Passive control of thermoacoustic instabilities in swirl-stabilized combustion at elevated pressures

In this study, a porous insert is placed at the dump plane of a swirl-stabilized lean premixed combustor to passively suppress thermoacoustic instabilities. The diffuser-shaped annular ring of porous inert material influences the turbulent flow field directly, including recirculation zones and vorti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: L Justin Williams, Joseph Meadows, Ajay K Agrawal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-09-01
Series:International Journal of Spray and Combustion Dynamics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1756827716642193
id doaj-4d83af4fc242410eaa6d934fbaf37546
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4d83af4fc242410eaa6d934fbaf375462020-11-25T03:34:06ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Spray and Combustion Dynamics1756-82771756-82852016-09-01810.1177/175682771664219310.1177_1756827716642193Passive control of thermoacoustic instabilities in swirl-stabilized combustion at elevated pressuresL Justin WilliamsJoseph MeadowsAjay K AgrawalIn this study, a porous insert is placed at the dump plane of a swirl-stabilized lean premixed combustor to passively suppress thermoacoustic instabilities. The diffuser-shaped annular ring of porous inert material influences the turbulent flow field directly, including recirculation zones and vortical and/or shear layer structures to passively control the acoustic performance of the combustor. The porous inert material is made of silicon carbide–hafnium carbide coated, high-strength, high-temperature-resistant open-cell foam materials. In this study, the porous insert concept is investigated at above-ambient operating pressures to demonstrate its suitability for practical combustion applications. Experiments are conducted in quartz and metal combustors, without and with the porous insert while varying operating pressure, equivalence ratio, and reactant flow rate. Measurements show that the porous insert, and consequent changes in the combustor flow field, decrease the sound pressure levels at the frequency of combustion instability at all operating conditions investigated in this study. The porous insert also decreases the broadband combustion noise, i.e. the measured sound pressure levels over a wide frequency range.https://doi.org/10.1177/1756827716642193
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L Justin Williams
Joseph Meadows
Ajay K Agrawal
spellingShingle L Justin Williams
Joseph Meadows
Ajay K Agrawal
Passive control of thermoacoustic instabilities in swirl-stabilized combustion at elevated pressures
International Journal of Spray and Combustion Dynamics
author_facet L Justin Williams
Joseph Meadows
Ajay K Agrawal
author_sort L Justin Williams
title Passive control of thermoacoustic instabilities in swirl-stabilized combustion at elevated pressures
title_short Passive control of thermoacoustic instabilities in swirl-stabilized combustion at elevated pressures
title_full Passive control of thermoacoustic instabilities in swirl-stabilized combustion at elevated pressures
title_fullStr Passive control of thermoacoustic instabilities in swirl-stabilized combustion at elevated pressures
title_full_unstemmed Passive control of thermoacoustic instabilities in swirl-stabilized combustion at elevated pressures
title_sort passive control of thermoacoustic instabilities in swirl-stabilized combustion at elevated pressures
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Spray and Combustion Dynamics
issn 1756-8277
1756-8285
publishDate 2016-09-01
description In this study, a porous insert is placed at the dump plane of a swirl-stabilized lean premixed combustor to passively suppress thermoacoustic instabilities. The diffuser-shaped annular ring of porous inert material influences the turbulent flow field directly, including recirculation zones and vortical and/or shear layer structures to passively control the acoustic performance of the combustor. The porous inert material is made of silicon carbide–hafnium carbide coated, high-strength, high-temperature-resistant open-cell foam materials. In this study, the porous insert concept is investigated at above-ambient operating pressures to demonstrate its suitability for practical combustion applications. Experiments are conducted in quartz and metal combustors, without and with the porous insert while varying operating pressure, equivalence ratio, and reactant flow rate. Measurements show that the porous insert, and consequent changes in the combustor flow field, decrease the sound pressure levels at the frequency of combustion instability at all operating conditions investigated in this study. The porous insert also decreases the broadband combustion noise, i.e. the measured sound pressure levels over a wide frequency range.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1756827716642193
work_keys_str_mv AT ljustinwilliams passivecontrolofthermoacousticinstabilitiesinswirlstabilizedcombustionatelevatedpressures
AT josephmeadows passivecontrolofthermoacousticinstabilitiesinswirlstabilizedcombustionatelevatedpressures
AT ajaykagrawal passivecontrolofthermoacousticinstabilitiesinswirlstabilizedcombustionatelevatedpressures
_version_ 1724560625791664128