Resumen:
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[EN] CFD plays a very important role in the design of gas turbine combustors. Accuracy
in mixing and combustion modelling can have a great impact in the final performance of
these components. Combustor flows mean a ...[+]
[EN] CFD plays a very important role in the design of gas turbine combustors. Accuracy
in mixing and combustion modelling can have a great impact in the final performance of
these components. Combustor flows mean a huge challenge in this subject, as they
present complex unsteady structures and the range of scales to be simulated or modelled
is very wide. Moreover, swirl flows, present in most gas turbine injectors to increase
their performance, make the simulation process more challenging.
Steady simulations, like RANS, are unable to offer accurate results for mixing and
combustion problems involving swirl flows. While DNS and standard LES models can
provide high-fidelity results, they require a grid resolution and computational cost that
most industries cannot afford.
The objective of this thesis is evaluating the performance of hybrid turbulence
models for mixing problems in order to establish an intermediate solution with good
accuracy at a reasonable cost. U-RANS, DES, SAS, D-LES and ILES have been applied
in an injector test-case for a better understanding of the flow features and validation of
the different turbulence approaches.
For the first time, unstructured meshes were employed for the specific test-case
demanded by the collaborative partner, PERM engines. Hybrid RANS/LES models
were used with Fluent’s pressure based solver and, independently, these same
approaches were implemented within an in-house unstructured HLLC Godunov-type
solver.
In the context of high-resolution methods, this thesis takes an initial step
implementing k-ω SST, DES, SAS models and species mixing in this solver, and the
required time-analysis tools. After a preliminary validation of the models, steady and
unsteady cases were run in the injector, with promising results. In terms of
implementation, this work leaves a powerful tool with strong potential in turbulence
analysis, for further study of combustion and many other different flows
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