and Driving Rates of High-Frequency Thermoacoustic Oscillations in a Lab-Scale Lean-Premixed Gas Turbine Combustor
This paper presents the numerical investigations of amplitude-dependent stability behavior of thermoacoustic oscillations at screech level frequencies in a lean-premixed, atmospheric, swirl-stabilized, lab-scale gas turbine combustor. A hybrid Computational Fluid Dynamics / Computational AeroAcoustics (CFD / CAA) approach is applied to individually compute thermoacoustic damping and driving rates for various acoustic amplitude levels at the combustors’ first transversal eigenfrequency. Periodically forced CFD simulations with the Unsteady Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (URANS) equations mimic the real combustor’s rotating first transversal eigenmode. A slow and monotonous increase of the forcing amplitude over time allows observation of the amplitude-dependent flow field and flame evolution. In accordance with measured OH*-chemiluminescence images, a pulsation-amplitude dependent flame contraction is reproduced in the CFD simulations, where acoustically induced vortex shedding is identified as the root-cause of this phenomenon. At several amplitude levels, period-averaged flow fields are then denoted as reference states, which serve as inputs for the CAA part. There, eigenfrequency simulations with linearized flow equations are performed with the Finite Element Method (FEM). The outcomes are damping and driving rates as a response to the amplitude dependency of the mean flow field, which combined give the net thermoacoustic growth rate. It is found that driving due to flame-acoustics interactions only governs a weak amplitude dependency, which agrees with prior, experimentally based studies at the authors’ institute. This disqualifies the perception of heat release saturation as the root-cause for limit-cycle oscillations – at least in this high-frequency thermoacoustic system. Instead, significantly increased dissipation due to the interaction of acoustically induced vorticity perturbations with the mean flow is identified, which may explain the formation of a limit-cycle.
Amplitude-Dependent Damping and Driving Rates of High-Frequency Thermoacoustic Oscillations in a Lab-Scale Lean-Premixed Gas Turbine Combustor
Paper Type
Technical Paper Publication
Description
Session: 04-08 Combustion Dynamics: High-Frequency Instabilities and Instability Analysis
Paper Number: 58456
Start Time: June 9th, 2021, 12:15 PM
Presenting Author: Thomas Hofmeister
Authors: Thomas Hofmeister Technical University of Munich
Thomas Sattelmayer Technische Universität München