Design and Validation of a Proportional Throttle Valve System for Liquid-Fuel Active Combustion Control

High-bandwidth fuel modulation is currently one of the most promising methods for active combustion control. To attenuate the large pressure oscillations in the combustion chamber, the fuel is pulsed so that the heat release rate fluctuations damp the pressure oscillations in the combustor. This the...

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Main Author: Schiller, Noah Harrison
Other Authors: Mechanical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/9843
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10142003-151535
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-98432020-09-29T05:41:42Z Design and Validation of a Proportional Throttle Valve System for Liquid-Fuel Active Combustion Control Schiller, Noah Harrison Mechanical Engineering Saunders, William R. Baumann, William T. Vandsburger, Uri proportional fuel injection piezoelectric actuator fuel modulation active combustion control high-bandwidth valve High-bandwidth fuel modulation is currently one of the most promising methods for active combustion control. To attenuate the large pressure oscillations in the combustion chamber, the fuel is pulsed so that the heat release rate fluctuations damp the pressure oscillations in the combustor. This thesis focuses on the development and implementation of a high-bandwidth, proportional modulation system for liquid-fuel active combustion control. The throttle valve modulation system, discussed in this thesis, uses a 500-um piezoelectric stack coupled with an off-the-shelf valve. After comparing three other types of actuators, the piezoelectric stack was selected because of its compact size, bandwidth capabilities, and relatively low cost. Using the acoustic resonance of the fuel line, the system is able to achieve 128% pressure modulation, relative to the mean pressure, and is capable of producing more than 75% flow modulation at 115 Hz. Additionally, at 760 Hz the system produces 40% pressure modulation and 21% flow modulation with flow rates between 0.4 and 10 gph. Control authority was demonstrated on a single-nozzle kerosene combustor which exhibits a well-pronounced instability at ~115 Hz. Using the modulation system, the fundamental peak of the combustion instability was reduced by 30 dB, and the broadband sound pressure levels inside the combustor were reduced by 12 dB. However, the most important conclusion from the combustion control experiments was not the system?s accomplishments, but rather its inability to control the combustor at high global equivalence ratios. Our work indicates that having the ability to modulate a large percentage of the primary fuel is not always sufficient for active combustion control. Master of Science 2011-08-06T15:58:25Z 2011-08-06T15:58:25Z 2003-10-08 2003-10-14 2003-10-16 2003-10-16 Thesis etd-10142003-151535 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/9843 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10142003-151535 Thesis.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic proportional fuel injection
piezoelectric actuator
fuel modulation
active combustion control
high-bandwidth valve
spellingShingle proportional fuel injection
piezoelectric actuator
fuel modulation
active combustion control
high-bandwidth valve
Schiller, Noah Harrison
Design and Validation of a Proportional Throttle Valve System for Liquid-Fuel Active Combustion Control
description High-bandwidth fuel modulation is currently one of the most promising methods for active combustion control. To attenuate the large pressure oscillations in the combustion chamber, the fuel is pulsed so that the heat release rate fluctuations damp the pressure oscillations in the combustor. This thesis focuses on the development and implementation of a high-bandwidth, proportional modulation system for liquid-fuel active combustion control. The throttle valve modulation system, discussed in this thesis, uses a 500-um piezoelectric stack coupled with an off-the-shelf valve. After comparing three other types of actuators, the piezoelectric stack was selected because of its compact size, bandwidth capabilities, and relatively low cost. Using the acoustic resonance of the fuel line, the system is able to achieve 128% pressure modulation, relative to the mean pressure, and is capable of producing more than 75% flow modulation at 115 Hz. Additionally, at 760 Hz the system produces 40% pressure modulation and 21% flow modulation with flow rates between 0.4 and 10 gph. Control authority was demonstrated on a single-nozzle kerosene combustor which exhibits a well-pronounced instability at ~115 Hz. Using the modulation system, the fundamental peak of the combustion instability was reduced by 30 dB, and the broadband sound pressure levels inside the combustor were reduced by 12 dB. However, the most important conclusion from the combustion control experiments was not the system?s accomplishments, but rather its inability to control the combustor at high global equivalence ratios. Our work indicates that having the ability to modulate a large percentage of the primary fuel is not always sufficient for active combustion control. === Master of Science
author2 Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Mechanical Engineering
Schiller, Noah Harrison
author Schiller, Noah Harrison
author_sort Schiller, Noah Harrison
title Design and Validation of a Proportional Throttle Valve System for Liquid-Fuel Active Combustion Control
title_short Design and Validation of a Proportional Throttle Valve System for Liquid-Fuel Active Combustion Control
title_full Design and Validation of a Proportional Throttle Valve System for Liquid-Fuel Active Combustion Control
title_fullStr Design and Validation of a Proportional Throttle Valve System for Liquid-Fuel Active Combustion Control
title_full_unstemmed Design and Validation of a Proportional Throttle Valve System for Liquid-Fuel Active Combustion Control
title_sort design and validation of a proportional throttle valve system for liquid-fuel active combustion control
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/9843
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10142003-151535
work_keys_str_mv AT schillernoahharrison designandvalidationofaproportionalthrottlevalvesystemforliquidfuelactivecombustioncontrol
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