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    Experimental and Numerical Calculation of Turbulent Timescales at the Exit of an Engine Representative Combustor Simulator

    Source: Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2016:;volume( 138 ):;issue: 002::page 21503
    Author:
    Koupper, Charlie
    ,
    Gicquel, Laurent
    ,
    Duchaine, Florent
    ,
    Bacci, Tommaso
    ,
    Facchini, Bruno
    ,
    Picchi, Alessio
    ,
    Tarchi, Lorenzo
    ,
    Bonneau, Guillaume
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4031262
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: To deepen the knowledge of the interaction between modern lean burn combustors and high pressure (HP) turbines, a nonreactive real scale annular trisector combustor simulator (CS) has been assembled at University of Florence (UNIFI), with the goal of investigating and characterizing the combustor aerothermal field as well as the hot streak transport toward the HP vanes. To generate hot streaks and simulate lean burn combustor behaviors, the rig is equipped with axial swirlers fed by a main air flow stream that is heated up to 531 K, while liners with effusion cooling holes are fed by air at ambient temperature. Detailed experimental investigations are then performed with the aim of characterizing the turbulence quantities at the exit of the combustion module, and specifically evaluating an integral scale of turbulence. To do so, an automatic traverse system is mounted at the exit of the CS and equipped to perform hot wire anemometry (HWA) measurements. In this paper, twopoint correlations are computed from the time signal of the axial velocity giving access to an evaluation of the turbulence timescales at each measurement point. For assessment of the advanced numerical method that is large Eddy simulation (LES), the same methodology is applied to a LES prediction of the CS. Although comparisons seem relevant and easily accessible, both approaches and contexts have fundamental differences: mostly in terms of duration of the signals acquired experimentally and numerically but also with potentially different acquisition frequencies. In the exercise that aims at comparing highorder statistics and diagnostics, the specificity of comparing experimental and numerical results is comprehensively discussed. Attention is given to the importance of the acquisition frequency, intrinsic bias of having a short duration signal and influence of the investigating windows. For an adequate evaluation of the turbulent time scales, it is found that comparing experiments and numerics for high Reynolds number flows inferring smallscale phenomena requires to obey a set of rules, otherwise important errors can be made. If adequately processed, LES and HWA are found to agree well indicating the potential of LES for such problems.
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      Experimental and Numerical Calculation of Turbulent Timescales at the Exit of an Engine Representative Combustor Simulator

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    contributor authorKoupper, Charlie
    contributor authorGicquel, Laurent
    contributor authorDuchaine, Florent
    contributor authorBacci, Tommaso
    contributor authorFacchini, Bruno
    contributor authorPicchi, Alessio
    contributor authorTarchi, Lorenzo
    contributor authorBonneau, Guillaume
    date accessioned2017-05-09T01:28:03Z
    date available2017-05-09T01:28:03Z
    date issued2016
    identifier issn1528-8919
    identifier othergtp_138_02_021503.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/160992
    description abstractTo deepen the knowledge of the interaction between modern lean burn combustors and high pressure (HP) turbines, a nonreactive real scale annular trisector combustor simulator (CS) has been assembled at University of Florence (UNIFI), with the goal of investigating and characterizing the combustor aerothermal field as well as the hot streak transport toward the HP vanes. To generate hot streaks and simulate lean burn combustor behaviors, the rig is equipped with axial swirlers fed by a main air flow stream that is heated up to 531 K, while liners with effusion cooling holes are fed by air at ambient temperature. Detailed experimental investigations are then performed with the aim of characterizing the turbulence quantities at the exit of the combustion module, and specifically evaluating an integral scale of turbulence. To do so, an automatic traverse system is mounted at the exit of the CS and equipped to perform hot wire anemometry (HWA) measurements. In this paper, twopoint correlations are computed from the time signal of the axial velocity giving access to an evaluation of the turbulence timescales at each measurement point. For assessment of the advanced numerical method that is large Eddy simulation (LES), the same methodology is applied to a LES prediction of the CS. Although comparisons seem relevant and easily accessible, both approaches and contexts have fundamental differences: mostly in terms of duration of the signals acquired experimentally and numerically but also with potentially different acquisition frequencies. In the exercise that aims at comparing highorder statistics and diagnostics, the specificity of comparing experimental and numerical results is comprehensively discussed. Attention is given to the importance of the acquisition frequency, intrinsic bias of having a short duration signal and influence of the investigating windows. For an adequate evaluation of the turbulent time scales, it is found that comparing experiments and numerics for high Reynolds number flows inferring smallscale phenomena requires to obey a set of rules, otherwise important errors can be made. If adequately processed, LES and HWA are found to agree well indicating the potential of LES for such problems.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleExperimental and Numerical Calculation of Turbulent Timescales at the Exit of an Engine Representative Combustor Simulator
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume138
    journal issue2
    journal titleJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4031262
    journal fristpage21503
    journal lastpage21503
    identifier eissn0742-4795
    treeJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2016:;volume( 138 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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