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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

High-Speed Diagnostics in a Natural Gas-Air Rotating Detonation Engine at Elevated Pressure

Christopher Lee Journell (6634439) 11 June 2019 (has links)
<div>Gas turbine engines have operated on the Brayton cycle for decades, each decade only gaining approximately one to two percent in thermal efficiency as a result of efforts</div><div>to improve engine performance. Pressure-gain combustion in place of constant-pressure combustion in a Brayton cycle could provide a drastic step-change in the thermal efficiency of these devices, leading to reductions in fuel consumption and emissions production. Rotating Detonation Engines (RDEs) have been widely researched as a viable option for pressure-gain combustion. Due to the extremely high frequencies associated with operation of an RDE, the development and application of high-speed diagnostics techniques for RDEs is necessary to further understand and</div><div>develop these devices.</div><div><br></div><div>An application of high-speed diagnostic techniques in a natural gas-air RDE at conditions relevant to land-based power generation is presented. Diagnostics included high-frequency chamber pressure measurements, chemiluminescence imaging of the annulus, and Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) measurements at the exit plane of the RDE. Results from a case with two detonation waves rotating clockwise (aft looking forward) in the combustor annulus are presented. Detonation surface plots are created from chemiluminescence images and allow for the extraction of properties such as dominant frequency modes and wave number, speed, and direction. The chamber frequency for the case with two co-rotating waves in the chamber is found to be 3.46 kHz and corresponds to average individual wave speeds of 68% Chapman-Jouguet (CJ) velocity. Dynamic Mode Decomposition (DMD) is applied and indicates the presence of two strong detonation waves rotating clockwise and periodically intersecting with weaker, counter-rotating waves in the annulus at certain times during operation. Singular-Spectrum Analysis (SSA) is used to isolate modes corresponding to the detonation frequency in the signals of velocity components obtained from PIV, maintaining instantaneous phase information. Axial and azimuthal components of velocity are observed to remain nearly 180 degrees out of phase. Lastly, approximate angles for the trailing oblique shocks in the combustion chamber are calculated.</div>
12

Operability and Performance of Rotating Detonation Engines

Ian V Walters (11014821) 23 July 2021 (has links)
<div>Rotating Detonation Engines (RDEs) provide a promising avenue for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from combustion-based propulsion and power systems by improving their thermodynamic efficiency through the application of pressure-gain combustion. However, the thermodynamic and systems-level advantages remain unrealized due to the challenge of harnessing the tightly coupled physics and nonlinear detonation dynamics inherent to RDEs, particularly for the less-detonable reactants characteristic of applications. Therefore, a RDE was developed to operate with natural gas and air as the primary reactants at elevated chamber pressures and air preheat temperatures, providing a platform to study RDEs with the less-detonable reactants and flow conditions representative of land-based power generation gas turbine engines. The RDE was tested with two injector configurations in a broad, parametric survey of flow conditions to determine the effect of operating parameters on the propagation of detonation waves in the combustor and delivered performance. Measurements of chamber wave dynamics were performed using high-frequency pressure transducers and high-speed imaging of broadband combustion chemiluminescence, while thrust measurements were used to characterize the work output potential.</div><div><br></div><div>The detonation dynamics were first studied to characterize RDE operability for the target application. Wave propagation speeds of up to 70% of the mixture Chapman-Jouguet detonation velocity and chamber pressure fluctuations greater than 4 times the mean chamber pressure were observed. Supplementing the air with additional oxygen, varying the equivalence ratio, and enriching the fuel with hydrogen revealed that combustor operability is sensitive to the chemical kinetics of the reactant mixture. While most test conditions exhibited counter-rotating detonation waves within the chamber, one injector design was able to support single wave propagation. A thermodynamic performance model was developed to aid analysis of RDE performance by making comparisons of net pressure gain for identical flow conditions. While the injector that supported a single wave operating mode better followed the trends predicted by the model, neither injector achieved the desire stagnation pressure gain relative to the reactant manifold pressure. Application of the model to a generic RDE revealed the necessity of normalizing any RDE performance parameter by the driving system potential and identified the area ratio between the exhaust and injection throats as the primary parameter affecting delivered pressure gain. A pair of test conditions with distinct wave dynamics were selected from the parametric survey to qualitatively and quantitatively analyze the exhaust flow using high-speed particle image velocimetry. A single detonation wave with an intermittent counter-rotating wave was characterized in the first test case, while a steady counter-rotating mode was studied in the second. The velocity measurements were phase averaged with respect to the instantaneous wave location to reveal contrasting flowfields for the two cases. The total pressure and temperature of flow exiting the combustor were computed using the phase-resolved velocity measurements along with the measured reactant flowrate and thrust to close the global balance of mass and momentum, providing an improved method of quantifying RDE performance. Finally, a reduced order model for studying RDE operability and mode selection was developed. The circumferential detonation wave dynamics are simulated and permitted to naturally evolve into the quasi-steady state operating modes observed in RDEs. Preliminary verification studies are presented and areas for further development are identified to enable the model to reach a broader level of applicability.</div><div><br></div><div>The experimental component of this work has advanced understanding of RDE operation with less-detonable reactants and developed improved methods for quantifying RDE performance. The accompanying modeling has elucidated the design parameters and flow conditions that influence RDE performance and provided a framework to investigate the factors that govern RDE mode selection and operability.<br></div>
13

