TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigation of the ignition and flame propagation characteristics in a swirl-stabilized hydrogen-enriched premixed combustor
AU - Ju, Hongyu
AU - Li, Yue
AU - Huang, Wenpu
AU - Zheng, Longxi
AU - Zhu, Pengfei
AU - Liang, Hongxia
AU - Suo, Jianqin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/6/16
Y1 - 2025/6/16
N2 - Swirl-stabilized premixed combustion is widely used in gas turbines, but the influence of hydrogen blending on the ignition process remains insufficiently understood. This study investigates the effects of hydrogen addition on flame kernel propagation and the timescales of ignition in a swirl-stabilized combustor. Hydrogen blending ratios (0%–50%) and varying inlet flow rates, with a focus on 30% hydrogen blending, are examined. High-speed photography and flame chemiluminescence technique are employed to capture flame kernel motion, while numerical simulations provide the flow field. An ignition load factor is proposed to model the ignition process, accounting for both hydrogen ratio and flow rate. A novel method for calculating flame kernel trajectories is introduced, designed for large time-step analysis, offering a single characteristic trajectory. Results indicate that hydrogen blending alters the flow field and fuel-air mixing uniformity. It enables the flame kernel to traverse the shear layer without following the flow, increasing its radial penetration depth. Moreover, the flame kernel's movement remains largely confined to the recirculation zone in most conditions, underscoring the significant influence of the cold flow field. The ignition process is categorized into four stages: initial ignition, flame development, residence, and recovery, and the duration of the stages is sensitive to mixing uniformity. Hydrogen blending reduces ignition delay slightly, but when the ratio exceeds 20%, delay time increases. This study provides essential data for the application of hydrogen-blended fuels in gas turbines.
AB - Swirl-stabilized premixed combustion is widely used in gas turbines, but the influence of hydrogen blending on the ignition process remains insufficiently understood. This study investigates the effects of hydrogen addition on flame kernel propagation and the timescales of ignition in a swirl-stabilized combustor. Hydrogen blending ratios (0%–50%) and varying inlet flow rates, with a focus on 30% hydrogen blending, are examined. High-speed photography and flame chemiluminescence technique are employed to capture flame kernel motion, while numerical simulations provide the flow field. An ignition load factor is proposed to model the ignition process, accounting for both hydrogen ratio and flow rate. A novel method for calculating flame kernel trajectories is introduced, designed for large time-step analysis, offering a single characteristic trajectory. Results indicate that hydrogen blending alters the flow field and fuel-air mixing uniformity. It enables the flame kernel to traverse the shear layer without following the flow, increasing its radial penetration depth. Moreover, the flame kernel's movement remains largely confined to the recirculation zone in most conditions, underscoring the significant influence of the cold flow field. The ignition process is categorized into four stages: initial ignition, flame development, residence, and recovery, and the duration of the stages is sensitive to mixing uniformity. Hydrogen blending reduces ignition delay slightly, but when the ratio exceeds 20%, delay time increases. This study provides essential data for the application of hydrogen-blended fuels in gas turbines.
KW - Gas turbine
KW - Hydrogen-enriched
KW - Ignition
KW - Lean premixed combustor
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105005413717&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.04.496
DO - 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.04.496
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105005413717
SN - 0360-3199
VL - 138
SP - 605
EP - 616
JO - International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
JF - International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
ER -