Power plants – Combustion products used as motive fluid – Using special fuel or oxidizer
Reexamination Certificate
2002-09-12
2004-10-12
Casaregola, Louis J. (Department: 3746)
Power plants
Combustion products used as motive fluid
Using special fuel or oxidizer
C060S746000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06802178
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to apparatuses and methods for injecting fluids and more specifically to an injector and associated method for injecting combustion fluids into a combustion chamber.
DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ART
The combustion of carbon-based compounds, or carbonaceous fuels, is widely used for generating kinetic and electrical power. In one typical electric generation system, a carbonaceous fuel such as natural gas is mixed with an oxidizer and combusted in a combustion device called a gas generator. The resulting combusted gas is discharged to, and used to rotate, a turbine, which is mechanically coupled to an electric generator. The combusted gas is then discharged to one or more additional combustion devices, called reheaters, where the combusted gas is mixed with additional fuel and/or oxidizer for subsequent combustion. The reheaters, which typically generate pressures lower than those found in the gas generator, discharge the reheated gas to one or more turbines, which are also coupled to the electric generator.
The combustion in the gas generator and reheaters results in high temperatures and pressures. In some low-emission systems, pure oxygen is used as the oxidizer to eliminate the production of nitric oxides (NOx) and sulfur oxides (SOx) that typically result from combustion with air. Combustion of carbonaceous gases with pure oxygen can generate combustion temperatures in excess of 5000° F. Such extreme conditions increase the stress on components in and around the combustion chambers, such as turbine blades and injectors. The stress increases the likelihood of failure and decreases the useful life of such components.
Injectors are used to inject the combustion components of fuel and oxidizer into the gas generator and the combusted gas, fuel, and/or oxidizer into the reheaters. Because of their position proximate to the combustion chamber, the injectors are subjected to the extreme temperatures of the combustion chamber. The injectors may also be heated by the passage of preheated combustion components therethrough. Failure of the injectors due to the resulting thermal stress caused by overheating increases operating costs, increases the likelihood of machine downtime, and presents an increased danger of worker injury and equipment damage.
One proposed injector design incorporates a mixer for combining a coolant with the fuel before the fuel is combusted. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,206,684 to Mueggenburg describes an injector assembly 10 that includes two mixers 30, 80. The first mixer 30 mixes an oxidizer with a fuel, and the second mixer 80 mixes coolant water with the prior mixed fuel and oxidizer. The mixture then flows through a face 121 to a combustion chamber 12 for combustion. The coolant water reduces the temperature of combustion of the fuel and, thus, the stress on system components. One danger presented by such a design is the possibility of “flash back,” or the combustion flame advancing from the combustion chamber into the injector. Flash back is unlikely in an injector outlet that has a diameter smaller than the mixture's “quenching distance.” Thus, flash back can be prevented by limiting the size of the injectors. Undesirably, however, a greater number of small injectors is required to maintain a specified flow rate of the combustion mixture. The increased number of injectors complicates the assembly. Small injectors are also typically less space-efficient because the small injectors require more space on the face than would a lesser number of large injectors that achieve the same flow rate. Space on the face is limited, so devoting more space to the injectors leaves less space for other uses, such as for mounting other components. The small injectors are also subject to further complications due to their size. For example, small passages and outlets in the injectors can become blocked by particulates present in the fuel, oxidizer, or coolant. Thus, the reactants must be carefully filtered before passing through the injector. Moreover, typical reheaters are not designed to accommodate liquids, so the coolant water cannot be used in them.
In another proposed oxygen-fed combustion cycle, the gas generator is eliminated and gaseous combustion components are provided for initial combustion in a gas turbine combustor. The gas turbine combustor, sometimes also called a reheater, is similar to the reheater of the conventional cycle described above in that all of the inputs are in gaseous form. Cooling is achieved by diluting the combustion components with recirculated flue gas comprising steam and carbon dioxide. The flue gas dilutes the oxygen content in the combustion device and thus the combustion temperature. One such cycle, described as “Combined Cycle Fired with Oxygen,” is discussed in “New Concepts for Natural Gas Fired Power Plants which Simplify the Recovery of Carbon Dioxide,” by Bolland and Saether, Energy Conversion Management, Vol. 33, No. 5-8, pp. 467-475 (1992). Advantageously, this cycle effectively reduces combustion temperatures, and the elimination of the gas generator simplifies the system. No special turbines are required for receiving hot gases from a gas generator, and the gas turbine combustor can discharge to a turbine that is designed for use with a conventional reheater. However, the gas turbine combustor is incompatible with the injectors designed for conventional gas generators, which provide inadequate flow rates and do not provide recirculated gases to the combustion chamber. Further, injectors for gas generators are typically designed to operate at the higher operating pressures found in a gas generator and are inoperable or inefficient when used in a lower pressure gas turbine combustor or reheater. Nor is the gas turbine combustor compatible with injectors designed for conventional reheaters, because the gas turbine combustor requires a lower pressure drop across the injectors than that provided in conventional reheaters.
Moreover, as the availability and price of various combustion fuels change, it is sometimes desirable to change the type of combustion fuel that is used. However, because different combustion fuels have different characteristics, such as heating values, conventional injectors must be adjusted or replaced in order to provide efficient service with the different fuels. Thus, changing the type of fuel that is combusted in a system requires servicing the injectors and thereby interrupting service, reducing output, and increasing costs.
Thus, there exists a need for an apparatus and method for injecting fluid components of combustion into a combustion chamber of a combustion device. The apparatus and method should provide for injection of a recirculated gas to limit the temperature of the injector to decrease thermal stress, likelihood of failure, and operating costs. The injectors should be compatible with combustion devices that inject gaseous coolants, including reheaters, and should provide efficient injection and mixture of combustion gases of various types and heating values.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides an injector and an associated method for injecting and mixing gases, comprising a carbonaceous fuel and oxygen, into a combustion chamber of a combustion device. The injector may have an annular space proximate to its perimeter, through which a recycled mixture of steam and carbon dioxide can be injected to limit the combustion temperature, thereby decreasing thermal stress on components in and around the combustion chamber. Further, the injector has different jets, which can be used to separately inject different combustion fuels. Thus, the same injector can permit different combustion fuels to be alternatingly injected, each under the proper conditions. The injector is compatible with combustion devices that inject only gaseous fluids, including a reheater. The injector can be used in a reheater that recombusts a combusted gas that is discharged from a gas generator and turbine. Alternatively, the injectors can be use
Jensen Robert J.
Matthews David R.
Sprouse Kenneth M.
Alston & Bird LLP
Casaregola Louis J.
The Boeing Company
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