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1.
The occurrence of oscillating combustion and combustion instability has led to resurgence of interest in the causes, mechanisms, suppression, and control of combustion noise. Noise generated by enclosed flames is of greater practical interest but is more complicated than that by open flames, which itself is not clearly understood. Studies have shown that different modes of combustion, premixed and non-premixed, differ in their sound generation characteristics. However, there is lack of understanding of the region bridging these two combustion modes. This study investigates sound generation by partially premixed flames. Starting from a non-premixed flame, air was gradually added to achieve partial premixing while maintaining the fuel flow rate constant. Methane, ethylene, and ethane partially premixed flames were studied with hydrogen added for flame stabilization. The sound pressure generated by methane partially premixed flames scales with M5 compared to M3 for turbulent non-premixed methane flames. Also, the sound pressure generated by partially premixed flames of ethane and ethylene scales as M4.5. With progressive partial premixing, spectra level increases at all frequencies with a greater increase in the high-frequency region compared to the low-frequency region; flames develop a peak and later a constant level plateau in the low frequency region. The partially premixed flames of methane, ethylene, and ethane generate a similar SPL as a function of equivalence ratio when the fuel volume flow rate is matched. However, when fuel mass flow rate is matched, the ethane and ethylene flames produce a similar SPL, which is lower than that produced by the methane flame.  相似文献   

2.
A tribrachial (or triple) flame is one kind of edge flame that can be encountered in nonpremixed mixing layers, consisting of a lean and a rich premixed flame wing together with a trailing diffusion flame all extending from a single point. The flame could play an important role on the characteristics of various flame behaviors including lifted flames in jets, flame propagation in two-dimensional mixing layers, and autoignition fronts. The structure of tribrachial flame suggests that the edge is located along the stoichiometric contour in a mixing layer due to the coexistence of all three different types of flames. Since the edge has a premixed nature, it has unique propagation characteristics. In this review, the propagation speed of tribrachial flames will be discussed for flames propagating in mixing layers, including the effects of concentration gradient, velocity gradient, and burnt gas expansion. Based on the tribrachial edge structure observed experimentally in laminar lifted flames in jets, the flame stabilization characteristics including liftoff height, reattachment, and blowout behaviors and their buoyancy-induced instability will be explained. Various effects on liftoff heights in both free and coflow jets including jet velocity, the Schmidt number of fuel, nozzle diameter, partial premixing of air to fuel, and inert dilution to fuel are discussed. Implications of edge flames in the modeling of turbulent nonpremixed flames and the stabilization of turbulent lifted flames in jets are covered.  相似文献   

3.
Characteristics and structure of inverse flames of natural gas   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Characteristics and structure of nominally non-premixed flames of natural gas are investigated using a burner that employs simultaneously two distinct features: fuel and oxidiser direct injection, and inverse fuel and oxidiser delivery. At low exit velocities, the result is an inverse diffusion flame that has been noted in the past for its low NOx emissions, soot luminosity, and narrow stability limits. The present study aimed at extending the burner operating range, and it demonstrated that the inverse flame exhibits a varying degree of partial premixing dependent on the discharge nozzle conditions and the ratio of inner air jet and outer fuel jet velocities. These two variables affect the flame length, temperature distributions, and stability limits. Temperature measurements and Schlieren visualisation show areas of enhanced turbulent mixing in the shear region and the presence of a well-mixed reaction zone on the flame centreline. This reaction zone is enveloped by an outer diffusion flame, yielding a unique double-flame structure. As the fuel–air equivalence ratio is decreasing with an increase in the inner jet velocity, the well-mixed reaction zone extends considerably. These findings suggest a method for establishing a flame of uniform high temperature by optimising the coaxial nozzle geometry and flow conditions. The normalised flame length is decreasing exponentially with the air/fuel velocity ratio. Measurements demonstrate that the inverse flame stability limits change qualitatively with varying degree of partial premixing. At the low premixing level, the flame blow-out is a function of the inner and outer jet velocities and the nozzle conditions. The flame blow-out at high degree of partial premixing occurs abruptly at a single value of the inner air jet velocity, regardless of the fuel jet velocity and almost independent of the discharge nozzle conditions.  相似文献   

4.
The influence of water vapor on critical conditions of extinction and autoignition of premixed and nonpremixed flames is investigated. The fuels tested are hydrogen (H2) and methane (CH4). Studies on premixed systems are carried out by injecting a premixed reactant stream made up of fuel, oxygen (O2), and nitrogen (N2) from one duct, and an inert-gas stream of N2 from the other duct. Critical conditions of extinction are measured for various amounts of water vapor added to the premixed reactant stream. The ratio of fuel to oxygen is maintained at a constant value, and the amounts of water vapor and nitrogen are so chosen that the adiabatic temperature remains the same. This ensures that the physical influence of water is the same for all cases. Therefore, changes in values for the critical conditions of extinction are attributed to the chemical influence of water vapor. Studies on nonpremixed systems are carried out by injecting a fuel stream made up of fuel and N2 from one duct ,and an oxidizer stream made up of O2 and N2 from the other duct. Critical conditions of extinction are measured with water vapor added to the oxidizer stream. The concentrations of reactants are so chosen that the adiabatic temperature and the flame position stay the same for all cases. Critical conditions of autoignition are measured by preheating the oxidizer stream of the nonpremixed system. Water vapor is added to the oxidizer stream. Numerical calculations are performed using a detailed chemical-kinetic mechanism and compared with measurements. Experimental and numerical studies show that addition of water makes the premixed and nonpremixed flames easier to extinguish and harder to ignite. The chemical influence of water is attributed to its enhanced chaperon efficiency in three body reactions.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Direct numerical simulations with a C3-chemistry model have been performed to investigate the transient behavior and internal structure of flames propagating in an axisymmetric fuel jet of methane, ethane, ethylene, acetylene, or propane in normal earth gravity (1g) and zero gravity (0g). The fuel issued from a 3-mm-i.d. tube into quasi-quiescent air for a fixed mixing time of 0.3 s before it was ignited along the centerline where the fuel–air mixture was at stoichiometry. The edge of the flame formed a vigorously burning peak reactivity spot, i.e., reaction kernel, and propagated through a flammable mixture layer, leaving behind a trailing diffusion flame. The reaction kernel broadened laterally across the flammable mixture layer and possessed characteristics of premixed flames in the direction of propagation and unique flame structure in the transverse direction. The reaction kernel grew wings on both fuel and air sides to form a triple-flame-like structure, particularly for ethylene and acetylene, whereas for alkanes, the fuel-rich wing tended to merge with the main diffusion flame zone, particularly methane. The topology of edge diffusion flames depend on the properties of fuels, particularly the rich flammability limit, and the mechanistic oxidation pathways. The transit velocity of edge diffusion flames, determined from a time series of calculated temperature field, equaled to the measured laminar flame speed of the stoichiometric fuel–air mixtures, available in the literature, independent of the gravity level.  相似文献   

7.
The Lagrangian CMC method was implemented in the open source programme OpenFOAM and applied to turbulent nonpremixed bluff body and swirl flames. Lagrangian CMC is more efficient than Eulerian CMC with the number of Lagrangian flame groups much less than the number of computational cells for Eulerian CMC equations in general. It is based on the conditional flame structure depending on the residence time of the fuel of fixed Lagrangian identity from the nozzle. According to sensitivity study the injected fuel was divided into ten flame groups according to the injection sequence with the resulting conditional profiles between those by ISR and Eulerian CMC. Minor deviation from Eulerian CMC was attributed to the flame structure that is difficult to be characterised by the residence time only in elliptic recirculating flows of the bluff body and swirl flames. The Eulerian and Lagrangian CMC showed the same trend of deviation from measurements for conditional temperature, H2O, OH, CO and H2 mass fractions. The significant deviation of H2 was due to uncertainty in the reaction chemistry, as observed in the previous works based on other reaction mechanisms for methane and methanol.  相似文献   

8.
This paper reports measured stability limits and PDF calculations of piloted, turbulent flames of compressed natural gas (CNG) partially-premixed with either pure oxygen, or with varying levels of O2/N2. Stability limits are presented for flames of CNG fuel premixed with up to 20% oxygen as well as CNG–O2–N2 fuel where the O2 content is varied from 8 to 22% by volume. Calculations are presented for (i) Sydney flame B [Masri et al. 1988] which uses pure CNG as well as flames B15 to B25 where the CNG is partially-premixed with 15–25% oxygen by volume, respectively and (ii) Sandia methane–air (1:3 by volume) flame E [Barlow et al. 2005] as well as new flames E15 and E25 that are partially-premixed with ‘reconstituted air’ where the O2 content in nitrogen is 15 and 25% by volume, respectively. The calculations solve a transported PDF of composition using a particle-based Monte Carlo method and employ the EMST mixing model as well as detailed chemical kinetics. The addition of oxygen to the fuel increases stability, shortens the flames, broadens the reaction zone, and shifts the stoichiometric mixture fraction towards the inner side of the jet. It is found that for pure CNG flames where the reaction zone is narrow (~0.1 in mixture fraction space), the PDF calculations fail to reproduce the correct level of local extinction on approach to blow-off. A broadening in the reaction zone up to about 0.25 in mixture fraction space is needed for the PDF/EMST approach to be able to capture these finite-rate chemistry effects. It is also found that for the same level of partial premixing, increasing the O2/N2 ratio increases the maximum levels of CO and NO but shifts the peak to richer mixture fractions. Over the range of oxygenation investigated here, stability limits have shown to improve almost linearly with increasing oxygen levels in the fuel and with increasing the contribution of release rate from the pilot.  相似文献   

