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Active Combustion Control for Aircraft Gas-Turbine Engines-Experimental Results for an Advanced, Low-Emissions Combustor PrototypeLean combustion concepts for aircraft engine combustors are prone to combustion instabilities. Mitigation of instabilities is an enabling technology for these low-emissions combustors. NASA Glenn Research Center s prior activity has demonstrated active control to suppress a high-frequency combustion instability in a combustor rig designed to emulate an actual aircraft engine instability experience with a conventional, rich-front-end combustor. The current effort is developing further understanding of the problem specifically as applied to future lean-burning, very low-emissions combustors. A prototype advanced, low-emissions aircraft engine combustor with a combustion instability has been identified and previous work has characterized the dynamic behavior of that combustor prototype. The combustor exhibits thermoacoustic instabilities that are related to increasing fuel flow and that potentially prevent full-power operation. A simplified, non-linear oscillator model and a more physics-based sectored 1-D dynamic model have been developed to capture the combustor prototype s instability behavior. Utilizing these models, the NASA Adaptive Sliding Phasor Average Control (ASPAC) instability control method has been updated for the low-emissions combustor prototype. Active combustion instability suppression using the ASPAC control method has been demonstrated experimentally with this combustor prototype in a NASA combustion test cell operating at engine pressures, temperatures, and flows. A high-frequency fuel valve was utilized to perturb the combustor fuel flow. Successful instability suppression was shown using a dynamic pressure sensor in the combustor for controller feedback. Instability control was also shown with a pressure feedback sensor in the lower temperature region upstream of the combustor. It was also demonstrated that the controller can prevent the instability from occurring while combustor operation was transitioning from a stable, low-power condition to a normally unstable high-power condition, thus enabling the high-power condition.
Document ID
20120013107
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Technical Memorandum (TM)
Authors
DeLaat, John C.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Kopasakis, George
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Saus, Joseph R.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Chang, Clarence T.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Wey, Changlie
(ASRC Aerospace Corp. Cleveland, OH, United States)
Date Acquired
August 26, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 2012
Subject Category
Aircraft Propulsion And Power
Report/Patent Number
NASA/TM-2012-217617
AIAA Paper 2012-783
E-18205
Report Number: NASA/TM-2012-217617
Report Number: AIAA Paper 2012-783
Report Number: E-18205
Meeting Information
Meeting: AIAA 50th Aerospace Sciences Meeting
Location: Nashville, TN
Country: United States
Start Date: January 9, 2012
End Date: January 12, 2012
Sponsors: American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 984754.02.07.03.19.04
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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