Analysis of Flame Front Breaks Appearing in LES of Inhomogeneous Jet Flames Using Flamelets
-
Published:2021-11-25
Issue:
Volume:
Page:
-
ISSN:1386-6184
-
Container-title:Flow, Turbulence and Combustion
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Flow Turbulence Combust
Author:
Soli AlessandroORCID, Langella Ivan, Chen Zhi X.
Abstract
AbstractThe physical mechanism leading to flame local extinction remains a key issue to be further understood. An analysis of large eddy simulation (LES) data with presumed probability density function (PDF) based closure (Chen et al., 2020, Combust. Flame, vol. 212, pp. 415) indicated the presence of localised breaks of the flame front along the stoichiometric line. These observations and their relation to local quenching of burning fluid particles, together with the possible physical mechanisms and conditions allowing their appearance in LES with a simple flamelet model, are investigated in this work using a combined Lagrangian-Eulerian analysis. The Sidney/Sandia piloted jet flames with compositionally inhomogeneous inlet and increasing bulk speeds, amounting to respectively 70 and 90% of the experimental blow-off velocity, are used for this analysis. Passive flow tracers are first seeded in the inlet streams and tracked for their lifetime. The critical scenario observed in the Lagrangian analysis, i.e., burning particles crossing extinction holes on the stoichiometric iso-surface, is then investigated using the Eulerian control-volume approach. For the 70% blow-off case the observed flame front breaks/extinction holes are due to cold and inhomogeneous reactants that are cast onto the stoichiometric iso-surface by large vortices initiated in the jet/pilot shear layer. In this case an extinction hole forms only when the strain effect is accompanied by strong subgrid mixing. This mechanism is captured by the unstrained flamelets model due to the ability of the LES to resolve large-scale strain and considers the SGS mixture fraction variance weakening effect on the reaction rate through the flamelet manifold. Only at 90% blow-off speed the expected limitation of the underlying combustion model assumption become apparent, where the amount of local extinctions predicted by the LES is underestimated compared to the experiment. In this case flame front breaks are still observed in the LES and are caused by a stronger vortex/strain interaction yet without the aid of mixture fraction variance. The reasons for these different behaviours and their implications from a physical and modelling point of view are discussed in this study.
Funder
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,General Physics and Astronomy,General Chemical Engineering
Reference61 articles.
1. Barlow, R.S.: 14th international workshop on measurement & computation of turbulent flames (2018). https://tnfworkshop.org/workshop-proceedings/tnf14-workshop/ 2. Barlow, R.S., Meares, S., Magnotti, G., Cutcher, H., Masri, A.R.: Local extinction and near-field structure in piloted turbulent CH4/air jet flames with inhomogeneous inlets. Combust. Flame 162(10), 3516–3540 (2015) 3. Baudoin, E., Bai, X.S., Yan, B., Liu, C., Yu, R., Lantz, A., Hosseini, S.M., Li, B., Elbaz, A., Sami, M., et al.: Effect of partial premixing on stabilization and local extinction of turbulent methane/air flames. Flow Turbul. Combust. 90(2), 269–284 (2013) 4. Bilger, R.W., Stårner, S.H., Kee, R.J.: On reduced mechanism for methane-air combustion in nonpremixed flames. Combust. Flame 80, 135–149 (1990) 5. Bray, K., Domingo, P., Vervisch, L.: Role of the progress variable in models for partially premixed turbulent combustion. Combust. Flame 141, 431–437 (2005)
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|