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1.
Measurements of mean velocity components, turbulent intensity, and Reynolds shear stress are presented in a turbulent lifted H2/N2 jet flame as well as non-reacting air jet issuing into a vitiated co-flow by laser doppler velocimetry (LDV) technique. The objectives of this paper are to obtain a velocity data base missing in the previous experiment data of the Dibble burner and so provide initial and flow field data for evaluating the validity of various numerical codes describing the turbulent partially premixed flames on this burner. It is found that the potential core is shortened due to the high ratio of jet density to co-flow density in the non-reacting cases. However, the existence of flame suppressed turbulence in the upstream region of the jet dominates the length of potential core in the reacting cases. At the centreline, the normalized axial velocities in the reacting cases are higher than the non-reacting cases, and the relative turbulent intensities of the reacting flow are smaller than in the non-reacting flow, where a self-preserving behaviour for the relative turbulent intensities exists at the downstream region. The profiles of mean axial velocity in the lifted flame distribute between the non-reacting jet and non-premixed flame both in the axial and radial distributions. The radial distributions of turbulent kinetic energy in the lifted flames exhibit a change in distributions indicating the difference of stabilisation mechanisms of the two lifted flame. The experimental results presented will guide the development of an improved modelling for such flames.  相似文献   

2.
Experiments are carried out on partially premixed turbulent flames stabilized in a conical burner. The investigated gaseous fuels are methane, methane diluted with nitrogen, and mixtures of CH4, CO, CO2, H2 and N2, simulating typical products from gasification of biomass, and co-firing of gasification gas with methane. The fuel and air are partially premixed in concentric tubes. Flame stabilization behavior is investigated and significantly different stabilization characteristics are observed in flames with and without the cone. Planar laser induced fluorescence (LIF) imaging of a fuel-tracer species, acetone, and OH radicals is carried out to characterize the flame structures. Large eddy simulations of the conical flames are carried out to gain further understanding of the flame/flow interaction in the cone. The data show that the flames with the cone are more stable than those without the cone. Without the cone (i.e. jet burner) the critical jet velocities for blowoff and liftoff of biomass derived gases are higher than that for methane/nitrogen mixture with the same heating values, indicating the enhanced flame stabilization by hydrogen in the mixture. With the cone the stability of flames is not sensitive to the compositions of the fuels, owing to the different flame stabilization mechanism in the conical flames than that in the jet flames. From the PLIF images it is shown that in the conical burner, the flame is stabilized by the cone at nearly the same position for different fuels. From large eddy simulations, the flames are shown to be controlled by the recirculation flows inside cone, which depends on the cone angle, but less sensitive to the fuel compositions and flow speed. The flames tend to be hold in the recirculation zones even at very high flow speed. Flame blowoff occurs when significant local extinction in the main body of the flame appears at high turbulence intensities.  相似文献   

3.
Large Eddy Simulation (LES) and flamelet-based combustion models were applied to four bluff-body stabilized nonpremixed and partially premixed flames selected from the Sydney flame series, based on Masri’s bluff-body test rig (University of Sydney). Three related non-reacting flow cases were also investigated to assess the performance of the LES solver. Both un-swirled and swirled cases were studied exhibiting different flow features, such as recirculation, jet precessing and vortex breakdown. Due to various fuel compositions, flow rates and swirl numbers, the combustion characteristics of the flames varied greatly. On six meshes with different blocking structure and mesh sizes, good prediction of flow and scalar fields using LES/flamelet approaches and known fuel and oxidizer mass fluxes was achieved. The accuracy of predictions was strongly influenced by the combustion model used. All flames were calculated using at least two modeling strategies. Starting with calculations of isothermal flow cases, simple single flamelet based calculations were carried out for the corresponding reacting cases. The combustion models were then adjusted to fit the requirements of each flame. For all flame calculations good agreement of the main flow features with the measured data was achieved. For purely nonpremixed flames burning attached to the bluff-body’s outer edge, flamelet modeling including strain rate effects provided good results for the flow field and for most scalars. The prediction of a partially premixed swirl flame could only be achieved by applying a flamelet-based progress variable approach.  相似文献   

