An experimental study was made, using a double-swirl burner, of the stability of swirling-fuel-jet diffusion flames in swirling air streams. The fuels were hydrogen and methane. The primary variables studied were swirl intensities of the fuel jet and the air stream. It was found that the stability o
Hydrodynamic and diffusion effects on the stability of spherically expanding flames
β Scribed by J.K. Bechtold; M. Matalon
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 840 KB
- Volume
- 67
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0010-2180
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β¦ Synopsis
We examine the stability of an outwardly propagating spherical flame accounting for both hydrodynamic and thermodiffusive effects. For Lewis numbers less than a critical value Le* < 1, disturbances of the flame front grow during the initial phase of propagation, i.e., when the radius is comparable to the flame thickness. However, for Le > Le*, the flame, which is stable to thermodiffusive effects, becomes unstable only after a critical size is reached. This instability is hydrodynamic in nature and is caused by the thermal expansion of the gas. In this study we provide an expression for the determination of the critical size, or a critical Peclet number, which depends on the thermal expansion coefficient and on the Lewis number. The explicit dependence on all the relevant physicochemical parameters enables us to compare our results with experimental data.
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