Atomization of ATF for Combustion in Aero Engines
In a gas turbine engine, combustion efficiency depends heavily on how well the fuel is prepared before burning. Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF) does not burn efficiently in liquid form—it must first be converted into a fine spray. This process is called atomization.
From an engineering standpoint, atomization is not just spraying fuel. It is about breaking fuel into extremely fine droplets so that it mixes uniformly with compressed air and burns rapidly, completely, and stably.
What is Atomization?
Atomization is the process of disintegrating liquid fuel into tiny droplets before it enters the combustion zone.
Why is this necessary?
Liquid fuel has limited surface area
Combustion occurs only at the surface
Smaller droplets create larger total surface area, leading to faster combustion
So, finer atomization results in:
Better air-fuel mixing
Faster ignition
More complete combustion
How Atomization Happens in an Aero Engine
Inside the combustion chamber, atomization is achieved using fuel nozzles (injectors) designed to produce a controlled spray pattern.
Step-by-step process:
High-pressure fuel delivery
Fuel is supplied at high pressure from the fuel system.Flow through the fuel nozzle
The nozzle design imparts velocity and swirl to the fuel.Spray formation
Fuel exits as a conical spray instead of a solid stream.Droplet breakup
Due to turbulence and interaction with compressed air, the fuel breaks into fine droplets.Mixing with air
The droplets mix with high-pressure air from the compressor.Ignition and combustion
Igniters start the combustion process, which then becomes self-sustaining.
Types of Atomization in Gas Turbines
1. Pressure Atomization
Most widely used method
Fuel is forced through a small orifice at high pressure
Sudden pressure drop causes atomization
2. Air-Blast Atomization
Uses high-velocity air to break fuel into droplets
Produces finer atomization compared to pressure type
Common in modern low-emission engines
3. Duplex (Dual-Orifice) Nozzles
Two fuel circuits:
Primary for low power/start
Secondary for high power
Ensures proper atomization across the full operating range
Why Atomization is Critical
1. Efficient Combustion
Fine droplets evaporate quickly and burn completely.
2. Prevention of Hot Spots
Poor atomization leads to uneven fuel distribution, causing localized overheating and turbine damage.
3. Reduced Emissions
Good atomization minimizes:
Unburnt hydrocarbons
Carbon monoxide
Smoke
4. Flame Stability
Ensures continuous combustion without flameout.
Factors Affecting Atomization Quality
Fuel Pressure → Higher pressure improves atomization
Nozzle Design → Orifice size and swirl angle are critical
Fuel Viscosity → Higher viscosity worsens atomization
Air Velocity → Helps in breaking droplets
Temperature → Affects evaporation rate
Engineering Insight
Atomization directly impacts:
Combustion efficiency
Turbine inlet temperature distribution
Engine durability
In service, nozzle degradation (clogging, erosion) can result in:
Increased fuel consumption
Combustion instability
Overheating of turbine components
This is why fuel nozzles are treated as critical precision components in aero engines.
Simple Analogy
Think of atomization like this:
Liquid fuel → like a pool of kerosene (poor burning)
Atomized fuel → like a fine spray (efficient burning)
Higher surface area always leads to better combustion.
Conclusion
Atomization is a fundamental process that determines how efficiently an aero engine performs.
Better atomization directly results in:
Higher efficiency
Lower emissions
Improved engine life
In practical terms:
Good atomization = Stable combustion = Reliable engine performance