4.
Measurements of velocity and temperature characteristics, together with the analysis of the process of flame extinction, are reported for a range of high-intensity flames stabilized on a model of an industrial oxyfuel burner installed in a divergent quarl. The burner consists of a central axisymmetric jet surrounded by 16 circular jets, simulating the injection of oxygen in practical burners. A laser-Doppler velocimeter was used to measure density-weighted velocity characteristics, and bare-wire thermocouples were used to measure near unweighted temperature characteristics. Experiments were carried out to improve knowledge of the flow in the near field of multijet burner heads, which is essential to design further modifications in their geometry and to predict their effects. Isothermal and combusting flows are studied; for the latter, the experiments quantify the effect of quarl geometry, fuel-to-air ratio, swirl number, and central-to-peripheral jet velocity ration on the flame characteristics.

The results show that flame stabilization occurs in the vicinity of the quarl and is affected by its geometry owing to changes in the rate of entrainment of cold air. Increasing the swirl level and decreasing the peripheral airflow improves flame stability by promoting the mixing of fuel and air along the annular stabilization region. Turbulence measurements show common features with and without combustion and suggest the absence of large-scale mixing in the present flames. Although the laminar flamelet concept may represent most of the features of the flames investigated, the local quenching of burning flamelets is shown to preclude the internal ignition of flame gases in a way that influences the process of flame stabilization.  相似文献   


5.
The effects of swirl and downstream wall confinement on an annular nonpremixed flame were investigated using direct numerical simulation (DNS). Fully three-dimensional parallel DNS was performed employing high-order numerical methods and high-fidelity boundary conditions to solve governing equations for variable-density flow and finite-rate Arrhenius chemistry. Three swirl numbers have been examined: 0 (without swirl), 0.4 and 0.8, while the effects of downstream wall confinement have been examined for swirl numbers 0 and 0.4. Results have been presented in terms of instantaneous and time-averaged flow quantities, which have also been analysed using energy spectra and proper orthogonal decomposition (POD). Effects of swirl on the fluid dynamic behaviour of the annular nonpremixed flame were found to be significant. The fluid dynamic behaviour of the flame is greatly affected by the interaction between the geometrical recirculation zone (GRZ) near the jet nozzle exit due to the annular configuration, the central recirculation zone (CRZ) associated with swirl, the unsteady vortical structures in the jet column due to the shear instability, and the downstream wall confinement. Depending on the degree of swirl, the GRZ near the burner mouth and the CRZ may co-exist or one zone may be overwhelmed by another. At a moderate swirl number, the co-existence leads to a flame with strong reaction attached to the burner mouth; while at a high swirl number, the CRZ dominates over the GRZ. The precessing vortex core was observed to exist in the swirling flow fields. The Nusselt number distribution of the annular impinging flames differs from that of round impinging jets. The POD analysis revealed that wall effects on the flow field are mainly associated with the higher mode numbers.  相似文献   

6.
The classic Flame Transfer Function (FTF) used in the thermoacoustic stability analysis of lean premixed combustors is linked, in a mathematically strict way, to the flow coherent structures using Large Eddy Simulation. This is based on a methodology which combines the Wiener-Hopf system identification filter—separating any field variables into a dynamic contribution driven by external forcing plus a noise contribution given by turbulent fluctuations—with the extended formulation of the Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD). The method is applied to partially premixed flames stabilized at two different types of Central Recirculation Zone (CRZ) due to the mechanism of vortex breakdown of the flow through a swirl burner: type A, where the CRZ appears rather narrow in the radial direction with apex located close to the burner exit and type B, where the CRZ is entirely located in the combustor and appears more flat at its apex than what observed in case of the type A vortex flow. Rather different properties are observed for the FTF. Flames stabilized at the narrow CRZ (type A), respond to inflow forcing with a time delay which depends much more on the bulk equivalence ratio than flames stabilized at the thick CRZ (type B). On the other hand the amplitude of the FTF in the case of the narrow CRZ is in general lower than in case of the thick and flat CRZ where amplification factors of the order of 4–5 are reached. By allowing a reasonable explanation of the observed trends, the methodology developed here can give an important contribution to the development of gas turbine burners.  相似文献   

