Mechanisms of Smoke Reduction in the High-Pressure Combustion of Emulsified Fuels. Volume II. Experimental and Theoretical Study of Evaporating Emulsified and Neat Fuel Sprays


Book Description

This report documents progress made during the second year of a three-year study of the atomization and evaporation characteristics of emulsified and alternative fuels at conditions typical of those found in gas turbine engines. The development of experimental techniques suitable for drop size measurements in realistic polydisperse fuel sprays in high pressure/temperature air has been the first goal of this year's program. The second area of interest has been the development of detailed drop models which predict the heat-up, evaporation, and trajectory of fuel sprays and the resulting size distribution parameters. In addition to these two areas, a facility was constructed during the first year of this program to allow for the containment of sprays in high pressure/temperature moving air with optical access for spray size measurements. These experimental and analytical tools have and will continue to be used to study the differences in atomization/evaporation of emulsified and neat fuels, and various other fuels at interest to the U.S. Navy.




Mechanisms of Smoke Reduction in the High-Pressure Combustion of Emulsified Fuels. Volume 3. Experimental Measurements and Computer Modeling of Evaporating Emulsified and Neat Fuel Sprays


Book Description

Measurements of drop-size distributions and vaporized fuel concentrations have been combined with a spray model in the comparative study of the evaporation of sprays of emulsified and non-emulsified and non-emulsified (neat) fuels at elevated temperatures and pressures. The fuel spray was generated by a pressure jet atomizer and was polydisperse; the air stream was approximately one-dimensional turbulent flow in a constant area duct. Diagnostic techniques have been adapted or developed which allow rapid measurements of overall drop-size distributions in the presence of evaporation in high-temperature high-pressure air, and also the fuel vapor concentration distribution within sprays. It was concluded that even in conditions of turbulence and high Reynolds number for drop motion relative to the air, some emulsified fuel drops apparently undergo microexplosions. Further, it was determined that the initial atomization quality depends on te air conditions, with better atomization at higher air densities. This implies that spray drop-size measurements performed at atmospheric conditions need to be corrected for air density and temperature effects to predict atomization quality for altitude relight or high-pressure combustion. A spray model has been developed which represents the spray being studied and provides data in a form comparable to the experimental diagnostics.













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