EP2668447A1 - Système et appareil permettant d'appliquer un champ électrique à un volume de combustion - Google Patents

Système et appareil permettant d'appliquer un champ électrique à un volume de combustion

Info

Publication number
EP2668447A1
EP2668447A1 EP11856899.7A EP11856899A EP2668447A1 EP 2668447 A1 EP2668447 A1 EP 2668447A1 EP 11856899 A EP11856899 A EP 11856899A EP 2668447 A1 EP2668447 A1 EP 2668447A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
electrode
electric field
combustion volume
electrodes
signal
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
EP11856899.7A
Other languages
German (de)
English (en)
Other versions
EP2668447B1 (fr
EP2668447A4 (fr
Inventor
Thomas S. Hartwick
David Goodson
Richard F. Rutkowski
Geoff Osler
Christopher A. Wiklof
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Clearsign Technologies Corp
Original Assignee
Clearsign Combustion Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Clearsign Combustion Corp filed Critical Clearsign Combustion Corp
Publication of EP2668447A1 publication Critical patent/EP2668447A1/fr
Publication of EP2668447A4 publication Critical patent/EP2668447A4/fr
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of EP2668447B1 publication Critical patent/EP2668447B1/fr
Not-in-force legal-status Critical Current
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical

Links

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23QIGNITION; EXTINGUISHING-DEVICES
    • F23Q3/00Igniters using electrically-produced sparks
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23CMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING FLUID FUEL OR SOLID FUEL SUSPENDED IN  A CARRIER GAS OR AIR 
    • F23C99/00Subject-matter not provided for in other groups of this subclass
    • F23C99/001Applying electric means or magnetism to combustion
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23CMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR COMBUSTION USING FLUID FUEL OR SOLID FUEL SUSPENDED IN  A CARRIER GAS OR AIR 
    • F23C2900/00Special features of, or arrangements for combustion apparatus using fluid fuels or solid fuels suspended in air; Combustion processes therefor
    • F23C2900/99005Combustion techniques using plasma gas

Definitions

  • An electric field may be applied to a flame.
  • the flame may respond by modifying its behavior, such as by increasing its rate of heat evolution.
  • a system may provide a plurality of electric field axes configured to pass near or through a flame.
  • a plurality greater than two electrodes may selectively produce a plurality greater than two electric field axes through or near a flame.
  • at least one of the selectable electric field axes may be at an angle and not parallel or antiparallel to at least one other of the selectable electric field axes.
  • a controller may sequentially select an electric field configuration in a combustion volume.
  • a plurality greater than two electrode drivers may drive the sequential electric field configurations in the combustion volume.
  • the controller may drive the sequential electric field configurations at a periodic rate.
  • a plurality of electric field modulation states may be produced sequentially at a periodic frequency equal to or greater than about 120 Hz. According to an embodiment, a plurality of electric field modulation states may be produced sequentially at a frequency of change equal to or greater than about 1 KHz.
  • a modulation frequency of electric field states in a combustion volume may be varied as a function of a fuel delivery rate, an airflow rate, a desired energy output rate, or other desired operational parameter.
  • an algorithm may be used to determine one or more characteristics of one or more sequences of electric field modulation states.
  • the algorithm may be a function of input variables and/or detected variables.
  • the input variables may include a fuel delivery rate, an airflow rate, a desired energy output rate, and/or another operational parameter.
  • an electric field controller may include a fuzzy logic circuit configured to determine a sequence of electric field modulation states in a combustion volume as a function of input variables and/or detected variables.
  • the input variables may include a fuel delivery rate, an airflow rate, a desired energy output rate, and/or another operational parameter.
  • related systems include but are not limited to circuitry and/or programming for providing method embodiments.
  • Combinations of hardware, software, and/or firmware may be configured according to the preferences of the system designer.
  • FIG. 1 is a diagram of a combustion volume configured for application of a time-varying electric field, according to an embodiment.
  • FIG. 2A is a depiction of an electric field in the combustion volume corresponding to FIG. 1 at a first time, according to an embodiment.
