Generic Gas Turbine Combustor: Description of The Combustor
Generic Gas Turbine Combustor: Description of The Combustor
Generic Gas Turbine Combustor: Description of The Combustor
This case study on combustion and radiative heat transfer in a generic gas turbine (GGT)
In the configuration shown below, the main air stream enters the combustion chamber via a
swirler nozzle. The fuel enters the combustion chamber separately from the air via a pipe in the
center of the swirler nozzle. The swirl of the air causes a recirculation zone, which stabilizes the
flame. After the primary combustion zone a secondary air stream is injected to rapidly dilute
the fuel/oxidizer mixture and to lower the temperature in the combustor [1].
NUMECA has developed a software suite, or a Flow INtegrated Environment (FINE), for internal
and external flows and geometries, which includes all the software tools required for a start-to-
finish CFD project. This unstructured CFD package consists of the following:
Grid generation
The mesh for the discretization of the combustor and the nozzle is generated by HEXPRESS
and consists of 800,000 cells. The mesh is refined in the combustion chamber behind the
swirler nozzle to capture the high gradients in this region.
The mass flow rate is a) 0.03 kg/s for the primary air stream, b) 0.045 kg/s for the secondary
air stream and c) 0.0014 kg/s for the fuel stream (see figure below). The static pressure at the
outlet is set to 200000 Pa and the walls are defined to be adiabatic.
The convective fluxes of the RANS equations are discretized using a 2nd order central scheme.
The combustion transport equations and the turbulent flow equations are discretized using an
upwind scheme to ensure bounded and monotonous solutions for the combustion variables.
The CFL number is set to 1.5 and a preconditioning technique is used with default values.
In the FGM (Flamelet Generated Manifolds) approach, the combustion look-up tables are
generated by remapping a flamelet library on the mixture fraction progress variable space
which determines the progress of the reaction from unburnt (zero) to burnt (maximum value)
[3]. The thermo-chemical states are tabulated as a function of the mixture fraction, mixture
fraction variance and the progress variable (instead of the mixture fraction, mixture fraction
variance, and strain rates as in the classical flamelet approach). The use of a progress variable
in addition to the mixture fraction makes it possible to simulate combustion processes with
partial premixing. The FGM approach can be used for both the simulation of non-premixed and
partially premixed combustion processes, with the advantage over the classical flamelet
approach that finite-rate effects and lifting of flames can be predicted.
References:
[1] Janus, B., Dreizler, A. and Janicka, J. (2004), "Experimental Study on Stabilization of
Lifted Swirl Flames in a Model GT Combustor", Flow, Turbulence and Combustion, Vol. 75:293-
315.
[3] van Oijen, J. and de Goey, P. (2000), "Modeling of premixed laminar flames using
flamelet generated manifolds ", Combustion Science and Technology, Vol. 161:113-137. Generic
Gas Turbine combustor (GGT).