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Numerical modeling of oxy-methane combustion in a model gas turbine combustor
•A numerical model has been developed to simulate Oxy-Methane combustion.•Experiments have been conducted to validate the developed numerical model.•Different combustion mechanisms and radiation models have been tested.•The increase of CO2 contents in the oxidizer increases the CO emission.•Combusti...
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Published in: | Applied energy 2018-10, Vol.228, p.68-81 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •A numerical model has been developed to simulate Oxy-Methane combustion.•Experiments have been conducted to validate the developed numerical model.•Different combustion mechanisms and radiation models have been tested.•The increase of CO2 contents in the oxidizer increases the CO emission.•Combustion at an equivalence ratio of 0.98 was found to give least CO emission.
There is a renewed interest in oxy-fuel combustion of natural gas for reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. This has necessitated various experimental and numerical studies of oxy-fuel combustion. In the numerical combustion study, the radiation model and combustion chemistry are critical for accurate numerical predictions of oxy-fuel combustion characteristics. In this study, three global reaction mechanisms: Westbrook-Dryer (3 equations), Jones-Lindstedt (5 equations) and Jones-Lindstedt (7 equations) for oxy-methane combustion were combined with different weighted sum of gray gas radiation models (WSGGM) available in the literature to determine the most accurate combination for oxy-methane combustion modeling and simulation. Experiments were conducted in a non-premixed swirl stabilized model gas turbine combustor at a firing rate of 4 MW/m3-bar while varying the percentage of CO2 in the oxidizer (O2/CO2) mixture. Numerical model developed using ANSYS FLUENT 17 code was validated against the experimental results. The combinations of Jones-Lindstedt (5 equations) reaction mechanism and WSGGM model proposed by Bordbar gave the closest approximation of the flame temperature with an average deviation of 5.52%. The model combination also predicted the flame attachment to the fuel nozzle and flame lift-off at a high CO2 percentage in the oxidizer mixture. The results of the parametric study on the effect of CO2 percentage in the oxidizer mixture, combustor energy level and equivalence ratio on the combustion characteristics and CO emissions were also reported. The CO emissions monotonically increases with increasing percentage of CO2 in the oxidizer due to decreased residence time and the reduction in the flame temperature. While the CO emission increases with the energy level in the combustor up to 3.5 MW/m3 and decreases thereafter. The optimum equivalence ratio for minimum CO emission is 0.98 with approximately 2 PPM at 40% CO2 in the oxidizer. |
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ISSN: | 0306-2619 1872-9118 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apenergy.2018.06.071 |