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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur Royce L. Abel
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la rechercheApplication of silicon carbide photodiode flame temperature sensors in an active combustion pattern factor control system / Carl A. Palmer in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of engineering for gas turbines and power, Vol. 133 N° 1 (Janvier 2011)
[article]
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of engineering for gas turbines and power > Vol. 133 N° 1 (Janvier 2011) . - 08 p.
Titre : Application of silicon carbide photodiode flame temperature sensors in an active combustion pattern factor control system Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Carl A. Palmer, Auteur ; Royce L. Abel, Auteur ; Peter Sandvik, Auteur Année de publication : 2012 Article en page(s) : 08 p. Note générale : Génie Mécanique Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Closed loop systems Combustion Engines Flames Gas turbines Nozzles Open loop systems Photodiodes Silicon compounds Temperature sensors Thermal variables control Valves Index. décimale : 620.1 Essais des matériaux. Défauts des matériaux. Protection des matériaux Résumé : This paper describes the development and initial application studies for an active combustion pattern factor controller (APFC) for gas turbines. The system is based around the use of a novel silicon carbide optical ultraviolet dual diode flame temperature sensor (FTS) developed by General Electric Co. The APFC system determines combustion flame temperatures, validates the values, and integrates an assessment of signal and combustion hardware health to determine how to trim the fuel flow to individual fuel nozzles. Key aspects of the system include the following: determination of each flame's bulk temperature using the FTS, assessment of the reliability of the flame temperature data and physical combustion hardware health through analysis of the high-frequency output of the sensor, validation of the flame temperature signal using a data-driven approach, fusion of sensor “health indices” into the APFC to alter the trim control signal based on the health (or “believability”) of each sensor and fuel nozzle/combustor, fault-tolerant peak/valley detection and control module that selects individual fuel valves to target for reducing pattern factor while simultaneously balancing the overall fuel flow. The authors demonstrated feasibility of the approach by performing simulations using a quasi-2D T700 turbine engine model. Tests were run on the simulated platform with no faults, simulated sensor faults, and on a system with underlying combustion hardware issues. The final APFC system would be applicable for aviation, naval, and land-based commercial gas turbines, and can be used in closed-loop control or adapted as an open-loop advisory/diagnostic system. DEWEY : 620.1 ISSN : 0742-4795 En ligne : http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=JETPEZ00013 [...] [article] Application of silicon carbide photodiode flame temperature sensors in an active combustion pattern factor control system [texte imprimé] / Carl A. Palmer, Auteur ; Royce L. Abel, Auteur ; Peter Sandvik, Auteur . - 2012 . - 08 p.
Génie Mécanique
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of engineering for gas turbines and power > Vol. 133 N° 1 (Janvier 2011) . - 08 p.
Mots-clés : Closed loop systems Combustion Engines Flames Gas turbines Nozzles Open loop systems Photodiodes Silicon compounds Temperature sensors Thermal variables control Valves Index. décimale : 620.1 Essais des matériaux. Défauts des matériaux. Protection des matériaux Résumé : This paper describes the development and initial application studies for an active combustion pattern factor controller (APFC) for gas turbines. The system is based around the use of a novel silicon carbide optical ultraviolet dual diode flame temperature sensor (FTS) developed by General Electric Co. The APFC system determines combustion flame temperatures, validates the values, and integrates an assessment of signal and combustion hardware health to determine how to trim the fuel flow to individual fuel nozzles. Key aspects of the system include the following: determination of each flame's bulk temperature using the FTS, assessment of the reliability of the flame temperature data and physical combustion hardware health through analysis of the high-frequency output of the sensor, validation of the flame temperature signal using a data-driven approach, fusion of sensor “health indices” into the APFC to alter the trim control signal based on the health (or “believability”) of each sensor and fuel nozzle/combustor, fault-tolerant peak/valley detection and control module that selects individual fuel valves to target for reducing pattern factor while simultaneously balancing the overall fuel flow. The authors demonstrated feasibility of the approach by performing simulations using a quasi-2D T700 turbine engine model. Tests were run on the simulated platform with no faults, simulated sensor faults, and on a system with underlying combustion hardware issues. The final APFC system would be applicable for aviation, naval, and land-based commercial gas turbines, and can be used in closed-loop control or adapted as an open-loop advisory/diagnostic system. DEWEY : 620.1 ISSN : 0742-4795 En ligne : http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=JETPEZ00013 [...]