News Release

SwRI upgrades HEAT facility to support alternative fuel testing

Improvements expand gas turbine combustor testing, reduce costs, widen capabilities

Business Announcement

Southwest Research Institute

Heat Facility Upgrades

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: Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has completed a three-year renovation to its High Energy Annex Test (HEAT) facility, which supports gas turbine combustor testing.

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Credit: Southwest Research Institute

SAN ANTONIO — June 16, 2026 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has completed a three-year renovation to its High Energy Annex Test (HEAT) facility, which supports highly efficient gas turbine combustor testing. An internally funded project designed new technology that expands HEAT’s capabilities to better serve evolving industry needs, particularly for alternative fuels.

SwRI’s HEAT facility was founded in 2016 to fill a critical need for real-world gas turbine combustion system testing.

“Modeling alone isn't sufficient,” said Griffin Beck, who oversees SwRI’s Propulsion and Energy Machinery section. “So SwRI created a facility with a controlled environment to test how combustors actually perform under realistic conditions. The HEAT facility supports physical combustor testing that validates designs, performance, and safety in real conditions.”

Additionally, the facility was designed to run continuous, high-quality tests — a rare capability that makes it ideal for realistic combustor testing as real-world turbines operate continuously. In recent years, SwRI identified improvements that could lower the cost of combustion testing. This included designing and testing a lower-cost combustion rig.

“Combustion testing is often expensive because each test requires a custom-built combustor,” Beck said. “We generated two alternative designs using additive manufacturing, which can reduce costs compared to traditional methods.”

SwRI also began making improvements to the HEAT facility to meet the challenge of decarbonization and the demand for cleaner, lower-carbon fuels.

“Combustion systems extract stored chemical energy through a controlled release of heat from chemical reactions,” Beck explained. “Different fuels, particularly hydrogen, release energy at different rates compared to conventional fuels which can affect flame speed, localized temperatures, efficiency, and safety.”

To accommodate these new testing capabilities, SwRI adapted HEAT’s combustor setup to allow flexible switching between fuel types for clients. The facility underwent rigorous testing to ensure it could safely handle and test different types of fuels.

HEAT received a powerful new air compressor that allows it to run higher-pressure tests that simulate real-world turbine conditions. This upgrade tripled HEAT’s airflow and pressure capabilities, which is essential for safely testing hydrogen and synthetic fuels.

For more information, visit https://www.swri.org/markets/energy-environment/machinery/propulsion-technologies.

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About SwRI:

SwRI is an independent, nonprofit, applied research and development organization based in San Antonio, Texas, with more than 3,200 employees and an annual research volume of $966 million. Southwest Research Institute and SwRI are registered marks in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. For more information, please visit https://www.swri.org.


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