US2705868A - Combustion apparatus - Google Patents

Combustion apparatus Download PDF

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Publication number
US2705868A
US2705868A US220605A US22060551A US2705868A US 2705868 A US2705868 A US 2705868A US 220605 A US220605 A US 220605A US 22060551 A US22060551 A US 22060551A US 2705868 A US2705868 A US 2705868A
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United States
Prior art keywords
fuel
duct
flame
tubular member
combustion apparatus
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Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US220605A
Inventor
Forman Ronald Thomas Max
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.)
Power Jets Research and Development Ltd
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Power Jets Research and Development Ltd
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Filing date
Publication date
Priority to GB21731/48A priority Critical patent/GB670247A/en
Priority to CH275239D priority patent/CH275239A/en
Priority to FR981045D priority patent/FR981045A/en
Application filed by Power Jets Research and Development Ltd filed Critical Power Jets Research and Development Ltd
Priority to US220605A priority patent/US2705868A/en
Priority to US220610A priority patent/US2705869A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2705868A publication Critical patent/US2705868A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23RGENERATING COMBUSTION PRODUCTS OF HIGH PRESSURE OR HIGH VELOCITY, e.g. GAS-TURBINE COMBUSTION CHAMBERS
    • F23R3/00Continuous combustion chambers using liquid or gaseous fuel
    • F23R3/02Continuous combustion chambers using liquid or gaseous fuel characterised by the air-flow or gas-flow configuration
    • F23R3/16Continuous combustion chambers using liquid or gaseous fuel characterised by the air-flow or gas-flow configuration with devices inside the flame tube or the combustion chamber to influence the air or gas flow
    • F23R3/18Flame stabilising means, e.g. flame holders for after-burners of jet-propulsion plants
    • F23R3/20Flame stabilising means, e.g. flame holders for after-burners of jet-propulsion plants incorporating fuel injection means

Definitions

  • This invention relates to combustion apparatus in which combustion is required to be supported by a current of air or other gas (hereinafter referred to as air) of flame extinguishing velocity.
  • air a current of air or other gas
  • flame extinguishing velocity is usedto indicate that the mean speed of the combustion-supporting air current in its general direction of flow past a combustion zone, calculated from the ratio air volume passing in unit time/cross sectional area of flow path, is substantially higher than the speed of flame propagation in the fuel/air mixture concerned.
  • the speed of flame propagation is considered as being of the order of one foot per second at atmospheric temperature; the invention on the other hand, is especially applicable to combustion apparatus in which the speed of the air current in its general direction of flow past a combustion zone, calculated on the basis indicated, might be of an order as low as or as high as 500 feet per second or even more, depending upon the design.
  • An object of the invention is to avoid difficulties which arise when fuel has to be burnt in a flow of air through a duct whose cross-sectional area is large in the sense that having regard to the speed of flame propagation, the velocity of the air flow, and the length of passage available within which to complete combustion, it is not possible to achieve a spread of flame across the whole cross-section of the duct using only a single source of ignition.
  • this invention is an improvement on that described in copending United States patent application Serial No. 220,610, for Combustion Apparatus, in the name of Johnstone.
  • This application is a division of application Serial No. 75,042, filed February 7, 1949, now abandoned.
  • a combustion apparatus in which combustion is required to be supported by a gaseous stream of flame extinguishing velocity comprising a duct conveying said stream, a plurality of flame stabilizing means distributed over a transverse section of the duct, a plurality of fuel injecting means distributed over a transverse section of the duct upstream of the flame stabilizing means and injecting fuel without ignition into the duct, and means for controlling the lateral spread of the fuel between said fuel injecting means and flame stabilizing means.
  • One method of limiting the spread of fuel is by enclosing the fuel injecting means by open ended tubular members having their axes parallel to that of the duct.
  • the invention provides a combustion apparatus in which combustion is required to be supported by a gaseous stream of flame extinguishing velocity comprising a duct conveying said stream, flame stabilizing means located in said duct, fuel injecting means located in said duct upstream of said flame stabilizing means and injecting fuel without ignition into said duct, an open ended tubular member surrounding said fuel injecting means and having its axis parallel to that of the duct and an obturating member in said tubular member whereby theneslcape of fuel from the upstream end thereof is contro e
  • the obturating member is preferably a plate located within the tubular member.
  • Figure l is a diagrammatic axial section of one form of the invention as applied to the burning of fuel in the exhaust pipe of a gas turbine jet propulsion unit.
  • Figure 3 is an end view of the detail shown in Figure 2. i
  • a turbine 1 has on its downstream side a fairing or bullet 2 forming with the exhaust cone 3 an annular diffusion passage.
  • the jet pipe has a divergent section 4 which forms a further diffusion passage, and downstream of this there is a section 5 of constant cross-section terminating in a convergent portion 6 leading to a jet orifice 7.
  • Fuel is in: ected upstream by a plurality of jets 9, located in an upstream portion of the diffusion passage 4, each of which jets is surrounded by an open ended tubular member 12 supported by a streamlined fairing 18 with its axis parallel to that of the duct.
  • a plurality of flame stabilizing baffles 10 At the junction of the diffusion passage 4 and the section 5, there is provided a plurality of flame stabilizing baffles 10, each baflle being designed to.
  • baffle 10 is suflicient to allow timefor vaporization of the fuel, and the length of the tube 12 downstream of each jet 9 limits the lateral spread of fuel and hence a desired degree of concentration of the fuel-air mixture at the baffle 10 may be achieved.
  • the arrangement also prevents fuel from reaching the duct wall and causing local overheating.
  • an inclined plate 16 is mounted in the inner wall of the tubular member 12, the position and dimensions of this plate relative to the tubular member being selected to be such that the required control is effected.
  • the plate may be adjustable both in regard to position and size for varying conditions of operation.
  • part of the fuel is reversed by the plate and part escapes by the upstream end of the tubular member and is reversed by the air flow in the duct.
  • a non-symmetrical distribution of fuel relative to the tubular member may be achieved so that a desired concentration of fuel is caused in the neighbourhood of the baffles.
  • the concentration of fuel is biased so as to be further from the duct wall than would otherwise be the case, so that the duct walls are not directly in contact with the flame.
  • Combustion apparatus for burning fuel in a fastmoving gas stream comprising a duct carrying the stream, a plurality of fuel injectors symmetrically disposed over one transverse section of the duct and each arranged to direct a jet of fuel in an upstream direction, a plurality of 3.
  • Combustion apparatus according to claim 2 wherein open ended tubular members extending along the stream said plate is inclined to the axis of the tubular member.

Description

April 12, 1955 R. T. M. FORMAN COMBUSTION APPARATUS Original Filed Feb. 7, 1949 Invenlor L & 3 M. I,
Attorneys United States Patent COMBUSTION APPARATUS Ronald Thomas Max Forman, Farnborough, England, assignor to Power Jets (Research and Development) Limited, London, England, a British company Original application February 7, 1949, Serial No. 75,042. Dividsd and this application April 12, 1951, Serial No. 220,6 5
Claims priority, application Great Britain January 4, 1949 3 Claims. (Cl. 6039.72)
This invention relates to combustion apparatus in which combustion is required to be supported by a current of air or other gas (hereinafter referred to as air) of flame extinguishing velocity. The term flame extinguishing velocity is usedto indicate that the mean speed of the combustion-supporting air current in its general direction of flow past a combustion zone, calculated from the ratio air volume passing in unit time/cross sectional area of flow path, is substantially higher than the speed of flame propagation in the fuel/air mixture concerned. For hydrocarbon fuels burning in air the speed of flame propagation is considered as being of the order of one foot per second at atmospheric temperature; the invention on the other hand, is especially applicable to combustion apparatus in which the speed of the air current in its general direction of flow past a combustion zone, calculated on the basis indicated, might be of an order as low as or as high as 500 feet per second or even more, depending upon the design.
An object of the invention is to avoid difficulties which arise when fuel has to be burnt in a flow of air through a duct whose cross-sectional area is large in the sense that having regard to the speed of flame propagation, the velocity of the air flow, and the length of passage available within which to complete combustion, it is not possible to achieve a spread of flame across the whole cross-section of the duct using only a single source of ignition.
In one aspect this invention is an improvement on that described in copending United States patent application Serial No. 220,610, for Combustion Apparatus, in the name of Johnstone. This application is a division of application Serial No. 75,042, filed February 7, 1949, now abandoned. In said application Serial No. 220,610, there is provided a combustion apparatus in which combustion is required to be supported by a gaseous stream of flame extinguishing velocity comprising a duct conveying said stream, a plurality of flame stabilizing means distributed over a transverse section of the duct, a plurality of fuel injecting means distributed over a transverse section of the duct upstream of the flame stabilizing means and injecting fuel without ignition into the duct, and means for controlling the lateral spread of the fuel between said fuel injecting means and flame stabilizing means. One method of limiting the spread of fuel is by enclosing the fuel injecting means by open ended tubular members having their axes parallel to that of the duct.
At high fuel pressures it is found that the fuel tends to escape at the upstream end of the tube and in this way the fuel may spread across the whole of the duct. An excessive length of tube would be required to prevent this and an object of the present invention is to limit such escape so that a local concentration of fuel in the duct may be obtained. This invention also makes it possible to produce a non-symmetrical distribution of fuel relative to the tubular member.
Accordingly the invention provides a combustion apparatus in which combustion is required to be supported by a gaseous stream of flame extinguishing velocity comprising a duct conveying said stream, flame stabilizing means located in said duct, fuel injecting means located in said duct upstream of said flame stabilizing means and injecting fuel without ignition into said duct, an open ended tubular member surrounding said fuel injecting means and having its axis parallel to that of the duct and an obturating member in said tubular member whereby theneslcape of fuel from the upstream end thereof is contro e The obturating member is preferably a plate located within the tubular member.
The invention is illustrated by accompanying drawing in which:
Figure l is a diagrammatic axial section of one form of the invention as applied to the burning of fuel in the exhaust pipe of a gas turbine jet propulsion unit.
way of example in the Figure 2 is an enlarged detail of the arrangement shown in Figure 1.
Figure 3 is an end view of the detail shown in Figure 2. i
In Figure l a turbine 1 has on its downstream side a fairing or bullet 2 forming with the exhaust cone 3 an annular diffusion passage. At the downstream end of this passage the jet pipe has a divergent section 4 which forms a further diffusion passage, and downstream of this there is a section 5 of constant cross-section terminating in a convergent portion 6 leading to a jet orifice 7. Fuel is in: ected upstream by a plurality of jets 9, located in an upstream portion of the diffusion passage 4, each of which jets is surrounded by an open ended tubular member 12 supported by a streamlined fairing 18 with its axis parallel to that of the duct. At the junction of the diffusion passage 4 and the section 5, there is provided a plurality of flame stabilizing baffles 10, each baflle being designed to.
9 and its corresponding baffle 10 is suflicient to allow timefor vaporization of the fuel, and the length of the tube 12 downstream of each jet 9 limits the lateral spread of fuel and hence a desired degree of concentration of the fuel-air mixture at the baffle 10 may be achieved.
The arrangement also prevents fuel from reaching the duct wall and causing local overheating. I
At low fuel pressures the fuel will remain within the tubular member 12, but at high pressures it will tend to escape at the upstream end. To control this escape an inclined plate 16 is mounted in the inner wall of the tubular member 12, the position and dimensions of this plate relative to the tubular member being selected to be such that the required control is effected. The plate may be adjustable both in regard to position and size for varying conditions of operation. As shown in Figure 2 part of the fuel is reversed by the plate and part escapes by the upstream end of the tubular member and is reversed by the air flow in the duct. In this way a non-symmetrical distribution of fuel relative to the tubular member may be achieved so that a desired concentration of fuel is caused in the neighbourhood of the baffles. In the particular case illustrated, the concentration of fuel is biased so as to be further from the duct wall than would otherwise be the case, so that the duct walls are not directly in contact with the flame.
I claim:
1. Combustion apparatus for burning fuel in a fastmoving gas stream comprising a duct carrying the stream and including a fuel injection and mixing zone and a flame zone spaced downstream therefrom, an open ended tubular member within the injection. and mixing zone of the duct and extending along the stream within this zone, a fuel injector within said tubular member arranged to direct a jet of fuel in an upstream direction, a baflie within said tubular member, lying in the path of said fuel jet and partly blocking the interior of the tubular member. a flame stabilizer spaced downstream from the tubular member and lying within the flame zone, and an igniter in the neighborhood of the flame stabilizer and within the flame zone.
2. Combustion apparatus for burning fuel in a fastmoving gas stream comprising a duct carrying the stream, a plurality of fuel injectors symmetrically disposed over one transverse section of the duct and each arranged to direct a jet of fuel in an upstream direction, a plurality of 3. Combustion apparatus according to claim 2 wherein open ended tubular members extending along the stream said plate is inclined to the axis of the tubular member. and each enclosing one of the injectors, a bafiie plate exltaeriding acrgass anl lpartly bltlaicking the iililterior of each References Cited in the file of this patent tu u at mem er an ying in t e path of t e fuel jet, the 5 plate being asymmetrically located with respect to the UNITED STATES PATENTS axis of the tubular member, being on that side of the said 2,506,611 Neal et al May 9, 1950 axis nearest to the duct well, a plurality of flame stabilizers 2,5 66,373 Redding Sept. 4, 1951 symmetrically disposed over a transverse section of the FOREIGN PATENTS duct spaced downstream from the tubular member and 10 a an lgniter in the neighborhood of said flame stabilizers. 920,910 France Jan. 8, 1947
US220605A 1948-02-19 1951-04-12 Combustion apparatus Expired - Lifetime US2705868A (en)

Priority Applications (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB21731/48A GB670247A (en) 1948-02-19 1948-08-17 Improvements in or relating to combustion apparatus
CH275239D CH275239A (en) 1948-02-19 1949-02-14 Incinerator.
FR981045D FR981045A (en) 1948-02-19 1949-02-17 Improvements to combustion devices
US220605A US2705868A (en) 1948-02-19 1951-04-12 Combustion apparatus
US220610A US2705869A (en) 1948-02-19 1951-04-12 Combustion apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB275239X 1948-02-19
US7504249A 1949-02-07 1949-02-07
US220605A US2705868A (en) 1948-02-19 1951-04-12 Combustion apparatus
US220610A US2705869A (en) 1948-02-19 1951-04-12 Combustion apparatus

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US2705868A true US2705868A (en) 1955-04-12

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US220605A Expired - Lifetime US2705868A (en) 1948-02-19 1951-04-12 Combustion apparatus

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CH (1) CH275239A (en)
FR (1) FR981045A (en)
GB (1) GB670247A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3162238A (en) * 1961-10-09 1964-12-22 Preway Inc Gas burner utilizing air above atmospheric pressure
US4751815A (en) * 1986-08-29 1988-06-21 United Technologies Corporation Liquid fuel spraybar
US4967562A (en) * 1988-12-12 1990-11-06 Sundstrand Corporation Turbine engine with high efficiency fuel atomization

Families Citing this family (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2651178A (en) * 1951-01-18 1953-09-08 A V Roe Canada Ltd Combination injector and stabilizer for gas turbine afterburners
US2780062A (en) * 1951-04-03 1957-02-05 Curtiss Wright Corp Jet engine burner construction
US2780915A (en) * 1951-12-05 1957-02-12 Solar Aircraft Co Fuel distribution system for jet engine and afterburner
US2712221A (en) * 1952-04-22 1955-07-05 Westinghouse Electric Corp Gas turbine afterburner apparatus
US2835109A (en) * 1952-07-17 1958-05-20 John P Longwell Igniter for ram-jet
US2840990A (en) * 1952-07-17 1958-07-01 John P Longwell Multistage fuel injection for ram-jet combustor
US2780916A (en) * 1952-08-22 1957-02-12 Continental Aviat & Engineerin Pilot burner for jet engines
US2931174A (en) * 1952-12-20 1960-04-05 Armstrong Siddeley Motors Ltd Vaporizer for liquid fuel
NL90169C (en) * 1953-06-27
US2861424A (en) * 1954-04-09 1958-11-25 Douglas Aircraft Co Inc Fuel supply means for combustion apparatus
US2986359A (en) * 1956-06-15 1961-05-30 Tino Ovid Airplane lifting device
DE1276414B (en) * 1956-07-13 1968-08-29 Snecma Incinerator
US3085401A (en) * 1959-01-22 1963-04-16 Rolls Royce Reheat combustion equipment of gas-turbine engines
DE1132765B (en) * 1959-12-14 1962-07-05 Gen Electric Combustion device for a gas flow to a jet engine combustion chamber, in particular to an afterburner
GB1390031A (en) * 1971-08-21 1975-04-09 Rolls Royce Reheat system for a gas turbine engine
GB2093584B (en) * 1981-02-21 1984-12-19 Rolls Royce Improvements in or relating to fuel burners and combustion equipment for use in gas turbine engines
FR2588920B1 (en) * 1985-10-23 1987-12-04 Snecma POSTCOMBUSTION TURBOREACTOR WITH INDIVIDUAL RADIAL POSTCOMBUSTION INJECTORS
US5000004A (en) * 1988-08-16 1991-03-19 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Gas turbine combustor
US20210231143A1 (en) * 2019-05-20 2021-07-29 Jonathan Jan Device and method for augmenting gas flow

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR920910A (en) * 1945-02-01 1947-04-22 Power Jets Res & Dev Ltd Improvements made to combustion devices, more especially to those in which gas streams circulate at high speed
US2506611A (en) * 1948-03-02 1950-05-09 Westinghouse Electric Corp Fuel control for aviation gas turbine power plants
US2566373A (en) * 1946-01-10 1951-09-04 Edward M Redding Fuel control system for turbojet engines

Family Cites Families (5)

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US2385833A (en) * 1943-01-27 1945-10-02 Kevork K Nahigyan Fuel vaporizer for jet propulsion units
NL67339C (en) * 1944-11-28
US2583651A (en) * 1945-08-14 1952-01-29 Jr Arthur Fredrick Horning Airplane power plant with direct cooling of exhaust valves
US2557020A (en) * 1946-04-26 1951-06-12 Standard Oil Dev Co Use of sulfur in the suppression of carburizing in gas turbine and jet propulsion engines
US2508420A (en) * 1948-09-21 1950-05-23 Westinghouse Electric Corp Combustion apparatus

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR920910A (en) * 1945-02-01 1947-04-22 Power Jets Res & Dev Ltd Improvements made to combustion devices, more especially to those in which gas streams circulate at high speed
US2566373A (en) * 1946-01-10 1951-09-04 Edward M Redding Fuel control system for turbojet engines
US2506611A (en) * 1948-03-02 1950-05-09 Westinghouse Electric Corp Fuel control for aviation gas turbine power plants

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3162238A (en) * 1961-10-09 1964-12-22 Preway Inc Gas burner utilizing air above atmospheric pressure
US4751815A (en) * 1986-08-29 1988-06-21 United Technologies Corporation Liquid fuel spraybar
US4967562A (en) * 1988-12-12 1990-11-06 Sundstrand Corporation Turbine engine with high efficiency fuel atomization

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Publication number Publication date
GB670247A (en) 1952-04-16
FR981045A (en) 1951-05-21
CH275239A (en) 1951-05-15
US2705869A (en) 1955-04-12

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