9.
The detailed flame structure of laminar premixed cellular flames in the tubular domain is simulated in 2D using a fully-implicit primitive variable finite difference formulation that includes multicomponent transport and detailed chemical kinetics. Numerical results for H2/air flames are presented and compared against spatially resolved experimental measurements of temperature and chemical species including atomic H and OH. The experimental results compare well for flame structure and cell number, despite the numerical model under-predicting the peak temperature by 200 K. Numerical experiments were performed to assess the ability for cellular tubular flames to impact experimental and numerical investigations of practical flames. The cellular flame structure is found to provide a highly sensitive geometry that is useful for validating diffusive transport modelling approximations. This capability is exemplified through the development of a simple and accurate approximation for thermal diffusion (i.e. the Soret effect) that is suitable for practical combustion codes.  相似文献   

10.
The combustion and emission production processes of a DISI (direct-injection spark-ignition) engine were modelled by combining flamelet models for premixed and diffusion flames. A new surrogate fuel was proposed to approximate the complicated composition of real gasoline. In contrast to simpler conventional models, the fuel was modelled as a ternary mixture of three hydrocarbons: iso-octane, n-heptane and toluene. Turbulent flame propagation in a partially premixed field was modelled by a premixed flamelet model. The mass fractions of the detailed composition of species in burnt gas were predicted by a diffusion flamelet model. For the pollutant formation modelling, a two-step oxidation of CO and H2 was used to simulate the secondary diffusion flame. The extended Zeldovich mechanism was used to model NOx formation, while a phenomenological model was used to model soot formation. This model was initially applied to a simple geometry to investigate the fundamentals of the model's behaviour, after which three-dimensional computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations were performed in a realistic engine geometry.  相似文献   

11.
Behaviour of a confined fire located in an unventilated zone   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The behaviour of a fire in an enclosure is studied for a configuration where the fuel source is located in the upper hot unventilated zone trapped by a soffit. The experimental study, undertaken in a laboratory-scale compartment with a fuel source above the level of a soffit, included the determination of the parameters (ventilation factor, rate of fuel supply) controlling the combustion or leading to extinction. Measurements (PIV, thermocouples, gas sampling and analysis) were performed to propose a hypothesis on the structure of the flame (flame stabilisation mechanisms, premixed or diffusion types). Video photography is used to determine the area covered by the flames. This information is used as a criterion to identify the combustion regimes. The results show that the gaseous fuel is diluted in the combustion products (CP) in the upper layer and that a recirculatory motion is formed, driven by buoyancy forces, which enhances the mixing of fuel and CP. These then travel horizontally towards the vent along the interface between the lower fresh air and upper zones, and are premixed with the convected air in the enclosure, before entering the reaction zone and being burnt. The flame stabilises at the interface between the upper hot and lower ventilated layers in the compartment. The observed “ghosting flame” is stabilised by a triple flame if the flame speed of the premixed flame is higher than the natural convection velocity induced in the compartment. The flame stability is quantified by a criterion based on the area of the horizontal flame. It has been observed that the combustion is controlled by the available mass fuel flux at the reaction zone if the ventilation is sufficient. This information is essential for the modelling of the phenomena involved in fires with such an underventilated fuel source.  相似文献   

12.
In our previous numerical studies [Nishioka Makihito, Zhenyu Shen, and Akane Uemichi. “Ultra-lean combustion through the backflow of burned gas in rotating counterflow twin premixed flames.” Combustion and Flame 158.11 (2011): 2188–2198. Uemichi Akane, and Makihito Nishioka. “Numerical study on ultra-lean rotating counterflow twin premixed flame of hydrogen–air.” Proceedings of the Combustion Institute 34.1 (2013): 1135–1142]. we found that methane– and hydrogen–air rotating counterflow twin flames (RCTF) can achieve ultralean combustion when backward flow of burned gas occurs due to the centrifugal force created by rotation. In this study, we investigated the mechanisms of ultralean combustion in these flames by the detailed numerical analyses of the convective and diffusive transport of the main species. We found that, under ultralean conditions, the diffusive transport of fuel exceeds its backward convective transport in the flame zone, which is located on the burned-gas side of the stagnation point. In contrast, the relative magnitudes of diffusive and convective transport for oxygen are reversed compared to those for the fuel. The resulting flows for fuel and oxygen lead to what we call a ‘net flux imbalance’. This net flux imbalance increases the flame temperature and concentrations of active radicals. For hydrogen–air RCTF, a very large diffusivity of hydrogen enhances the net flux imbalance, significantly increasing the flame temperature. This behaviour is intrinsic to a very lean premixed flame in which the reaction zone is located in the backflow of its own burned gas.  相似文献   

