Author:
CLANET CHRISTOPHE,SEARBY GEOFFREY,CLAVIN PAUL
Abstract
This paper is concerned with the coupling mechanisms leading to the spontaneous
generation of sound during flame propagation in a tube open at one end. We consider
the cases of premixed gaseous combustion and of premixed spray combustion of
decane droplets in air. The flame front propagates from the open to the closed end of
a tube and, for a particular position, starts to amplify a longitudinal acoustic mode
of the tube. We call this mode the primary acoustic instability and focus our study on
the physical mechanisms responsible for sound amplification. Measured amplification
rates are compared to calculated values. In the gaseous case, it is shown that the
instability results from a coupling between the acoustic acceleration field and the
geometry of the flame front separating the burnt gases from the denser unburnt
mixture. The situation is quite different in the spray case. The primary acoustic
instability is much stronger and results from a modification of the inner structure of
the flame. This modification arises from the velocity lag of the droplets in the acoustic
velocity field, leading to a modulation of the fuel flux at the flame.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
67 articles.
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