Abstract
An analysis is presented of the flow in a layer of liquid whose surface tension varies
under the action of a moving surface heat flux distribution chosen to model the
spread of a flame over the liquid. Subject to this heat flux, the surface temperature
increases from the ambient temperature of the liquid, far upstream, to its vaporization
temperature at a moving vaporization front, and stays constant at this value
downstream of the vaporization front. The speed of the front is determined by a
condition of regularity of the temperature. Three different regimes are found which
correspond to the uniform, pulsating and pseudo-uniform regimes of flame spread
observed experimentally when the ambient temperature of the liquid, or the strength
of the surface heat flux, is decreased. The first and third of these are stationary
regimes of high and low front speed, and the second is an oscillatory regime featuring
long phases of low speed and short pulses of high speed. An asymptotic description
is given of the flow relative to the moving vaporization front in the stationary regime
of low speed, which includes a long recirculation eddy ahead of the front and a small
region around the front that controls its speed. An explanation of the mechanism of
oscillation is proposed based on the interplay between the quasi-steady response of
this small controlling region and the delay introduced by the recirculating flow.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
17 articles.
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