7.
The dynamic response of fully premixed flames stabilized in strongly swirled flows undergoing vortex breakdown is investigated with axisymmetric unsteady RANS simulations. The analysis relies on the well known Helmholtz-Hodge decomposition of the velocity field into its irrotational and rotational components. A novel methodology based on the linearization of the progress variable transport equation is developed to determine the separate contribution of these velocity components to the Flame Transfer Function (FTF). Due to the phase delay between the convected tangential velocity and instantaneously propagating axial velocity perturbations, a non-monotonic frequency dependence of the swirl number amplitude downstream the swirl generator is detected. In line with experimental observations, such non-monotonic frequency dependence is found also for the amplitude and phase of the FTF. This behaviour is associated here with rotational velocity perturbations generated by the Central Recirculation Zone (CRZ) generated by the phenomenon of vortex breakdown which, responding in a fashion totally similar to the swirl number perturbation, produces flame surface area fluctuations with the same distribution versus frequency.  相似文献   

8.
Transitional jet diffusion flames provide the link between dynamics of laminar and turbulent flames. In this study, instabilities and their interaction with the flow structure are explored in a transitional jet diffusion flame, with focus on isolating buoyancy effects. Experiments are conducted in hydrogen flames with fuel jet Reynolds number of up to 2,200 and average jet velocity of up to 54 m/s. Since the fuel jet is laminar at the injector exit, the transition from laminar to turbulent flame occurs by the hydrodynamic instabilities in the shear layer of fuel jet. The instabilities and the flow structures are visualized and quantified by the rainbow schlieren deflectometry technique coupled with a high-speed imaging system. The schlieren images acquired at 2,000 frames per second allowed exposure time of 23 μs with spatial resolution of 0.4 mm. Results identify a hitherto unknown secondary instability in the flame surface, provide explanation for the observed intermittency in the breakpoint length, show coherent vortical structures downstream of the flame breakpoint, and illustrate gradual breakdown of coherent structures into small-scale random structures in the far field turbulent region.  相似文献   

9.
Finite Rate Chemistry Effects in Highly Sheared Turbulent Premixed Flames   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Detailed scalar structure measurements of highly sheared turbulent premixed flames stabilized on the piloted premixed jet burner (PPJB) are reported together with corresponding numerical calculations using a particle based probability density function (PDF) method. The PPJB is capable of stabilizing highly turbulent premixed jet flames through the use of a small stoichiometric pilot that ensures initial ignition of the jet and a large shielding coflow of hot combustion products. Four lean premixed methane-air flames with a constant jet equivalence ratio are studied over a wide range of jet velocities. The scalar structure of the flames are examined through high resolution imaging of temperature and OH mole fraction, whilst the reaction rate structure is examined using simultaneous imaging of temperature and mole fractions of OH and CH2O. Measurements of temperature and mole fractions of CO and OH using the Raman–Rayleigh–LIF-crossed plane OH technique are used to examine the flame thickening and flame reaction rates. It is found that as the shear rates increase, finite-rate chemistry effects manifest through a gradual decrease in reactedness, rather than the abrupt localized extinction observed in non-premixed flames when approaching blow-off. This gradual decrease in reactedness is accompanied by a broadening in the reaction zone which is consistent with the view that turbulence structures become embedded within the instantaneous flame front. Numerical predictions using a particle-based PDF model are shown to be able to predict the measured flames with significant finite-rate chemistry effects, albeit with the use of a modified mixing frequency.  相似文献   

10.
The low swirl flow is a novel method for stabilizing lean premixed combustion to achieve low emissions of nitrogen oxides. Understanding the characteristics of low swirl flows is of both practical and fundamental interest. In this paper, in order to gain better insight into low swirl stabilized combustion, large eddy simulation and dynamically thickened flame combustion modeling are used to characterize various features of non-reacting and reacting low swirl flows including vortex breakdown, shear layers’ instability, and coherent structures. Furthermore, four test cases with different equivalence ratios are studied to evaluate the effects of equivalence ratio on the flame and flow characteristics. A finite volume scheme on a Cartesian grid with a dynamic one equation eddy viscosity subgrid model is used for large eddy simulations. The obtained results show that the combustion heat release and increase in equivalence ratio toward the stoichiometric value decrease the local swirl number of the flow field, while increasing the flow spreading at the burner outlet. Results show that the flame becomes W shaped as the equivalence ratio increases. Moreover, the combination of the swirling motion and combustion heat release temporally imposes a vortex breakdown in the post-flame region, which leads to occurrence of a transient recirculation zone. The temporal recirculation zone disappears downstream of the burner outlet due to merging of the inner shear layer from all sides at the centerline. Also, various analyses of shear layers’ wavy and vortical structures show that combustion heat release has the effect of decreasing the instability amplitude and vortex shedding frequency.  相似文献   