  • FIG. 2B is a depiction of an electric field in the combustion volume corresponding to FIG. 1 at a second time, according to an embodiment.
  • FIG. 2C is a depiction of an electric field in the combustion volume corresponding to FIG. 1 at a third time, according to an embodiment.
  • FIG. 3 is block diagram of a system configured to provide a time- varying electric field across a combustion volume, according to an embodiment.
  • FIG. 4 is block diagram of a system configured to provide a time- varying electric field across a combustion volume, according to an embodiment.
  • FIG. 5 is a timing diagram for controlling electrode modulation, according to an embodiment.
  • FIG. 6 is a diagram illustrating waveforms for controlling electrode modulation according to an embodiment.
  • FIG. 7 is a diagram illustrating waveforms for controlling electrode modulation according to an embodiment.
  • FIG. 1 is a diagram of a combustion volume 103 with a system 101 configured for application of a time-varying electric field to the combustion volume 103, according to an embodiment.
  • a burner nozzle 102 is configured to support a flame 104 in a combustion volume 103.
  • the combustion volume 103 may form a portion of a boiler, such as a water tube boiler or a fire tube boiler, a hot water tank, a furnace, an oven, a flue, an exhaust pipe, a cook top, or the like.
  • At least three electrodes 106, 108, and 1 10 are arranged near or in the combustion volume 103 such that application of a voltage signals to the electrodes may form an electric field across the combustion volume 103 in the vicinity of or through the flame 104 supported therein by the burner nozzle 102.
  • the electrodes 106, 108, and 1 10 may be respectively energized by
  • leads 1 12, 1 14, and 1 16 which may receive voltage signals from a controller and/or amplifier (not shown).
  • the burner nozzle 102 is shown as a simplified hollow cylinder, several alternative embodiments may be contemplated. While the burner 102 and the electrodes 106, 108, and 1 10 are shown in respective forms and geometric relationships, other geometric relationships and forms may be contemplated. For example, the electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 may have shapes other than cylindrical. According to some embodiments, the burner nozzle 102 may be energized to form one of the electrodes. According to some embodiments, a plurality of nozzles 102 may support a plurality of flames104 in the combustion volume 103.
  • 1 10 may support a second plurality of electric field axes across the combustion volume 103 in the vicinity of or through at least one flame.
  • one electric field axis may be formed between electrodes 106 and 108.
  • Another electric field axis may be formed between electrodes 108 and 1 10.
  • Another electric field axis may be formed between electrodes 106 and 1 10.
  • the illustrative embodiment of FIG. 1 may vary considerably in scale, according to the applications.
  • the inner diameter of the burner 102 may be about a centimeter, and the distance between electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 may be about 1 .5 centimeters.
  • the inner diameter of the burner 102 may be about 1 .75 inches and the distance between the electrodes may be about 3.25 inches.
  • Other dimensions and ratios between burner size and electrode spacing are contemplated.
  • an algorithm may provide a sequence of voltages to the electrodes 106, 108, 1 10.
  • the algorithm may provide a
  • FIG. 2A is a depiction 202 of a nominal electric field 204 formed at least momentarily at a first time between an electrode 106 and an electrode 108, according to an embodiment.
  • the electric field 204 is depicted such that electrode 106 is held at a positive potential and electrode 108 is held at a negative potential, such that electrons and other negatively charges species in the combustion volume 103 tend to stream away from electrode 108 and toward electrode 106.
  • positive ions and other positively charged species in the combustion volume 103 tend to stream away from electrode 106 and toward electrode 108.
  • a flame 104 in the combustion volume 103 may include a variety of charged and uncharged species.
  • charged species that may respond to an electric field may include electrons, protons, negatively charged ions, positively charged ions, negatively charged particulates, positively charged particulates, negatively charged fuel vapor, positively charged fuel vapor, negatively charged combustion products, and positively charged combustion products, etc.
  • Such charged species may be present at various points and at various times in a combustion process.
  • a combustion volume 103 and/or flame may include uncharged combustion products, unburned fuel, and air.
