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PhD Thesis Defense by
(Advisor: Dr. Tim Lieuwen)
Monday, October 30, 2017 @ 2 p.m.
Food Processing Technology Building Auditorium
NARA
Abstract:
This work presents 5 kHz stereo PIV and OH PLIF measurements as well as OH* and CH* chemiluminescence measurements of transversely forced swirl flames. The presence of transverse forcing on this naturally unstable flow both influences the natural instabilities, as well as amplifies disturbances that may not necessarily manifest themselves during natural oscillations. By manipulating the structure of the acoustic forcing field, both axisymmetric and helical modes are preferentially excited away from the frequency of natural instability. Additionally, forced and self-excited transverse acoustic instability studies to date have strong coupling between the transverse and axial acoustic fields near the flame. This is significant, as studies suggest that it is not the transverse disturbances themselves, but rather the induced axial acoustic disturbances, that control the bulk of the heat release response.
The work first presents a method for spatially interpolating the phase locked r-z and r-theta planar velocity and flame position data, extracting the full three-dimensional structure of the helical disturbances. These helical disturbances are also decomposed into symmetric and antisymmetric disturbances about the jet core, showing the subsequent axial evolution (in magnitude and phase) of each of these underlying disturbances. Then experiments performed with essentially the same transverse acoustic wave field, but with and without axial acoustics, show that significant heat release oscillations are only excited in the former case. The results show that the axial disturbances at the nozzle exit are the dominant cause of the heat release oscillations. These observations support the theory that the key role of the transverse motions is to act as the “clock” for the instability, setting the frequency of the oscillations while having a negligible direct effect on the actual heat release fluctuations. They also show that transverse instabilities can be damped by either actively canceling the induced axial acoustics in the nozzle (rather than the much larger energy transverse combustor disturbances), or by passively tuning the nozzle impedance to drive an axial acoustic velocity node at the nozzle outlet.
Committee Members:
Dr. Tim Lieuwen
Dr. Suresh Menon
Dr. Jerry Seitzman
Dr. Wenting Sun
Dr. Devesh Ranjan