13.
氢是一种非常有前景的清洁可再生能源载体.掺氢燃料预混稀燃是当前开发清洁高效的低排放燃气轮机最重要的能源转化方式之一。本文基于预混CH4/H2/air本生灯火焰,对氢气掺混影响下的湍流火焰详细火焰结构进行了测量和表征。实验采用CH2O和OH基平面激光诱导荧光(PLIF,Planar Laser Induced Fluorescence)同步测量技术,获得了火焰预热区、反应区以及已燃区的详细火焰结构信息。本文对反应区和预热区火焰厚度进行了提取和统计。研究表明,氢气对火焰反应区、预热区均有明显作用。结果表明,掺氢小幅度增厚反应区厚度,但能够比较明显地降低预热区厚度。  相似文献   

14.
15.
We have investigated the downward flame spread over a thin solid fuel. Hydrogen, methane, or propane, included in the gaseous product of pyrolysis reaction, is added in the ambient air. The fuel concentration is kept below the lean flammability limit to observe the partially premixing effect. Both experimental and numerical studies have been conducted. Results show that, in partially premixed atmospheres, both blue flame and luminous flame regions are enlarged, and the flame spread rate is increased. Based on the flame index, a so-called triple flame is observed. The heat release rate ahead of the original diffusion flame is increased by adding the fuel, and its profile is moved upstream. Here, we focus on the heat input by adding the fuel in the opposed air, which could be a direct factor to intensify the combustion reaction. The dependence of the flame spread rate on the heat input is almost the same for methane and propane/air mixtures, but larger effect is observed for hydrogen/air mixture. Since the deficient reactant in lean mixture is fuel, the larger effect of hydrogen could be explained based on the Lewis number consideration. That is, the combustion is surely intensified for all cases, but this effect is larger for lean hydrogen/air mixture (Le < 1), because more fuel diffuses toward the lean premixed flame ahead of the original diffusion flame. Resultantly, the pyrolysis reaction is promoted to support the higher flame spread rate.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of hot combustion product dilution in a pressurised kerosene-burning system at gas turbine conditions were investigated with laminar counterflow flame simulations. Hot combustion products from a lean (φ = 0.6) premixed flame were used as an oxidiser with kerosene surrogate as fuel in a non-premixed counterflow flame at 5, 7, 9 and 11 bar. Kerosene-hot product flames, referred to as ‘MILD’, exhibit a flame structure similar to that of kerosene–air flames, referred to as ‘conventional’, at low strain rates. The Heat Release Rate (HRR) of both conventional and MILD flames reflects the pyrolysis of the primary and intermediate fuels on the rich side of the reaction zone. Positive HRR and OH regions in mixture fraction space are of similar width to conventional kerosene flames, suggesting that MILD flames are thin fronts. MILD flames do not exhibit typical extinction behaviour, but gradually transition to a mixing solution at very high rates of strain (above A = 160, 000 s?1 for all pressures). This is in agreement with literature that suggests heavily preheated and diluted flames have a monotonic S-shaped curve. Despite these differences in comparison with kerosene–air flames, MILD flames follow typical trends as a function of both strain and pressure. Further still, the peak locations of the overlap of OH and CH2O mass fractions in comparison with the peak HRR indicate that the pixel-by-pixel product of OH- and CH2O-PLIF signals is a valid experimental marker for non-premixed kerosene MILD and conventional flames.  相似文献   

