24/7 Space News  





. Device Burns Fuel With Almost Zero Emissions

Researchers Ben Zinn (left) and Yedidia Neumeier (right) look up at the mirror placed above the Georgia Tech combustor to demonstrate how few emissions its exhaust produces.
by Staff Writers
Atlanta GA (SPX) Jun 27, 2006
Georgia Tech researchers have created a new combustor (combustion chamber where fuel is burned to power an engine or gas turbine) designed to burn fuel in a wide range of devices ? with next to no emission of nitrogen oxide (NOx) and carbon monoxide (CO), two of the primary causes of air pollution.

The device has a simpler design than existing state-of-the-art combustors and could be manufactured and maintained at a much lower cost, making it more affordable in everything from jet engines and power plants to home water heaters.

"We must burn fuel to power aircrafts and generate electricity for our homes. The combustion community is working very hard to find ways to burn the fuel completely and derive all of its energy while minimizing emissions," said Dr. Ben Zinn, Regents' professor, the David S. Lewis Jr. Chair in Georgia Tech's Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering and a key collaborator on the project.

"Our combustor has an unbelievably simple design, and it would be inexpensive to make and inexpensive to maintain."

Attaining ultra low emissions has become a top priority for combustion researchers as federal and state restrictions on pollution continuously reduce the allowable levels of NOx and CO produced by engines, power plants and industrial processes.

Called the Stagnation Point Reverse Flow Combustor, the Georgia Tech device, originally developed for NASA, significantly reduces NOx and CO emissions in a variety of aircraft engines and gas turbines that burn gaseous or liquid fuels. It burns fuel with NOx emissions below 1 parts per million (ppm) and CO emissions lower than 10 ppm, significantly lower than emissions produced by other combustors.

The project's initial goal was to develop a low emissions combustor for aircraft engines and power-generating gas turbines that must stably burn large amounts of fuel in a small volume over a wide range of power settings (or fuel flow rates). But the design can be adapted for use in a variety of applications, including something as large as a power generating gas turbine or as small as a water heater in a home.

"We wanted to have all the clean-burning advantages of a low temperature combustion process while burning a large amount of fuel in a small volume," Zinn said.

The combustor burns fuel in low temperature reactions that occur over a large portion of the combustor. By eliminating all high temperature pockets through better control of the flow of the reactants and combustion products within the combustor, the device produces far lower levels of NOx and CO and avoids acoustic instabilities that are problematic in current low emissions combustors.

To reduce emissions in existing combustors, fuel is premixed with a large amount of swirling air flow prior to injection into the combustor. This requires complex and expensive designs, and the combustion process often excites instabilities that damage the system.

But Georgia Tech's design eliminates the complexity associated with premixing the fuel and air by injecting the fuel and air separately into the combustor while its shape forces them to mix with one another and with combustion products before ignition occurs.

The project was funded by the NASA University Research Engineering Technology Institute (URETI) Center on Aeropropulsion and Power and Georgia Tech. The primary investigators on the project were Professors Ben T. Zinn, Yedidia Neumeier, Jerry Seitzman and Jeff Jagoda from the School of Aerospace Engineering, and Visiting Research Engineers Yoav Weksler and Ben Ami Hashmonay.

Related Links
Georgia Tech



Stabilizing Explosive Elements
New York (UPI) Jun 26, 2006
Capsules only nanometers or billionths of a meter wide that stabilize extremely dangerous compounds normally prone to igniting or exploding can safely generate more than enough hydrogen gas to beat U.S. Department of Energy goals for hydrogen production for 2015 just by dropping them in water.

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  



  • Botanist To Study Seed Behavior Aboard Space Station
  • Douglass Urges NASA And Industry To Address Workforce Crisis
  • Stephen Hawking Calls For Mankind To Reach For Stars
  • Optimize Trade Study Analyses With Software From Phoenix Integration And AGI

  • Three Sols Of Driving Gain Opportunity 138 Meters
  • Spirit Turns On Heaters To Continue Working
  • Other NASA Martian Landers Turning 30
  • Spirit Continues Work As Martian Winter Deepens

  • Boeing Delta II Delivers Military Technology Demonstration Mission
  • Alcatel Alenia Space To Provide Onboard Equipment For Soyuz-Fregat Launchers
  • Alcatel Alenia Space To Provide Communication Payload For Arabsat BADR-6 Satellite
  • Ariane 5 Receives Improved Upper Stage

  • France Offers Alternative To Google Earth
  • GlobeXplorer Adds 200th City To CitySphere International Datebase
  • Canada To Fund More Access To Latest Satellite Imaging Data
  • Medspiration Charts All Med Water Temperatures

  • IAU Approves Names For Two Small Plutonian Moons
  • Three Trojan Asteroids Share Neptune Orbit
  • New Horizons Crosses The Asteroid Belt
  • Trio Of Neptunes And Their Belt

  • Desert Cosmic Ray Detector Project Moving Ahead
  • Integral Sees A GRB Out Of The Corner Of Its Eye
  • How To Bake A Galaxy
  • Hubble Sees Star Birth Gone Wild

  • SMART-1 Maneuvers Prepare For Mission End
  • GMV To Provide Mission Planning Software For Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
  • NASA Spies Lunar Meteoroid Impact
  • Shanghai Lands Star Role In Satellite Mission

  • Baltimore City Public School Buses and Pupils Made Safer With GPS System
  • UN To Hold Workshop On Navsat Applications In Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Luxembourg Companies To Build Galileo Antenna System
  • Orbital Receives Contract For Public Transit Management System Upgrade

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement