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Hukam Mongia

Other affiliations: GE Aviation, General Electric, GE Transportation  ...read more
Bio: Hukam Mongia is an academic researcher from Purdue University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Combustor & Combustion chamber. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 210 publications receiving 4455 citations. Previous affiliations of Hukam Mongia include GE Aviation & General Electric.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a large-eddy simulation of turbulent premixed reacting flows in a gas turbine combustor (General Electric's lean premixed dry low-NOx LM6000) has been carried out to evaluate the potential of LES for design studies of realistic hardware.
Abstract: Large-eddy simulation (LES) of turbulent premixed reacting flows in a gas turbine combustor (General Electric's lean premixed dry low-NOx LM6000) has been carried out to evaluate the potential of LES for design studies of realistic hardware. A flamelet model for the premixed flame is combined with a dynamic model for the subgrid kinetic energy to simulate the propagation of the turbulent flame in this high swirl and high Reynolds number flow. Comparison of the computed results with experimental data indicate good agreement in spite of relatively coarse grid resolution employed in the LES. These results provide significant confidence that LES capability for design studies of practical interest is feasible in the near future.

357 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
N. K. Rizk1, Hukam Mongia1
TL;DR: In this paper, an emission model that simulates the combustor by a number of reactors representing various combustion zones is proposed, which addresses the combined effects of spray evaporation and mixing in the reaction zone.
Abstract: To meet the future goals of reduced emissions produced by gas turbine combustors, a better understanding of the process of formation of various pollutants is required. Both empirical and analytical approaches are used to provide the exhaust concentrations of pollutants of interest such as NOx , CO, and unburned hydrocarbon with varying degrees of success. In the present investigation, an emission model that simulates the combustor by a number of reactors representing various combustion zones is proposed. A detailed chemical kinetic scheme was used to provide a fundamental basis for the derivation of a number of expressions that simulate the reaction scheme. The model addresses the combined effects of spray evaporation and mixing in the reaction zone. The model validation included the utilization of a large data base obtained for an annular combustor of a modern turbopropulsion engine. In addition to the satisfactory agreement with the measurements, the model provided insight into the regions within the combustor that could be responsible for the excessive formation of emissions. Methods to reduce the emissions may be implemented in light of such information.

158 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the components of a combined analytical, experimental, and computational approach to understand and control combustion dynamics are developed for turbopropulsion engine combustors and industrial combustors.
Abstract: Combustion dynamics impact the design of both conventional diffusion e ame gas turbine combustors and lean premixed combustion systems. The occurrence of dynamics in diffusion e ame combustors can generally be eliminated through changes to the fueling system or operating characteristics driven primarily through empirical design know-how. Lean premixed combustors, such as industrial aeroderivative dry low-emissions combustors, have more persistent dynamics problems that are only partially ameliorated with application of empirical tools and controls. With continuing emphasis on reducing emissions and cost and increasing performance of turbopropulsion engine combustors, the design direction of e ight engines is approaching the lean premixed limit; thus, there is a need for improved tools and control strategies for combustion dynamics in these applications as well. The components of a combined analytical, experimental, and computational approach to understanding and controlling combustion dynamics are being developed. With successful implementation of such an analytical and control mechanism, further improvements in the emissions, stability, and durability characteristics of both e ight and industrial combustors will become possible.

138 citations

Patent
18 Jan 2001
TL;DR: In this paper, a mixer assembly for use in a combustion chamber of a gas turbine engine is described. But it is not shown how to use the mixture of fuel and air through the outlet to the combustion chamber.
Abstract: A mixer assembly for use in a combustion chamber of a gas turbine engine. The mixer assembly includes a mixer housing having a hollow interior, an inlet and an outlet. The housing delivers a mixture of fuel and air through the outlet to the combustion chamber for burning. The mixer assembly includes a fuel nozzle assembly mounted in the housing having a fuel passage adapted for connection to a fuel supply. The passage extends to an outlet port for delivering fuel from the passage to the hollow interior of the mixer housing. The nozzle assembly includes a plasma generator for generating at least one of a dissociated fuel and an ionized fuel from the fuel delivered through the nozzle outlet port to the hollow interior of the housing.

