AN EXPERIMENTAL AND NUMERICAL STUDY OF TEMPERATURE UNIFORMITY ENHANCEMENT VIA PASSIVE GEOMETRY MODIFICATIONS IN AIR DILUTION MIXING
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University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Abstract
<p>This work studies the effect of passive geometries on the temperature
uniformity downstream of gas turbines dilution zones. The experimental setup simulates
the non-reacting hot and cold air mixing in a dilution chamber, with inlet Reynolds
number in the range of 40,000 – 95,000. Several CFD models were investigated and
validated against experimental results. The proposed passive geometries include dilution
jet extender parts that are installed on the large dilution holes (5mm to 25mm). The
second proposed geometry is converging nozzle parts, called jet area modifiers,
installed on the inner side of the large dilution holes. The converging nozzle parts
have lengths of 5mm, 15mm, and 25mm and area ratios of 0.5 and 0.75. The presented
research investigates the effect of different factors affecting temperature uniformity.
Results indicate that temperature uniformity is the strongest factor affecting the
usefulness efficiency, followed by the jet extender length. The Reynolds number does not
have a significant effect on the usefulness efficiency. Jet extenders offer improvement
on the temperature uniformity index by 0.9% - 14.9% depending on the temperature ratio
and extender length. The added pressure drop varies between 5% and 28% depending on
extender length. Jet area modifiers result in an improvement in the temperature
uniformity index between 2% and 29%, and pressure drop of 8%-36% compared to the
baseline extender case. The realizable k-ε model showed good agreement with experimental
data and performed well against k-ω (SST) and Reynolds Stress Turbulence (RST)
models.</p>