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Lean blowout (LBO) is a serious issue in modern gas turbine engines that operate in a lean (premixed) mode to follow the stringent emission norms. When an engine operates with a lean fuel-air mixture, the flame becomes unstable and is at times carried out of the combustion chamber by the unburnt flow. Thus, the sudden loss of the flame, known as lean blowout, leads to fatal accidents in aircrafts and loss of production in power plants. Therefore, an in-depth analysis of lean blowout is necessary as the phenomenon involves complex interactions between flow dynamics and chemical kinetics. For understanding the complex dynamics of this phenomenon, recurrence analysis can be a very useful method. In the current study, we observe a transition to LBO as the global fuel-air ratio is reduced from stoichiometric condition and perform recurrence quantification analysis (RQA) with the CH chemiluminescence data obtained experimentally. The extent of fuel-air mixing is varied with an objective of developing some robust early predictors of LBO that would work over a wide range of premixing. We find some RQA measures, such as determinism, laminarity, and trapping time, which show distinctive signature toward LBO and thereby can be used as early predictors of LBO for both premixed and partially premixed flames. Our analysis shows that the computational time for laminarity and trapping time is relatively less. However, computational time for those measures depends upon the dynamics of the combustor, size of the data taken, and choice of recurrence threshold.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5131231 | DOI Listing |
Energy Fuels
June 2025
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, Colorado 80401, United States.
Experiments using pure compounds, National Jet Fuels Combustion Program (NJFCP) test fuels, and commercial jet fuels were conducted to demonstrate the equivalence of the indicated cetane number (ICN) and derived cetane number (DCN) for jet fuels. The calibrated range for ICN was also extended to lower cetane number (CN) values (5 to 35) to allow CN quantification for jet fuel synthetic blending components (SBCs) with low CN. ICN and DCN were shown to be highly correlated for values above about 30.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChaos
January 2024
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Jadavpur University, Kolkata 700032, India.
Modern lean premixed combustors are operated in ultra-lean mode to conform to strict emission norms. However, this causes the combustors to become prone to lean blowout (LBO). Online monitoring of combustion dynamics may help to avoid LBO and help the combustor run more safely and reliably.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
February 2023
Department of Aerospace Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai 600036, India.
In the context of statistical physics, critical phenomena are accompanied by power laws having a singularity at the critical point where a sudden change in the state of the system occurs. In this work we show that lean blowout (LBO) in a turbulent thermoacoustic system is accompanied by a power law leading to finite-time singularity. As a crucial discovery of the system dynamics approaching LBO, we unravel the existence of the discrete scale invariance (DSI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChaos
June 2022
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Jadavpur University, Kolkata 700032, India.
Lean premixed combustors are highly susceptible to lean blowout flame instability, which can cause a fatal accident in aircrafts or expensive shutdown in stationary combustors. However, the lean blowout limit of a combustor may vary significantly depending on a number of variables that cannot be controlled in practical situations. Although a large literature exists on the lean blowout phenomena, a robust strategy for early lean blowout detection is still not available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChaos
April 2020
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Jadavpur University, Kolkata 700032, India.
Lean blowout (LBO) is a serious issue in modern gas turbine engines that operate in a lean (premixed) mode to follow the stringent emission norms. When an engine operates with a lean fuel-air mixture, the flame becomes unstable and is at times carried out of the combustion chamber by the unburnt flow. Thus, the sudden loss of the flame, known as lean blowout, leads to fatal accidents in aircrafts and loss of production in power plants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF