Damper of a gas turbine with a gap
10125987 · 2018-11-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F23M20/005
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23R3/002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F23M3/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23R3/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A damper for a gas turbine combustion chamber as shown in FIG. 1 includes a damper volume wall and a main neck. The damper volume wall defines a damper volume inside the damper volume wall. The main neck includes a main neck wall defining a main neck volume inside the main neck wall. The main neck is associated with the damper volume for fluid communication between the damper volume and the gas turbine combustion chamber. In addition, the damper includes a gap between the main neck wall and the damper volume wall. The main neck defines a main neck axis. For example, the gap is a second neck, and in further embodiments, multiple damper volumes are provided.
Claims
1. A damper for a gas turbine combustion chamber, comprising: a damper volume wall defining a damper volume inside the damper volume wall; a main neck, the main neck including a main neck wall defining a main neck volume inside the main neck wall, and the main neck being associated with the damper volume for fluid communication between the damper volume and a combustion chamber, wherein the main neck is mechanically connected to a wall of the combustion chamber; and a gap between the main neck wall and the damper volume wall, such that the main neck is mechanically disconnected from the damper volume wall by the gap.
2. The damper of claim 1, wherein comprising: a second damper volume wall defining a second damper volume arranged outside the main neck wall; and a second neck for fluid communication between the first damper volume and the second damper volume.
3. The damper of claim 1, wherein the gap and the main neck are coaxial.
4. The damper of claim 1, wherein the gap is disposed adjacent to the main neck.
5. The damper of claim 1, wherein the full circumference of the main neck is surrounded by the gap.
6. The damper of claim 2, comprising: a purge hole for providing a fluid to the second damper volume.
7. The damper of claim 1, wherein the gap is partly defined by a flange.
8. A combustion chamber comprising the damper of claim 1.
9. A gas turbine comprising the damper of claim 1.
10. A method of operating a gas turbine, the gas turbine having a damper, the damper having a damper volume wall defining a damper volume inside the damper volume wall, and a main neck, the main neck having a main neck wall defining a main neck volume inside the main neck wall, and the main neck being associated with the damper volume for fluid communication between the damper volume and a combustion chamber of the gas turbine, the main neck mechanically connected to a wall of the combustion chamber, the damper including a gap between the main neck wall and the damper volume wall, such that the main neck is mechanically disconnected from the damper volume wall by the gap, the method comprising: feeding a purging fluid through the gap between the main neck wall and the damper volume wall.
11. The method of claim 10, comprising: feeding the purging fluid through the main neck from the damper volume into the combustion chamber.
12. The method of claim 10, wherein the damper additionally includes a second damper volume wall defining a second damper volume arranged outside the main neck wall, and a second neck for fluid communication between the damper volume and the second damper volume, and the method comprises: feeding the purging fluid through a purge hole into the second damper volume.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) An embodiment of the invention will now be described by way of example only and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(6) A damper 1 for a gas turbine combustion chamber as shown in
(7) A damper 10 as shown in
(8) In the embodiment shown in
(9)
(10)
(11) In
(12) The damper 1, 10 and damper volume 2, 12 may be a wide variety of shapes and sizes, such as the substantially cuboid structures shown in the Figures, a substantially semi spheroid shape, or any other appropriate regular or irregular shape. In most cases, the design will be driven by the requirement to fit within available spaces around the combustion chamber within a gas turbine, and will therefore follow the contours of the combustion chamber and/or other features within the gas turbine. The design may also depend on which damping modes need damping. A similar variety of shapes is possible for the other volumes provided within the damper.
(13) Although two damper volumes 12 and 14 are shown in
(14) Various different arrangements of features are possible to delineate the second damper volume 14. For example, in the case shown in
(15) The main neck 18 provides fluid communication between the damper volume and the combustion chamber, and is not connected directly to the other features of the damper. The main neck typically has an exit into the combustion chamber at one end and an exit into the damper volume at the other end. The main neck is shown as cylindrical and perpendicular to the combustion chamber wall in the Figures, but may be another shape, such as a cuboid or an irregular shape. Generally the axis of the main neck will be substantially perpendicular to the combustion chamber wall. The main neck is also not necessarily completely straight, in which case the main neck axis would preferably be defined as perpendicular to the cross-sectional plane across the main neck at the point where the main neck enters the combustion chamber.
(16) The second or intermediate neck 7, 16 is disposed around the main neck, so that the second neck is outside the main neck. The intermediate necks are shown as cylindrical in the Figures, but may be another shape, such as a cuboid or an irregular shape. Preferably, each intermediate neck entirely surrounds the main neck, going around its full circumference. Although the examples in the Figures show the intermediate necks adjacent to the main neck, this is not essential and the intermediate neck could be separated from the main neck, for example by placing the intermediate neck part way along the secondary wall 32 of
(17) Preferably, in any given radial direction, the intermediate neck (or gap) is disposed further from the main neck axis than the main neck. Preferably, when looking at a cross-section of the damper, the intermediate neck and the main neck lie within the same plane, the plane being perpendicular to the main neck axis; in other words, the plane includes a full cross-section of both the intermediate neck and the main neck.
(18) The main and intermediate necks are optionally coaxial and/or concentric. In some embodiments, the main and intermediate necks have parallel axes.
(19) The intermediate necks in the Figures are shown adjacent to the main neck, but as mentioned above this is not necessarily the case. The main requirement is that the intermediate neck should normally be as close to the combustion chamber as the main neck. At the least, the part of the intermediate neck closest to the combustion chamber should be closer to the combustion chamber than the part of the main neck furthest from the combustion chamber.
(20) Necks have a cross-sectional area and a length, as is typical in Helmholtz dampers. The area and length define a damping frequency when combined with a volume. Extra dampers could be stacked on the damper of the current invention, either dampers according to the current invention or conventional dampers. These dampers would be attached distal to the combustion chamber.
(21) The damper could be related to any part of the combustion chamber 6, 20.
(22) A flange 24 is preferably provided to delineate the intermediate neck. This provides options in defining the neck length and therefore the damping frequency.
(23) The gap 7 in
(24) In a method of operating a gas turbine comprising the apparatus described above, purging fluid is fed through a gap 7 between the main neck wall 4 and the damper volume wall 3. It may subsequently be fed through the main neck from the damper volume 2 into the combustion chamber 6. In embodiments with a second damper volume, the method comprises the additional step of feeding purging fluid through a purge hole 26 into the second damper volume.
(25) Various modifications to the embodiments described are possible and will occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention which is defined by the following claims.
(26) TABLE-US-00001 REFERENCE SIGNS 1 damper 2 damper volume 3 damper volume wall 4 main neck wall 5 main neck volume 6 combustion chamber 7 gap or second neck (intermediate neck) 8 main neck axis 9 flange 10 damper 12 damper volume 14 second damper volume 16 second neck (intermediate neck) 18 main neck 20 combustion chamber 22 main neck axis 24 flange 26 purge hole 30 outer damper wall 32 secondary wall 33 main neck wall 34 secondary outer damper wall 36 combustion chamber wall 40 third damper volume 41 tertiary wall 42 fourth damper volume 43 quaternary wall