Browsing by Author "Burger, Victor"
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- ItemOpen AccessThe design of a combustion test facility for synthetic jet fuel research(2009) Burger, Victor; Yates, AndrewWith the relatively recent emergence of non-petroleum-derived aviation gas turbine fuels, it was appropriate to review the complete list of jet-fuel specifications to assess whether they were sufficiently robust to ensure fit-forpurpose within the new paradigm. Although this has been an industry-wide endeavour, there were some particular research areas that were identified for special in-house attention by Sasol, as the world’s first commercial producer of approved and certified semi-synthetic and fully synthetic jet fuel. The project described in this report formed part of one of these research areas, which pertained to ignition and combustion stability in gas turbines and the role played by various fuel attributes and properties. The project was conducted at the Sasol Advance Fuels Laboratory based at the University of Cape Town. The project entailed the design and construction of a combustion test facility for conducting synthetic jet fuel research. The primary intended focus of the facility was the investigation of ignition and combustion stability behaviour of various test fuels, ranging from commercial jet fuel to single component model fuels. The scope of the project also included the design of both a basic homogeneous and a heterogeneous combustor which served to verify the facility’s suitability for investigating the influence of fuel chemistry and combustor inlet conditions on ignition and combustion stability limits.
- ItemOpen AccessDevelopment of an electronic control unit for the T63 gas turbine(2014) Robertson, Leanne; Yates, Andrew; Burger, VictorFundamental research has been undertaken at the SASOL Advanced Fuels Laboratory to investigate the effects of the chemistry and physical properties of both conventional and synthetic jet fuels on threshold combustion. This research was undertaken using a purpose built low pressure continuous combustion test facility. Researchers at the laboratory now wish to examine these effects on an aviation gas turbine in service for which “off-map” scheduling of fuel to the engine would be required. A two phase project was thus proposed to develop this capability; the work of this thesis embodies Phase I of that project.
- ItemOpen AccessThe influence of fuel properties on threshold combustion in aviation gas turbine engines(2017) Burger, Victor; Yates, AndrewThis body of work investigated the influence of alternative jet fuel properties on aviation gas turbine performance at threshold combustor operating conditions. It focused on altitude blowout performance and was in part motivated by results that were encountered during an aviation industry evaluation of synthetic kerosene that complied with the Jet A-1 specification, but differed from the fuel that was used as a reference in terms of some significant properties. As a consequence the relative impact of physical properties and reaction chemistry properties were of primary interest in this study. The thesis considered the potential to blend a range of different alternative jet fuel formulations which exhibited independent variations in properties relating to evaporation and reaction behaviour whilst still conforming to legislated physical fuel specifications. It further explored the potential for said variations having a detectable and significant influence on the simulated high altitude extinction behaviour in a representative aviation gas turbine combustor. Based on the findings, appropriate metrics were suggested for scientifically quantifying the appropriate properties and conclusions were drawn about the potential impact of alternative jet fuel properties on blowout performance. These subjects were addressed primarily through the theoretical analyses of targeted experimental programmes. The experimental design adopted a novel approach of formulating eight test fuels to reflect real-world alternative fuel compositions while still enabling a targeted evaluation of the influences of both physical and chemical reaction properties. A detailed characterisation was performed of the test fuels' physical and reaction properties. The extinction and spray behaviours of the fuels were then evaluated in a laboratory scale combustor featuring dual-swirl geometry and a single prefilming airblast atomiser. The various experimental data sets were interpreted within the context of a theoretical model analysis. In doing so the relative performance of alternative jet fuel formulations under laboratory burner conditions were translated to predict relative real world altitude performance. This approach was validated against aforementioned industry evaluation results and demonstrated to be consistent. A technically defensible explanation was provided for the previously unexplored anomalous altitude extinction results that were observed during the industry evaluation of synthetic jet fuel. A conclusive case was made for the extinction limit differences having been caused by the relative differences in chemical ignition delays of the fuels. The probability of volatility (distillation profile) and fuel physical properties playing a significant role in the impaired altitude performance was discredited. Evaporation-controlled combustion efficiency was, however, shown to become a significant factor at low air mass flow rates or when the fuel evaporation is compromised. The influence of flame speed and chemical ignition delays were investigated. Laminar flame speed was shown not to correlate with LBO, discrediting its use as a proxy for reaction rate. The study showed a correlation between the lean blowout behaviour of jet fuels and the ignition delays associated with their derived cetane numbers. Additionally, there was substantive support indicating that an even stronger correlation could be obtained by operating the IQT™ device that is used to measure these delays at an elevated temperature. The thesis makes a contribution towards the development of both technical understanding and practical tools for evaluating the potential operating limits of alternative jet fuel formulations.