17.
We demonstrate experimentally, perhaps for the first time, the existence of low-temperature multistage diffusion flames of n-alkanes. Multistage diffusion flames of n-heptane, n-decane, and n-dodecane are established in an atmospheric counterflow burner. Planar laser-induced fluorescence, chemiluminescence, and thermometry are used to probe the structures of such flames. In the first flame zone, the majority of the fuel is partially oxidized via low-temperature peroxy chemistry. In the second flame zone, the intermediate species produced are further oxidized via intermediate-temperature chemistry. The two stages of the flame are coupled such that significant fuel and oxidizer leakage occur, respectively, from the first and second reaction zones. The fuel is then further consumed, in the second stage, after the radical pool is replenished by the oxidation of the intermediates. The structure of the n-alkane multistage flame is found to be consistent with that previously observed for acyclic ethers. Owing to the different classes of temperature-dependent chemistries dominating the first and second stages, the reaction zone structure of multistage diffusion flames is dramatically influenced by the reactant concentrations and flame temperatures. The first stage is relatively favored at lower temperatures whereas the second stage is favored at elevated temperatures. Moreover, near extinction where the flame temperature is low, the multistage flame dynamics are controlled by the first oxidation stage, governed by peroxy chemistry, whereas the second oxidation stage, governed by intermediate chemistry, is dominant near high-temperature ignition conditions. Finally, by doping the oxidizer with ozone, we demonstrate the role of ozone doping on the multistage flame structure and the existence of a separate low-temperature ozone-assisted burning mode.  相似文献   

18.
Large eddy simulations (LES) are employed to investigate the effect of the inlet turbulence intensity on the H2/CH4 flame structure in a hot and diluted co-flow stream which emulates the (Moderate or Intense Low-oxygen Dilution) MILD combustion regime. In this regard, three fuel inlet turbulence intensity profiles with the values of 4%, 7% and 10% are superimposed on the annular mixing layer. The effects of these changes on the flame structure under the MILD condition are studied for two oxygen concentrations of 3% and 9% (by mass) in the oxidiser stream and three hot co-flow temperatures 1300, 1500 and 1750 K. The turbulence-chemistry interaction of the numerically unresolved scales is modelled using the (Partially Stirred Reactor) PaSR method, where the full mechanism of GRI-2.11 represents the chemical reactions. The influences of the turbulence intensity on the flame structure under the MILD condition are studied by using the profile of temperature, CO and OH mass fractions in both physical and mixture fraction spaces at two downstream locations. Also, the effects of this parameter are investigated by contours of OH, HCO and CH2O radicals in an area near the nozzle exit zone. Results show that increasing the fuel inlet turbulence intensity has a profound effect on the flame structure particularly at low oxygen mass fraction. This increment weakens the combustion zone and results in a decrease in the peak values of the flame temperature and OH and CO mass fractions. Furthermore, increasing the inlet turbulence intensity decreases the flame thickness, and increases the MILD flame instability and diffusion of un-burnt fuel through the flame front. These effects are reduced by increasing the hot co-flow temperature which reinforces the reaction zone.  相似文献   

19.
This study has been mainly motivated to assess computationally and theoretically the conditional moment closure (CMC) model and the transient flamelet model for the simulation of turbulent nonpremixed flames. These two turbulent combustion models are implemented into the unstructured grid finite volume method that efficiently handles physically and geometrically complex turbulent reacting flows. Moreover, the parallel algorithm has been implemented to improve computational efficiency as well as to reduce the memory load of the CMC procedure. Example cases include two turbulent CO/H2/N2 jet flames having different flow timescales and the turbulent nonpremixed H2/CO flame stabilized on an axisymmetric bluff-body burner. The Lagrangian flamelet model and the simplified CMC formulation are applied to the strongly parabolic jet flame calculation. On the other hand, the Eulerian particle flamelet model and full conservative CMC formulation are employed for the bluff-body flame with flow recirculation. Based on the numerical results, a detailed discussion is given for the comparative performances of the two combustion models in terms of the flame structure and NO x formation characteristics.  相似文献   

20.
Atmospheric-pressure highly-diluted laminar dimethyl ether (DME)–oxygen flames with temperatures below 1500 K were stabilized for the first time on a specially designed burner which allows preheating of the gas streams of fuel and oxidizer. With regard to the partially premixed structure of these flames which contain up to 90% argon in the unburnt gases, molecular-beam mass spectrometry (MBMS) with electron ionization (EI) was used to investigate chemical species profiles of reactants, intermediates, and products at a series of lateral positions and as function of distance from the burner. The flame structure reveals a near one-dimensional behavior at the flame front and beyond, towards the burnt gas. In a systematic approach, combustion parameters including stoichiometry, dilution, and gas preheating temperature were varied. The partial premixing effects upon the flame were revealed by comparing the distribution of flame species in a full two-dimensional concentration field above the burner, which is a starting point to model such flames in further studies. Formaldehyde and the methyl radical as two prominent species in the combustion process of DME were used to discuss characteristics of both high- and low-temperature kinetics.  相似文献   

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