The evolution of a premixed flame under conditions of confinement is studied theoretically. The analysis is based on a hydrodynamic model in which the flame is treated as a surface of discontinuity. The flame structure is assumed to be quasi-steady with a high activation energy and a large heat rele
Effect of nonunity lewis number on premixed flame propagation through isotropic turbulence
โ Scribed by Ajit Dandekar; Lance R. Collins
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 992 KB
- Volume
- 101
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0010-2180
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Direct numerical simulations of a passive premixed flame surface propagating through stationary isotropic turbulence have been performed in three dimensions on a 963 mesh with a particular emphasis on characterizing the effect of Lewis number on the rate of propagation of the flame surface and flame surface topology. The simulations were based on the flame sheet assumption that implies that the time scale for chemical reaction is short as compared with the time scales for the turbulent fluctuations (so-called flamelet regime). In this limit, the flame surface can be represented by a field equation (Sivashinsky equation) which accounts for local advection of the reaction front due to instantaneous velocity fluctuations and propagation due to reaction. The Navier Stokes equations and scalar field equation for the flame surface were updated using a pseudo-spectral method with fourth order accuracy in time, Lewis number effects were incorporated into the simulations by using a modified Sivashinsky equation for the flame surface. At zero turbulence level, the simulation yielded the familiar steady and nonsteady cellular structures seen previously by several investigators. At finite turbulence levels the flame speed was augmented above the cellular flame speed due to additional wrinkling from the hydrodynamic field, Comparisons with experimental measurements in the literature agree with the simulations to within 30% over a wide range of turbulence intensities and Lewis numbers. In addition spectral analysis of the Sivashinsky equation provides insight into the effect of varying the Lewis number and how that effect may be incorporated into a relatively simple spectral model for the flame surface.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The effects of Lewis number on the global and local structure of premixed flames interacting with turbulent Kfirmfin vortex streets are experimentally investigated using OH planar-laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF). The OH PLIF results show that over the range of Lewis numbers studied, i.e., Le = 0.2
Experimental measurements of density and OH radical concentration have been compared with a theory which predicts the concentrations of product and of a reactive intermediate in a plane premixed flame propagating into grid turbulence. The theory is based on the simplest version of the Bray and Libby