123 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive study on confined swirling flows in an operational gas-turbine injector was performed by means of large-eddy simulations, which was based on the Favre-filtered conservation equations and modified Smagorinsky treatment of subgrid-scale motions.
Abstract: A comprehensive study on confined swirling flows in an operational gas-turbine injector was performed by means of large-eddy simulations. The formulation was based on the Favre-filtered conservation equations and a modified Smagorinsky treatment of subgrid-scale motions. The model was then numerically solved by means of a preconditioned density-based finite-volume approach. Calculated mean velocities and turbulence properties show good agreement with experimental data obtained from the laser-Doppler velocimetry measurements. Various aspects of the swirling flow development (such as the central recirculating flow, precessing vortex core and Kelvin–Helmholtz instability) were explored in detail. Both co- and counter-rotating configurations were considered, and the effects of swirl direction on flow characteristics were examined. The flow evolution inside the injector is dictated mainly by the air delivered through the primary swirler. The impact of the secondary swirler appears to be limited.

122 citations


Cited by
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Book
01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: This updated edition includes new worked programming examples, expanded coverage and recent literature regarding incompressible flows, the Discontinuous Galerkin Method, the Lattice Boltzmann Method, higher-order spatial schemes, implicit Runge-Kutta methods and code parallelization.
Abstract: Computational Fluid Dynamics: Principles and Applications, Third Edition presents students, engineers, and scientists with all they need to gain a solid understanding of the numerical methods and principles underlying modern computation techniques in fluid dynamics By providing complete coverage of the essential knowledge required in order to write codes or understand commercial codes, the book gives the reader an overview of fundamentals and solution strategies in the early chapters before moving on to cover the details of different solution techniques This updated edition includes new worked programming examples, expanded coverage and recent literature regarding incompressible flows, the Discontinuous Galerkin Method, the Lattice Boltzmann Method, higher-order spatial schemes, implicit Runge-Kutta methods and parallelization An accompanying companion website contains the sources of 1-D and 2-D Euler and Navier-Stokes flow solvers (structured and unstructured) and grid generators, along with tools for Von Neumann stability analysis of 1-D model equations and examples of various parallelization techniques Will provide you with the knowledge required to develop and understand modern flow simulation codes Features new worked programming examples and expanded coverage of incompressible flows, implicit Runge-Kutta methods and code parallelization, among other topics Includes accompanying companion website that contains the sources of 1-D and 2-D flow solvers as well as grid generators and examples of parallelization techniques

1,228 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the main issues and related closures of turbulent combustion modeling are reviewed and a review of the models for non-premixed turbulent flames is given, along with examples of numerical models for mean burning rates for premixed turbulent combustion.

1,069 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the advances made over the past two decades in this area is provided in this article, where various swirl injector configurations and related flow characteristics, including vortex breakdown, precessing vortex core, large-scale coherent structures, and liquid fuel atomization and spray formation are discussed.

1,048 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Heinz Pitsch1
TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight the fundamental differences between Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) and LES combustion models for non-premixed and premixed turbulent combustion, identify some of the open questions and modeling issues for LES, and provide future perspectives.
Abstract: Large-eddy simulation (LES) of turbulent combustion is a relatively new research field. Much research has been carried out over the past years, but to realize the full predictive potential of combustion LES, many fundamental questions still have to be addressed, and common practices of LES of nonreacting flows revisited. The focus of the present review is to highlight the fundamental differences between Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) and LES combustion models for nonpremixed and premixed turbulent combustion, to identify some of the open questions and modeling issues for LES, and to provide future perspectives.

922 citations

01 Apr 1992
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a monotone integrated large eddy simulation approach, which incorporates a form of turbulence modeling applicable when the large-scale flows of interest are intrinsically time dependent, thus throwing common statistical models into question.
Abstract: Fluid dynamic turbulence is one of the most challenging computational physics problems because of the extremely wide range of time and space scales involved, the strong nonlinearity of the governing equations, and the many practical and important applications. While most linear fluid instabilities are well understood, the nonlinear interactions among them makes even the relatively simple limit of homogeneous isotropic turbulence difficult to treat physically, mathematically, and computationally. Turbulence is modeled computationally by a two-stage bootstrap process. The first stage, direct numerical simulation, attempts to resolve the relevant physical time and space scales but its application is limited to diffusive flows with a relatively small Reynolds number (Re). Using direct numerical simulation to provide a database, in turn, allows calibration of phenomenological turbulence models for engineering applications. Large eddy simulation incorporates a form of turbulence modeling applicable when the large-scale flows of interest are intrinsically time dependent, thus throwing common statistical models into question. A promising approach to large eddy simulation involves the use of high-resolution monotone computational fluid dynamics algorithms such as flux-corrected transport or the piecewise parabolic method which have intrinsic subgrid turbulence models coupled naturally to the resolved scales in the computed flow. The physical considerations underlying and evidence supporting this monotone integrated large eddy simulation approach are discussed.

849 citations