  • the charged species typically present in flames generally make flames highly conductive. Areas of the combustion volume 103 outside the flame 104 may be relatively non-conductive.
  • the nominal electric field 204 may be expressed as drawing negatively charged species within the flame 104 toward the volume of the flame proximate electrode 106, and as drawing positive species within the flame 104 toward the volume of the flame 104 proximate electrode 108.
  • FIG. 2B is a depiction 206 of a nominal electric field 208 formed at least momentarily at a second time between electrode 108 and electrode 1 10, according to an embodiment.
  • the electric field 208 is depicted such that electrode 108 is held at a positive potential and electrode 1 10 is held at a negative potential, such that negatively charged species in the combustion volume 103 tend to stream away from electrode 1 10 and toward electrode 108; and positive species in the combustion volume 103 tend to stream away from electrode 108 and toward electrode 1 10.
  • the combustion volume 103 may be drawn toward the volume of the flame proximate electrode 1 10 and negatively charged species within the flame 204 may be drawn toward the volume of the flame proximate electrode 108. This may tend to increase the mass density of the flame 104 near electrodes 108 and/or 1 10.
  • FIG. 2C is a depiction 21 O of an electric field 212 formed at least momentarily at a third time between electrode 1 10 and electrode 106, according to an embodiment.
  • the electric field 212 is depicted such that electrode 1 10 is held at a positive potential and electrode 106 is held at a negative potential.
  • negatively charged species in the combustion volume 103 tend to stream away from electrode 1 10 and toward electrode 108; and positive species in the combustion volume 103 tend to stream away from electrode 108 and toward electrode 1 10.
  • a movement of higher mass density from the region of the flame 104 proximate electrode 1 10 to the region of the flame proximate electrode 106 may tend to cause a clockwise rotation of positive species and counter-clockwise rotation of negative species in the flame 104, along with an acceleration of combustion.
  • this may tend to cause a clockwise or counter-clockwise swirl.
  • a sequential, repeating application of nominal electric fields 204, 208, 212 may tend to accelerate the flame 104 to produce a clockwise swirl or vortex effect in the flame.
  • Such a sequential electric field application may further tend to expose reactants to a streaming flow of complementary reactants and increase the probability of collisions between reactants to reduce diffusion related limitations to reaction kinetics. Decreased diffusion limitations may tend to increase the rate of reaction, further increasing exothermic output, thus further increasing the rate of reaction.
  • the higher temperature and higher reaction rate may tend to drive the flame reaction farther to completion to increase the relative proportion of carbon dioxide (C0 2 ) to other partial reaction products such as carbon monoxide (CO), unburned fuel, etc. exiting the combustion volume 103.
  • the greater final extent of reaction may thus provide higher thermal output and/or reduce fuel consumption for a given thermal output.
  • nominal electric fields 204, 208, 212 may tend to accelerate the flame 104 to produce a counter-clockwise swirl or vortex effect in the flame, for example when a field-reactive movement of species is dominated by negatively charged species.
  • FIGS 1 and 2A-2C While the electrode configuration and electric field sequence shown in FIGS 1 and 2A-2C is shown as an embodiment using a relatively simple configuration of three electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 and three electric field axes 204, 208, 212, other configurations may be preferable for some embodiments and some applications.
  • an electric field may exist simultaneously between more than two electrodes.
  • the number of electrodes may be increased significantly.
  • the timing of electric field switching may be changed, may be made at a non-constant interval, may be made to variable potentials, may be informed by feedback control, etc.
  • the electrode configuration may be altered significantly, such as by integration into the combustion chamber wall, placement behind the combustion chamber wall, etc.
  • electrodes may be placed such that the electric field angle varies in more than one plane, such as by placing some electrodes proximal and other electrodes distal relative to the burner nozzle.
  • a given electrode may be limited to one state (such as either positive or negative) plus neutral.
  • all electrodes may be limited to one state (such as either positive or negative) plus neutral.
  • FIG. 3 is block diagram of a system 301 configured to provide a time-varying electric field across a combustion volume, according to an embodiment.
  • An electronic controller 302 is configured to produce a plurality of time-varying waveforms for driving a plurality of electrodes 106, 108 and 1 10.
  • the waveforms may be formed at least partly by a sequencer (not shown) forming a portion of the controller 302.
  • the sequencer may be formed from a software algorithm, a state machine, etc., operatively coupled to an output node 306.
  • the waveforms are transmitted to an amplifier 304 via one or more signal lines 306.
  • the amplifier 304 amplifies the waveforms to respective voltages for energizing the electrodes 106, 108, and 1 10 via the respective electrode leads 1 12, 1 14, and 1 16.
  • the waveforms may be produced by the controller 302 at a constant frequency.
  • the constant frequency may be fixed or selectable. According to another embodiment,
  • a non-constant period or segment of a period may help to provide a spread-spectrum field sequence and may help to avoid resonance conditions or other interference problems.
  • electrode drive waveforms may be produced at about 1 KHz. According to another embodiment, electrode drive waveforms may be produced with a period corresponding to about 10 KHz. According to another embodiment, electrode drive waveforms may be produced at about 20 KHz. According to an illustrative embodiment, the amplifier 304 may drive the electrodes 106, 108, and 1 10 to about 900 volts. According to another embodiment, the amplifier 304 may drive the electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 to about +450 and -450 volts. As mentioned elsewhere, portions of a period may include opening a circuit to one or more electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 to let its voltage "float".
  • FIG. 4 is block diagram of a system 401 configured to receive or transmit at least one combustion or electric field parameter and/or at least one sensor input.
  • the system 401 may responsively provide a time-varying electric field between electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 across a combustion volume as a function of the at least one combustion parameter and/or at least one sensor input, according to another embodiment.
  • the modulation frequency of the electric field states and/or the electrode voltage may be varied as a function of a fuel delivery rate, a desired energy output rate, or other desired operational parameter.
  • the controller 302 may be operatively coupled to one or more of a parameter communication module 402 and a sensor input module 404, such as via a data communication bus 406.
  • the parameter communication module 402 may provide a facility to update software, firmware, etc used by the controller 302. Such updates may include look-up table and/or algorithm updates such as may be determined by modeling, learned via previous system measurements, etc.
  • the parameter communication module 402 may further be used to communicate substantially real time operating parameters to the controller 302.
  • the parameter communication module 402 may further be used to communicate operating status, fault conditions, firmware or software version, sensor values, etc. from the controller 302 to external systems (not shown).
  • a sensor input module 404 may provide sensed values to the controller 302 via the data communication bus 406. Sensed values received from the sensor input module 404 may include parameters not sensed by external systems and therefore unavailable via the parameter communication module 402. Alternatively, sensed values received from the sensor input module 404 may include parameters that are also reported from external systems via the parameter communication module 402.
  • Parameters such as a fuel flow rate, stack gas temperature, stack gas optical density, combustion volume temperature, combustion volume luminosity, combustion volume ionization, ionization near one or more electrodes, combustion volume open, combustion volume maintenance lockout, electrical fault, etc. may be communicated to the controller 302 from the parameter communication module 402, sensor input module 404, and/or via feedback through the amplifier 304.
  • Voltage drive to the electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 may be shut off in the event of a safety condition state and/or a manual shut-down command received through the parameter communication module 402. Similarly, a fault state in the system 401 may be communicated to an external system to force a shutdown of fuel or otherwise enter a safe state.
  • the controller may determine waveforms for driving the electrodes
  • parameters responsive to the received parameters, feedback, and sensed values (referred to collectively as “parameters”).
  • the parameters may be optionally combined, compared, differentiated, integrated, etc.
  • Parameters or combinations of parameters may be input to a control algorithm such as an algorithmic calculation, a table look-up, a proportional-integral- differential (PID) control algorithm, fuzzy logic, or other mechanisms to determine waveform parameters.
  • the determined waveform parameters may include, for example, selection of electrodes 106, 108, 1 10, sequencing of electrodes 106, 108, 1 10, waveform frequency or period, electrode 106, 108, 1 10 voltage, etc.
  • the parameters may be determined, for example, according to optimization of a response variable such for maximizing thermal output from the combustion volume, maximizing an extent of reaction in the combustion volume, maximizing stack clarity from the combustion volume, minimizing pollutant output from the combustion volume, maximizing the temperature of the combustion volume, meeting a target temperature in the combustion volume, minimizing luminous output from a flame in the combustion volume, achieving a desired flicker in a flame in the combustion volume, maximizing luminous output from a flame in the combustion volume, maximizing fuel efficiency, maximizing power output, compensating for maintenance issues, maximizing system life,
  • a response variable such for maximizing thermal output from the combustion volume, maximizing an extent of reaction in the combustion volume, maximizing stack clarity from the combustion volume, minimizing pollutant output from the combustion volume, maximizing the temperature of the combustion volume, meeting a target temperature in the combustion volume, minimizing luminous output from a flame in the combustion volume, achieving a desired flicker in a flame in the combustion volume, maximizing luminous output from a flame in the combustion volume,
  • waveforms generated by the controller are [047] According to an embodiment, waveforms generated by the controller
  • the amplifier 304 may provide status, synchronization, fault or other feedback via dedicated nodes 306 or may alternatively communicate status to the controller 302 and/or the parameter communication module 402 via the data bus 406.
  • controller 302 and amplifier 304 of FIGS. 3 and 4 are illustrated as discrete modules, they may be integrated. Similarly, the parameter communications module 402 and/or sensor input module 404 may be integrated with the controller 302 and/or amplifier 304.
  • FIG. 5 An illustrative set of waveforms is shown in FIG. 5, in the form of a timing diagram 501 showing waveforms 502, 504, 506 for respectively controlling electrode 106, 108, 1 10 modulation, according to an embodiment.
  • Each of the waveforms 502, 504, and 506 are shown registered with one another along a horizontal axis indicative of time, each shown as varying between a high voltage, V H , a ground state, 0, and a low voltage V L .
  • the waveforms 502, 504, 506 correspond respectively to energization patterns delivered to the electrodes 106, 108 and 1 10.
  • the voltages V H , 0, and V L may represent relatively low voltages delivered to the amplifier 304 from the controller 302 via the amplifier drive line(s) 306. Similarly, the voltages V H , 0, and V L may represent relatively large voltages delivered by the amplifier 304 to the respective electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 via the respective electrode drive lines 1 12, 1 14, 1 16.
  • the waveforms 502, 504, 506 may be provided to repeat in a periodic pattern with a period P. During a first portion 508 of the period P, waveform 502 drives electrode 106 high while waveform 504 drives electrode 108 low, and waveform 506 drives electrode 1 10 to an
  • portion 508 of waveform 506 may represent opening the electrode drive such that the electrode electrical potential floats.
  • Waveform portion 508 corresponds to the electric field state 202 shown in FIG. 2A. That is V H is applied to electrode 106 while V L is applied to electrode 108 to form an idealized electric field 204 between electrodes 106 and 108. Electrode 1 10 is either allowed to float or held at an intermediate potential such that reduced or substantially no electric fields are generated between it and the other electrodes.
  • waveform 502 indicates that electrode 106 is held open to "float" or alternatively is driven to an
  • Waveform portion 510 corresponds to the electric field state 206 shown in FIG. 2B. That is, V H is applied to electrode 108 while V L is applied to electrode 1 10 to form an idealized electric field 208 between electrodes 108 and 1 10. Electrode 106 is either allowed to float or held at an intermediate potential such that reduced or substantially no electric fields are generated between it and the other electrodes.
  • waveform 504 indicates that electrode 108 is held open to "float" or alternatively is driven to an
  • Waveform portion 512 corresponds to the electric field state 210 shown in FIG. 2B. That is, V H is applied to electrode 1 10 while V L is applied to electrode 106 to form an idealized electric field 212 between electrodes 1 10 and 106. Electrode 108 is either allowed to float or held at an intermediate potential such that reduced or substantially no electric fields are generated between it and the other electrodes. Proceeding to the next portion 508, the periodic pattern is repeated.
