Exhaust gas measurements in a propane fueled swirl stabilized combustor
Abstract
Exhaust gas temperature, velocity, and composition are measured and combustor efficiencies are calculated in a lean premixed swirl stabilized laboratory combustor. The radial profiles of the data between the co- and the counter swirl cases show significant differences. Co-swirl cases show evidence of poor turbulent mixing across the combustor in comparison to the counter-swirl cases. NO sub x levels are low in the combustor but substantial amounts of CO are present. Combustion efficiencies are low and surprisingly constant with varying outer swirl in contradiction to previous results under a slightly different inner swirl condition. This difference in the efficiency trends is expected to be a result of the high sensitivity of the combustor to changes in the inner swirl. Combustor operation is found to be the same for propane and methane fuels. A mechanism is proposed to explain the combustor operation and a few important characteristics determining combustor efficiency are identified.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- August 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982STIN...8231641A
- Keywords:
-
- Combustion Chambers;
- Combustion Efficiency;
- Combustion Products;
- Exhaust Gases;
- Carbon Monoxide;
- Chemical Composition;
- Flow Velocity;
- Methane;
- Nitrous Oxides;
- Propane;
- Swirling;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer