Publication | Open Access
Assessment of CO2 and NOx Emissions in Intercooled Pulsed Detonation Turbofan Engines
24
Citations
28
References
2018
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringCombustion EngineeringGas Turbine CombustionDetonation Turbofan EnginesNumerical SimulationExhaust EmissionNox EmissionsIn-cylinder FlowNox GenerationPropulsionMultiphase FlowChalmers UniversityDetonation PhenomenonAerospace EngineeringCombustion ScienceAerodynamicsGas Turbine EngineNox Model
In the present paper, the synergistic combination of intercooling with pulsed detonation combustion is analyzed concerning its contribution to NOx and CO2 emissions. CO2 is directly proportional to fuel burn and can, therefore, be reduced by improving specific fuel consumption (SFC) and reducing engine weight and nacelle drag. A model predicting NOx generation per unit of fuel for pulsed detonation combustors (PDCs), operating with jet-A fuel, is developed and integrated within Chalmers University's gas turbine simulation tool GESTPAN. The model is constructed using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) data obtained for different combustor inlet pressure, temperature, and equivalence ratio levels. The NOx model supports the quantification of the trade-off between CO2 and NOx emissions in a 2050 geared turbofan architecture incorporating intercooling and pulsed detonation combustion and operating at pressures and temperatures of interest in gas turbine technology for aero-engine civil applications.
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