  • waveforms 502, 504, and 506 of timing diagram 501 indicate that each of the portions 508, 510, and 512 of the period P are
  • the periods may be varied somewhat or modulated such as to reduce resonance behavior, accommodate variations in combustion volume 103 geometry, etc. Additionally or alternatively, the periods P may be varied in duration. Similarly, while the voltage levels V H , 0, and V L are shown as substantially equal to one another, they may also be varied from electrode-to- electrode, from period portion to period portion, and/or from period-to-period.
  • waveforms 502, 504, and 506 are shown as idealized square waves, the shape of the waveforms 502, 504, 506 may be varied. For example, leading and trailing edges may exhibit voltage overshoot or undershoot; leading and trailing edges may be transitioned less abruptly, such as by applying a substantially constant dl/dt circuit, optionally with acceleration; or the waveforms may be modified in other ways, such as by applying sine functions, etc.
  • FIG. 6 is a diagram 601 illustrating waveforms 602, 604, 606 for controlling electrode modulation according to another embodiment.
  • the waveforms 602, 604, and 606 may, for example, be created from the
  • waveforms 502, 504, 506 of FIG. 5 by driving the square waveforms through an R/C filter, such as driving through natural impedance.
  • the waveforms 602, 604, and 606, may be digitally synthesized, driven by a harmonic sine-function generator, etc.
  • period portions 508, 510, and 512 may or may not correspond exactly to the corresponding portions of FIG. 5, they may be generally regarded as driving the electrodes 106, 108, and 1 10 to corresponding states as shown in FIGS 2A-2C.
  • the period P may be conveniently determined from a zero crossing as shown, or may be calculated to correspond to the position shown in FIG. 5.
  • waveforms such as 602, 604, 606 drive corresponding electrodes 106, 108, 1 10; the idealized electric fields 204, 208, 212 of FIGS. 2A-2C may not represent the actual fields as closely as when waveforms such as 502, 504, 506 of FIG. 5 are used.
  • waveform 602 ramps up from an intermediate voltage, 0 to a high voltage V H while waveform 604 ramps down from an intermediate voltage, 0 to a low voltage V L and waveform 606 ramps down from a high voltage V H toward an intermediate voltage 0.
  • the electric field 212 of FIG. 2C "fades" to the electric field 204 of FIG.
  • waveform 604 ramps up toward high voltage while waveform 606 continues to decrease and waveform 602 begins its descent from its maximum value. This may tend to fade electric field 204 toward the configuration 206, while a small reversed sign field 212 appears, owing to the potential between electrodes 106 and 1 10.
  • FIG. 7 is a diagram 701 illustrating waveforms 702, 704, 706 for controlling modulation of the respective electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 according to another embodiment.
  • Waveform 702 begins a period P during a portion 708 at a relatively high voltage VH, corresponding to a relatively high voltage at electrode 106.
  • waveform 704 begins the period P at a relatively low voltage V L , corresponding to a relatively low voltage at electrode 108; and waveform 706 corresponds to an open condition at electrode 1 10.
  • Waveform portion 708 may be referred to as a first pulse period.
  • the electric field configuration in a driven combustion volume 103 may correspond to configuration 202, shown in FIG. 2A.
  • the nominal electric field 204 of configuration 202 may tend to attract positively charged species toward electrode 108 and attract negatively charged species toward electrode 106.
  • waveforms 702 and 704 drive respective electrodes 106 and 108 open while waveform 706 maintains the open circuit condition at electrode 1 10.
  • the electrodes 106, 108, and 1 10 are held open and thus substantially no electric field is applied to the flame or the combustion volume.
  • inertia imparted onto charged species during the preceding first pulse period 708 may remain during the non-pulse period 710, and the charged species may thus remain in motion. Such motion may be nominally along trajectories present at the end of the first pulse period 708, as modified by subsequent collisions and interactions with other particles.
  • a second pulse period 712 begins.
