This paper presents an experimental investigation of hydrogen enrichment effects on combustion behavior and exhaust emissions in a self-developed micro gas turbine fueled with a propane–butane mixture. Hydrogen was blended with the base fuel in volume fractions of 0–30%, and combustion was examined under unloaded operating conditions at three global equivalence ratios (ϕ = 0.7, 1.1, and 1.3). The global equivalence ratio (ϕ) is defined as the ratio of the actual fuel–air ratio to the corresponding stoichiometric fuel–air ratio, with ϕ 1 fuel-rich operating conditions. The micro gas turbine is based on an automotive turbocharger coupled with a custom-designed counterflow combustion chamber developed specifically for alternative gaseous fuel research. Exhaust gas emissions of CO, CO2, and NOx were measured using a laboratory-grade FTIR analyzer (Horiba Mexa FTIR Horiba Ltd., Kyoto, Japan), while combustion chamber temperature was monitored with thermocouples. The results show that hydrogen addition significantly influences flame stability, combustion temperature, and emission characteristics. Increasing the hydrogen fraction led to a pronounced reduction in CO emissions across all equivalence ratios, indicating enhanced oxidation kinetics and improved combustion completeness. CO2 concentrations decreased monotonically with hydrogen enrichment due to the reduced carbon content of the blended fuel and the shift of combustion products toward higher H2O fractions. In contrast, NOx emissions increased with increasing hydrogen content for all tested equivalence ratios, which is attributed to elevated local flame temperatures, enhanced reaction rates, and the formation of locally near-stoichiometric zones in the compact combustor. A slight reduction in NOx at low hydrogen fractions was observed under near-stoichiometric conditions, suggesting a temporary shift toward a more distributed combustion regime. Overall, the findings demonstrate that hydrogen–propane–butane blends can be stably combusted in a micro gas turbine without major operational issues under unloaded conditions. While hydrogen addition offers clear benefits in terms of CO reduction and carbon-related emissions, effective NOx mitigation strategies will be essential for future high-hydrogen microturbine applications.
István Péter Kondor (Fri,) studied this question.