Characteristics of Self-Excited Wave Propagation in a Non-Premixed Linear Detonation Combustor

Deborah Renae Jackson (12474894) 28 April 2022 (has links)
<p>The interaction and behavior of detonation waves propagating in a linear detonation combustor (LDC) were studied to identify the coupled thermoacoustic-chemical phenomenon responsible for self-generated and self-sustained detonation waves. The LDC was operated with natural gas and gaseous oxygen over a wide range of equivalence ratios and optically observed with OH*-chemiluminescence, schlieren, and broadband imaging in addition to high-frequency pressure transducers and photomultiplier tubes. Counter-propagating, self-sustained detonation waves were observed in the semi-bounded combustor to accelerate and amplify consistently from the closed-boundary to the open-boundary. The incident waves then reflect off of the open-boundary and transition into weaker waves that propagate acoustically relative to the burned products before being reflected by the closed-boundary and accelerating to dominancy once again. The combustor was then modified to have symmetric boundary conditions with both ends closed. For closed cases, the detonation waves experienced similar acceleration and amplification processes. The incident waves accelerate until they are reflected by a closed boundary into a flow field for which the fuel-injectors have yet to recover. For this reason, the reflected waves propagate through burned products until they encounter fresh reactants and accelerate again. The closed boundary conditions also caused the direction of dominance to periodically alternate. This study indicates that the local mixing field between open and closed boundary conditions affects the strength and speed of the reflected wave and demonstrates the impact of combustor geometry on coupled thermoacoustic-chemical phenomenon in RDEs.</p>
14

Study and Numerical Simulation of Unconventional Engine Technology

Shekhar, Anjali January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
15

Impact of Tapered Combustion Channels on the Operation of a Rotating Detonation Engine

Moosmann, Kaitlin 10 August 2022 (has links)
No description available.
16

Effect of Corrugated Outer Wall On Operating Regimes of Rotating Detonation Combustors

Knight, Ethan 21 September 2018 (has links)
No description available.
17

Rotating Detonation Combustor Mechanics

Anand, Vijay G. 02 October 2018 (has links)
No description available.
18

Experimental and Computational Analysis of an Axial Turbine Driven by Pulsing Flow