  • waveform 702 provides an open electrical condition at electrode 106 while waveform 704 goes to a relatively high voltage to drive electrode 108 to a corresponding relatively high voltage and waveform 706 goes to a relatively low voltage to drive electrode 1 10 to a corresponding relatively low voltage.
  • an electric field configuration 206 of FIG. 2B occurs.
  • a third pulse period 714 begins, which may for example create an electric field configuration similar to electric field configuration 210, shown in FIG. 2C.
  • the system may again enter a non-pulse portion 710. This may continue over a plurality of periods, such as to provide a pseudo-steady state repetition of the period P portions 708, 710, 712, 710, 714, 710, etc.
  • the pulse periods and non-pulse portions may provide about a 25% duty cycle pulse train, as illustrated, wherein there is a field generated between two electrodes about 25% of the time and no applied electric fields the other 75% of the time.
  • the duty cycle may be varied according to conditions within the combustion volume 103, such as may be determined by a feedback circuit and/or parameter input circuit as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4.
  • the pulse periods 708, 712, and 714 may each be about 10 microseconds duration and the period P may be about 1 KHz frequency, equivalent to 1 millisecond period.
  • the non-pulse portions may each be about 323.333 microseconds.
  • the relative charge-to-mass ratio of a particular charged species may affect its response to the intermittent pulse periods 708, 712, 714 and intervening non-pulse portions 710.
  • the duty cycle may be varied to achieve a desired movement of one or more charged species in the combustion volume 103.
  • waveforms 702, 704, 706 optimized to transport a positively charged species clockwise may be superimposed over other waveforms (not shown) optimized to transport another positively charged species or a negatively charged species clockwise or counterclockwise to produce a third set of waveforms (not shown) that achieve transport of differing species in desired respective paths.
  • a heavy, positive species may require a relatively high
  • a light, negative species may require a relatively low duty cycle with a relatively short period to move along a chosen path.
  • the two waveforms may be superimposed to drive the positive and negative species in parallel (clockwise or counterclockwise) or anti-parallel (clockwise and counter-clockwise) to each other.
  • Electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 are shown arranged in figures above such that a straight line connecting any two electrodes passes through the volume of an intervening flame, other arrangements may be within the scope. While the number of electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 shown in the embodiments above is three, other numbers greater than three may similarly fall within the scope. While the electrodes 106, 108, 1 10 are indicated as cylindrical conductors arranged parallel to the major axis of the burner nozzle, other arrangements may fall within the scope.
  • a plurality of electrodes are arranged substantially at the corners of a cube, and include plates of finite size having normal axes that intersect at the center of the cube, which corresponds to the supported flame 104.
  • the electrodes may include surfaces or figurative points arranged at the centers of the faces of a cube, at the corners or at the centers of the faces of a geodesic sphere, etc.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
EP11856899.7A 2011-01-24 2011-01-24 Appareil et procédé permettant d'appliquer un champ électrique à un volume de combustion Not-in-force EP2668447B1 (fr)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/US2011/022269 WO2012102697A1 (fr) 2011-01-24 2011-01-24 Système et appareil permettant d'appliquer un champ électrique à un volume de combustion

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EP2668447A1 true EP2668447A1 (fr) 2013-12-04
EP2668447A4 EP2668447A4 (fr) 2016-11-02
EP2668447B1 EP2668447B1 (fr) 2018-09-12

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EP (1) EP2668447B1 (fr)
JP (1) JP2014506666A (fr)
KR (1) KR20140066660A (fr)
CN (1) CN103443548B (fr)
CA (1) CA2825585A1 (fr)
WO (1) WO2012102697A1 (fr)

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EP2668447B1 (fr) 2018-09-12
JP2014506666A (ja) 2014-03-17
WO2012102697A1 (fr) 2012-08-02
CN103443548A (zh) 2013-12-11
CN103443548B (zh) 2016-04-06
CA2825585A1 (fr) 2012-08-02
KR20140066660A (ko) 2014-06-02
EP2668447A4 (fr) 2016-11-02

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