Numerical Modeling of Oxy-Fuel Combustion in a Model Gas Turbine Combustor: Effect of Combustion Chemistry and Radiation Model

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Abstract

Radiation modeling and combustion chemistry are critical to accurate numerical predictions of oxy-combustion characteristics. The presence of carbon dioxide (CO2) in oxy-fuel combustion acts as diluents and significantly changes the radiative properties of the combustion gases in comparison to air combustion. In this regard, three global reaction mechanisms: Westbrook-Dryer (3 equations), Jones-Lindstedt (5 equations) and Jones-Lindstedt (7 equations) for oxy-fuel combustion of methane were combined with different weighted sum of gray gas radiation models (WSGGM) available in literature to determine the most accurate combination for methane-oxy-fuel combustion modeling and simulation. This study was carried out in a non-premixed swirl stabilized model gas turbine combustor at a firing rate of 4MW/m3-bar. The modified Westbrook-Dryer (WD-oxy) mechanism could not predict the flame attachment to the fuel nozzle at 35% CO2 addition. The combinations of Jones-Lindstedt (5 equations) reaction mechanism and WSGGM model proposed by Bordbar gave the closest approximation to our experimental observations and predicted the flame attachment to the fuel nozzle.

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Raghib Shakeel, M., Sanusi, Y. S., & Mokheimer, E. M. A. (2017). Numerical Modeling of Oxy-Fuel Combustion in a Model Gas Turbine Combustor: Effect of Combustion Chemistry and Radiation Model. In Energy Procedia (Vol. 142, pp. 1647–1652). Elsevier Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.egypro.2017.12.544

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