Fernelius, Mark H. 01 April 2017 (has links)
Pressure gain combustion is a form of combustion that uses pressure waves to transfer energy and generate a rise in total pressure during the combustion process. Pressure gain combustion shows potential to increase the cycle efficiency of conventional gas turbine engines if used in place of the steady combustor. However, one of the challenges of integrating pressure gain combustion into a gas turbine engine is that a turbine driven by pulsing flow experiences a decrease in efficiency. The interaction of pressure pulses with a turbine was investigated to gain physical insights and to provide guidelines for designing turbines to be driven by pulsing flow. An experimental rig was built to compare steady flow with pulsing flow. Compressed air was used in place of combustion gases; pressure pulses were created by rotating a ball valve with a motor. The data showed that a turbine driven by full annular pressure pulses has a decrease in turbine efficiency and pressure ratio. The average decrease in turbine efficiency was 0.12 for 10 Hz, 0.08 for 20 Hz, and 0.04 for 40 Hz. The turbine pressure ratio, defined as the turbine exit total pressure divided by the turbine inlet total pressure, ranged from 0.55 to 0.76. The average decrease in turbine pressure ratio was 0.082 for 10 Hz, 0.053 for 20 Hz, and 0.064 for 40 Hz. The turbine temperature ratio and specific turbine work were constant. Pressure pulse amplitude, not frequency, was shown to be the main cause for the decrease in turbine efficiency. Computational fluid dynamics simulations were created and were validated with the experimental results. Simulations run at the same conditions as the experiments showed a decrease in turbine efficiency of 0.24 for 10 Hz, 0.12 for 20 Hz, and 0.05 for 40 Hz. In agreement with the experimental results, the simulations also showed that pressure pulse amplitude is the driving factor for decreased turbine efficiency and not the pulsing frequency. For a pulsing amplitude of 86.5 kPa, the efficiency difference between a 10 Hz and a 40 Hz simulation was only 0.005. A quadratic correlation between turbine efficiency and corrected pulse amplitude was presented with an R-squared value of 0.99. Incidence variation was shown to cause the change in turbine efficiency and a correlation between corrected incidence and corrected amplitude was established. The turbine geometry was then optimized for pulsing flow conditions. Based on the optimization results and observations, design recommendations were made for designing turbines for pulsing flow. The first design recommendation was to weight the design of the turbine toward the peak of the pressure pulse. The second design recommendation was to consider the range of inlet angles and reduce the camber near the leading edge of the blade. The third design recommendation was to reduce the blade turning to reduce the wake caused by pulsing flow. A new turbine design was created and tested following these design recommendations. The time-accurate validation simulation for a 10 Hz pressure pulse showed that the new turbine decreased the entropy generation by 35% and increased the efficiency by 0.04 (5.4%).
19

Reduction of Mixture Stratification in a Constant-Volume Combustor

Rowe, Richard Zachary 12 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / This study contributes to a better working knowledge of the equipment being used in a well-established combustion lab. In particular, several constant-volume combustion properties (e.g., time ignition delay, flame propagation, and more) are examined to deduce any buoyancy effects between fuel and air mixtures and to develop a method aimed at minimizing such effects. This study was conducted on an apparatus designed to model the phenomena occurring within a single channel of a wave rotor combustor, which consists of a rotating cylindrical pre-chamber and a fixed rectangular main combustion chamber. Pressure sensors monitor the internal pressures within the both chambers at all times, and two slow-motion videography techniques visually capture combustion phenomena occurring within the main chamber. A new recirculation pump system has been implemented to mitigate stratification within the chamber and produce more precise, reliable results. The apparatus was used in several types of experiments that involved the combustion of various hydrocarbon fuels in the main chamber, including methane, 50%-50% methane-hydrogen, hydrogen, propane, and 46.4%-56.3% methane-argon. Additionally, combustion products created in the pre-chamber from a 1.1 equivalence ratio reaction between 50%-50% methane-hydrogen and air were utilized in the issuing pre-chamber jet for all hot jet ignition tests. In the first set of experiments, a spark plug ignition source was used to study how combustion events travel through the main chamber after different mixing methods were utilized – specifically no mixing, diffusive mixing, and pump circulation mixing. The study reaffirmed that stratification between fuel-air mixtures occurs in the main chamber through the presence of asymmetrical flame front propagation. Allowing time for mixing, however, resulted in more symmetric flame fronts, broader pressure peaks, and reduced combustion time in the channel. While 30 seconds of diffusion helped, it was found that 30 seconds of pumping (at a rate of 30 pumps per 10 seconds) was the most effective method at reducing stratification effects in the system. Next, stationary hot jet ignition experiments were conducted to compare the time between jet injection and main chamber combustion and the speed of the resulting shockwaves between cases with no mixing and 30 seconds of pump mixing. Results continued to show an improvement with the pump cases; ignition delay times were typically shorter, and shock speeds stayed around the same, if not increased slightly. These properties are vital when studying and developing wave rotor combustors, and therefore, reducing stratification (specifically by means of a recirculation system) should be considered a crucial step in laboratory models such as this one. Lastly, experiments between a fueled main chamber and rotating pre-chamber helped evaluate the leakage rate of the traversing hot jet ignition experimental setup paired with the new pump system. In its current form, major leaks are inevitable when attempting traversing jet experiments, especially with the pump’s suction action drawing sudden large plumes of outside air into the main chamber. To minimize leaks, gaps between the pre-chamber and main chamber should be reduced, and the contact surface between the two chambers should be more evenly distributed. Also, the pump system should only be operated as long as needed to evenly distribute the fuel-air mixture, which approximately happens when the main chamber’s total volume has been circulated through the system one time. Therefore, a new pump system with half of the original system’s volume was developed in order to decrease the pumping time and lower the risk of leaks.
20

Characteristics of Periodic Self-sustained Detonation Generation in an RDE Analogue

Kyle S Schwinn (11199204) 28 July 2021 (has links)
<div>Rotating detonation engines (RDEs) are one of the most promising options for improving combustor efficiency through a constant-volume combustion process. RDEs are characterized by continuous detonation propagation in an annular combustion chamber with an implicitly dynamic injection response. An additional benefit is the similarity of these devices to existing engine architectures. However, RDEs have yet to realize their thermodynamic and systemic advantages due the non-ideal physics of detonation in practical devices and the complex interactions between the detonations and the hydrodynamics of the reactants. The design of RDEs is heavily informed by experimental and simulation efforts, but simulations are expensive and often limited by the assumptions of the solver. Experiments have their own challenges; the dynamic reaction zone processes are difficult to examine experimentally in annular combustor geometry. Therefore, an RDE analogue, operating at near-atmospheric conditions with natural gas and oxygen, was developed that emulates the combustor geometry of an RDE in a linear channel that facilitates optical diagnostic capabilities. The experiment permits detailed characterization of the injection, mixing, and ignition processes in an RDE and provides a cross-platform comparison with simulation results, which are often two-dimensional or linear, 3-D domains.</div><div> </div><div>A unique phenomenon was discovered in this experiment, wherein a transverse combustion instability developed periodic, kilohertz-rate detonations through a non-linear amplification process. The behavior was highly repeatable and produced dominant cycle frequencies in two distinct regimes: 6-8 kHz and 10-11 kHz. An investigation of this phenomenon found that these cycle frequencies corresponded to natural dynamics in the oxidizer and fuel manifolds, respectively, and that the transition between regimes was facilitated by the injection pressure ratio between the oxidizer and fuel. This indicated that the injection hydrodynamics were being influenced by the manifold dynamics, and that the hydrodynamics played a key role in the amplification of the instability.</div><div> </div><div>The kinetic characteristics of the reactants were examined independently of the injection hydrodynamics as the second key component of the amplification process by altering the reactant chemistry. The combustion morphology was characterized against performance criteria to examine successful behavior. Results showed that cycle frequency and kinetic rates were directly proportional, and that non-linear growth of the flame was possible when the cycle frequency matched the dynamics supplied by the manifolds. When the cycle frequency exceeded the limits of the manifold dynamics, failure of the detonation behavior would occur. A computational analysis of the reactants was used to examine kinetic rate trends with variations in equivalence ratio, oxidizer dilution, and product gas recirculation.</div><div> </div><div>Particle image velocimetry (PIV) was performed on the experiment to study the flow structure of the injection process and the interactions with the detonation process. Time-averaged statistics showed that the detonation induced transverse perturbation to the flow, with varying strength and directionality with respect to the axial location of the shock. A correlation between this behavior and a reactivity gradient, linked to the local product gas residence time, was found. Analysis of the PIV images produced time-resolved measurements of the reactant fill, from which hydrodynamic timescales of the injection process could be obtained. Comparisons between the hydrodynamic and kinetic timescales created an operability map for the test condition which narrows the prediction of the product gas recirculation that occurs in the combustor.</div><div> </div><div>The experiments performed in this work has improved understanding of the dynamic injection that occurs during RDE operation. The self-excited generation of detonations through non-linear processes in this experiment brings to light important interactions between the combustor, injector, and manifolds that can improve, or hinder, the performance of RDEs.</div>

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