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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur William T. Baumann
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la recherchePulsed control of thermoacoustic instabilities / J. Matthew Carson in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of dynamic systems, measurement, and control, Vol. 131 N° 4 (Juillet 2009)
[article]
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of dynamic systems, measurement, and control > Vol. 131 N° 4 (Juillet 2009) . - 07 p.
Titre : Pulsed control of thermoacoustic instabilities : analysis and experiment Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : J. Matthew Carson, Auteur ; William T. Baumann, Auteur ; William R. Saunders, Auteur Année de publication : 2009 Article en page(s) : 07 p. Note générale : dynamic systems Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : thermoacoustic instabilities; subharmonic control; actuator Résumé : Thermoacoustic instabilities in combustors have been suppressed using phase-shift algorithms pulsing an on-off actuator at the limit cycle frequency (flc) or at the subharmonics of flc. It has been suggested that control at a subharmonic rate may extend the actuator lifetime and possibly require less actuator bandwidth. This paper examines the mechanism of subharmonic control in order to clarify the principles of operation and subsequently identify potential advantages for combustion control. Theoretical and experimental arguments show that there must be a Fourier component of the subharmonic control signal at flc in order to stabilize the limit cycling behavior. It is also demonstrated that the magnitude of that Fourier component must be equivalent to the signal magnitude for a linear phase-shift controller that operates directly at flc. The concept of variable-subharmonic control is introduced whereby the actuator is pulsed at the instability frequency to initially stabilize the system and then is pulsed at a subharmonic frequency to maintain stability. These results imply that an actuator used for subharmonic control cannot be effective unless its bandwidth spans the instability frequency. The advantage of reduced cycling may still be realized but will require higher control authority to produce the same effect as an actuator pulsed at the instability frequency. DEWEY : 629.8 ISSN : 0022-0434 En ligne : http://dynamicsystems.asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/Issue.aspx?issueID=26497&di [...] [article] Pulsed control of thermoacoustic instabilities : analysis and experiment [texte imprimé] / J. Matthew Carson, Auteur ; William T. Baumann, Auteur ; William R. Saunders, Auteur . - 2009 . - 07 p.
dynamic systems
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of dynamic systems, measurement, and control > Vol. 131 N° 4 (Juillet 2009) . - 07 p.
Mots-clés : thermoacoustic instabilities; subharmonic control; actuator Résumé : Thermoacoustic instabilities in combustors have been suppressed using phase-shift algorithms pulsing an on-off actuator at the limit cycle frequency (flc) or at the subharmonics of flc. It has been suggested that control at a subharmonic rate may extend the actuator lifetime and possibly require less actuator bandwidth. This paper examines the mechanism of subharmonic control in order to clarify the principles of operation and subsequently identify potential advantages for combustion control. Theoretical and experimental arguments show that there must be a Fourier component of the subharmonic control signal at flc in order to stabilize the limit cycling behavior. It is also demonstrated that the magnitude of that Fourier component must be equivalent to the signal magnitude for a linear phase-shift controller that operates directly at flc. The concept of variable-subharmonic control is introduced whereby the actuator is pulsed at the instability frequency to initially stabilize the system and then is pulsed at a subharmonic frequency to maintain stability. These results imply that an actuator used for subharmonic control cannot be effective unless its bandwidth spans the instability frequency. The advantage of reduced cycling may still be realized but will require higher control authority to produce the same effect as an actuator pulsed at the instability frequency. DEWEY : 629.8 ISSN : 0022-0434 En ligne : http://dynamicsystems.asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/Issue.aspx?issueID=26497&di [...]