11.
Laser Doppler Anemometry (LDA) and Planar Laser-Induced Fluorescence (PLIF) measurements have been performed in a turbulent nonpremixed jet flame. One of the features of this configuration is a central co-axial fuel jet surrounded by a turbulent annular air flow. The whole is placed within a low-speed coflowing air stream. This three-flow system with turbulent primary air differs from flow systems used for nonpremixed jet flames reported in the literature and is very useful for obtaining information on the mixing process between fuel and primary air. Next to the characterization of the velocity field, special attention has been paid to the conditional seeding of the central fuel jet and of the annular air flow. Together with visualizations of the OH radical, an important combustion intermediate which is formed during combustion, and the NO radical, which is seeded to the central jet flow, the resulting statistics reveal the properties of small- and large-scale structures in the flame.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of finite‐rate chemistry, such as partial extinctions and re‐ignitions, are investigated in turbulent non‐pre‐mixed reacting flows stabilized in the wake of an axisymmetric bluff‐body burner. A two‐dimensional large‐eddy simulation procedure is employed that uses a partial equilibrium/two‐scalar reactedness mixture fraction probability density function (PDF) combustion sub‐model, which is applied at the sub‐grid scale (SGS) level. An anisotropic sub‐grid eddy–viscosity and two equations for the SGS turbulence kinetic and scalar energies complete the SGS closure model. The scalar covariances required in the joint PDF formulation are obtained from an extended scale‐similarity assumption between the resolved and the sub‐grid fluctuations. Extinction due to strong turbulence/chemistry interactions is recognized with the help of a ‘critical’, locally variable, turbulent Damkohler number criterion, while transient localized extinctions and re‐ignitions are treated with a Lagrangian transport equation for a reactedness progress variable. Comparisons with available experimental data suggested that the formulated approach was capable of identifying the effects of large‐scale vortex structure activity, which were inherent in the reacting wake and dominant in the counterpart isothermal flows that otherwise would have been obscured if a standard time‐averaged procedure had been used. Additionally, the post‐extinction and re‐ignition behaviour and its time‐varying interaction with the large‐scale structure dynamics were more appropriately addressed within the context of the present time‐dependent method. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Quantitative hydroxyl time-series measurements from a set of stable and extinguishing turbulent opposed-flow partially premixed CH4/air flames are used to investigate the effect of Reynolds number and fuel-side equivalence ratio on the structure of turbulent partially premixed flames. The hydroxyl (OH) integral time scale, computed from the autocorrelation function, is used to characterize OH fluctuations and is found to reach a minimum at the axial location of peak OH. Analyses of the duration of and period between bursts in the OH time series are used to examine the dynamics of flame-front motion. In general, with increasing Reynolds number (Re), the distribution in OH burst times shifts towards smaller time scales. A hydroxyl intermittency parameter is also defined from the bursts to quantify the presence or absence of OH. For flames with the same fuel-side equivalence ratio, the hydroxyl intermittency at peak OH remains almost constant when going from stable to extinguishing flames. However, histograms portray an increase in burst separation times for flames displaying occasional extinction events. Hydroxyl time series for a partially premixed flame at a fuel-side equivalence ratio of 2.0 and Re = 6650 are synthesized by using mixture-fraction simulations based on calculated state relationships for OH versus mixture fraction (f). The laminar-flamelet model is employed to explore relations between OH and f so as to predict trends in mixture-fraction time scales.“Time-Series Measurements in Turbulent Opposed-Jet Flames" is submitted for consideration as a full length article to Flow Turbulence and Combustion.  相似文献   

14.
In the frame of this work a transported joint scalar probability density function (PDF) method is combined with the flamelet generated manifolds (FGM) tabulated chemistry approach for large eddy simulation (LES) modeling of a three-dimensional turbulent premixed swirl burner. This strategy accounts for the turbulence-chemistry interaction at reasonable computational costs. At the same time, it allows the usage of detailed chemistry mechanisms for the creation of the chemical database. The simulation results obtained are comparatively assessed along with complementary measurements. Furthermore, transient and time-averaged data are used to provide insight into the flow physics of the bluff-body swirl stabilized flame considered. The sensitivity of the results to different modeling approaches regarding the predicted flame shape and its dynamics is also investigated, where the implemented approach is compared with the well-established artificially thickened flame (ATF) combustion model. Consequently, the investigation conducted in this work aims to provide a complete picture on the ability of the proposed combustion model to reproduce the flow conditions within complex bluff-body swirl stabilized flames.  相似文献   

15.
The stabilization characteristics and local extinction structures of partially premixed methane/air flames were studied using simultaneous OH-PLIF/PIV techniques, and large eddy simulations employing a two-scalar flamelet model. Partial premixing was made in a mixing chamber comprised of two concentric tubes, where the degree of partial premixing of fuel and air was controlled by varying the mixing length of the chamber. At the exit of the mixing chamber a cone was mounted to stabilize the flames at high turbulence intensities. The stability regime of flames was determined for different degree of partial premixing and Reynolds numbers. It was found that in general partially premixed flames at low Reynolds numbers become more stable when the level of partial premixing of air to the fuel stream decreases. At high Reynolds numbers, for the presently studied burner configuration there is an optimal partial premixing level of air to the fuel stream at which the flame is most stable. OH-PLIF images revealed that for the stable flames not very close to the blowout regime, significant local extinction holes appear already. By increasing premixing air to fuel stream successively, local extinction holes grow in size leading to eventual flame blowout. Local flame extinction was found to frequently attain to locations where locally high velocity flows impinging to the flame. The local flame extinction poses a future challenge for model simulations and the present flames provide a possible test case for such study.  相似文献   

16.
Experimental Characterization of Gelled Jet A1 Spray Flames   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Gelled propellants provide energetic performance similar to conventional liquid propellants and safety during storage and handling like a solid propellant. Experiments on unconfined gelled Jet A1 spray flames and the comparison with ungelled spray flames are reported for the first time in this paper in terms of the global features, burning regimes, stability limits, visible flame height, emission spectra, natural luminosity, and CH ? chemiluminescence. Propellants were atomized by an internally impinging two-fluid atomizer, developed specifically for efficient atomization of non-Newtonian gels. Swirling and non-swirling spray flames were successfully stabilized on a burner incorporating bluff body and annular jet of combustion air over a wide range of operating parameters. Structural features of the atomizer impart high momentum to the (central) spray jet, such that the recirculation zone could be penetrated under all conditions. Long-exposure smoke and high-speed visualizations were employed to study cold flow structures and droplet-vortex interactions. Short-exposure direct and backlit imaging were used to observe global features of spray flames. Stability limits and visible flame heights were mapped for different thermal inputs, swirl numbers, and flow rates of atomizing and combustion air jets. Non-swirling stable anchored, partially blown off, and neck-blown off flames were observed. Lifted, and a transition regime, in which the flame could burn in stable and lifted mode repetitively, were observed for the swirling flames. Interactions between central and annular jets are important in these regimes, determining flame shape, symmetry, and flame height. Jet-like propagation zone determines the flame height through its dependence on momentum of spray jet. The length of this zone is affected by variations in thermal input, gas-liquid ratio, and air-fuel ratio. The gelled Jet A1 flames are remarkably shorter despite having a larger average droplet size than ungelled Jet A1. This experimental observation directly supports theoretical predictions reported in literature. These flames are more luminous than ungelled Jet A1, especially at the base and the neck regions. While, majority of the heat is released in the jet-like propagation zone for both the flames, significant heat is released in the neck zone of ungelled Jet A1 spray flame in comparison to ungelled Jet A1 spray flame due to intense turbulence and smaller droplet size.  相似文献   

17.
A variety of investigators have attempted to characterize the mechanisms of how reaction zones stabilize, or propagate, against incoming reactants, particularly in stable lifted jet flames both laminar and turbulent. In this paper, experiments are described that investigate the characteristics of upstream flame propagation in turbulent hydrocarbon jet flames. An axisymmetric, gaseous turbulent jet mixing in air has been selectively ignited at downstream positions to assess the upstream propagation of the bulk reaction zone. The farthest axial position that permitted the reaction zone to propagate upstream after application of the ignition source, referred to as the “upper propagation limit”, or UPL, is determined for a variety of jet and air co-flow parameters. There is an inverse relationship between the upper propagation limit position and the jet Reynolds number. Conversely, there is a direct relationship between the upper propagation limit and the co-flow velocity. Interpretation of the results is related to the velocity at the stoichiometric surface. Global discussion is made as to what these results imply about the stabilization and propagation of turbulent lifted jet flames.  相似文献   

18.
Confined short turbulent swirling premixed and non-premixed methane and heptane spray flames stabilized on an axisymmetric bluff body in a square enclosure have been examined close to the blow-off limit and during the extinction transient with OH* chemiluminescence and OH-PLIF operated at 5 kHz. The comparison of flames of different canonical types in the same basic aerodynamic field allows insights on the relative blow-off behaviour. The flame structure has been examined for conditions increasingly closer to blow-off. The premixed flame was seen to change from a cylindrical shape at stable burning condtions, with the flame brush closing across the flow at conditions close to blow-off. The PLIF images show that for the gaseous non-premixed flame, holes appear along the flame sheet with increasing frequency as the blow-off condition is approached, while the trend is less obvious for the spray flame. Non-premixed and spray flames showed randomly-occurring lift-off, which is further evidence of localised extinction. The mean lift-off height increased with increasing fuel jet velocity and decreased with increasing air velocity and approaches zero (i.e. the flame is virtually attached) just before the blow-off condition, despite the fact that more holes were evident in the flame sheet as extinction was approached. It was found that the average duration of the blow-off event, when normalised with the characteristic flow time d/U b (d being the bluff-body diameter and U b the bulk velocity) was in the range 9–38 with the spray flame extinction lasting a shorter time than the gaseous flames. Finally, it was found that correlations based on a Damköhler number collapse the blow-off velocity data for all flames with reasonable accuracy. The results can help the development of advanced turbulent combustion models.  相似文献   

19.
This large eddy simulation (LES) study is applied to three different premixed turbulent flames under lean conditions at atmospheric pressure. The hierarchy of complexity of these flames in ascending order are a simple Bunsen-like burner, a sudden-expansion dump combustor, and a typical swirl-stabilized gas turbine burner–combustor. The purpose of this paper is to examine numerically whether the chosen combination of the Smagorinsky turbulence model for sgs fluxes and a novel turbulent premixed reaction closure is applicable over all the three combustion configurations with varied degree of flow and turbulence. A quality assessment method for the LES calculations is applied. The cold flow data obtained with the Smagorinsky closure on the dump combustor are in close proximity with the experiments. It moderately predicts the vortex breakdown and bubble shape, which control the flame position on the double-cone burner. Here, the jet break-up at the root of the burner is premature and differs with the experiments by as much as half the burner exit diameter, attributing the discrepancy to poor grid resolution. With the first two combustion configurations, the applied subgrid reaction model is in good correspondence with the experiments. For the third case, a complex swirl-stabilized burner–combustor configuration, although the flow field inside the burner is only modestly numerically explored, the level of flame stabilization at the junction of the burner–combustor has been rather well captured. Furthermore, the critical flame drift from the combustor into the burner was possible to capture in the LES context (which was not possible with the RANS plus kɛ model), however, requiring tuning of a prefactor in the reaction closure.  相似文献   

20.
Flow structure of premixed propane–air swirling jet flames at various combustion regimes was studied experimentally by stereo PIV, CH* chemiluminescence imaging, and pressure probe. For the non-swirling conditions, a nonlinear feedback mechanism of the flame front interaction with ring-like vortices, developing in the jet shear layer, was found to play important role in the stabilisation of the premixed lifted flame. For the studied swirl rates (S = 0.41, 0.7, and 1.0) the determined domain of stable combustion can be divided into three main groups of flame types: attached flames, quasi-tubular flames, and lifted flames. These regimes were studied in details for the case of S = 1.0, and the difference in the flow structure of the vortex breakdown is described. For the quasi-tubular flames an increase of flow precessing above the recirculation zone was observed when increased the stoichiometric coefficient from 0.7 to 1.4. This precessing motion was supposed to be responsible for the observed increase of acoustic noise generation and could drive the transition from the quasi-tubular to the lifted flame regime.  相似文献   

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