Measurements of fuel thickness for prefilming atomisers at elevated pressure
journal contribution
posted on 2020-10-19, 14:46 authored by Mark BrendMark Brend, Ashley BarkerAshley Barker, Jon CarrotteJon Carrotte© 2020 Elsevier Ltd This work describes an experimental study of the fuel flows on the prefilmer of an aerospace gas turbine airblast atomiser at elevated pressure. The work identifies the physics leading to contradictory findings within the literature. This concerns an important atomisation boundary condition, whether the thickness of the fuel film on the prefilming surface influences the downstream drop size distribution. Analysis of the experimental data shows that fuel film thickness becomes uncorrelated with the downstream drop size if surface tension forces dominate inertia at the prefilmer tip. Fuel film thickness however provides the initial length scale for primary atomization if fuel inertia exceeds surface tension forces. It is the high inertial conditions that are associated with gas turbine operation, but the low inertial conditions that are readily achievable at laboratory scale through momentum flux scaling. Additionally, a detailed statistical description of the fuel flow has been provided for the atomiser tested. This reveals the importance of upstream hydrodynamic and aerodynamic boundary conditions on the probability of a ligament forming. Surprisingly, operating pressure is shown to have limited effect on the probability of ligament formation, a significant advantage for future modelling of the primary atomization processes.
Funding
Technology Strategy Board for funding the measurement programme under the NADIT pro1225 gram (project number 101368)
History
School
- Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
Department
- Aeronautical and Automotive Engineering
Published in
International Journal of Multiphase FlowVolume
131Publisher
ElsevierVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Rights holder
© ElsevierPublisher statement
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal International Journal of Multiphase Flow and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmultiphaseflow.2020.103313Acceptance date
2020-04-10Publication date
2020-07-06Copyright date
2020ISSN
0301-9322Publisher version
Language
- en
Depositor
Dr Mark Brend Deposit date: 15 October 2020Article number
103313Usage metrics
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