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1.
The accuracy of large-eddy simulation (LES) of a turbulent premixed Bunsen flame is investigated in this paper. To distinguish between discretization and modeling errors, multiple LES, using different grid sizes h but the same filterwidth Δ, are compared with the direct numerical simulation (DNS). In addition, LES using various values of Δ but the same ratio Δ/h are compared. The chemistry in the LES and DNS is parametrized with the standard steady premixed flamelet for stochiometric methane-air combustion. The subgrid terms are closed with an eddy-viscosity or eddy-diffusivity approach, with an exception of the dominant subgrid term, which is the subgrid part of the chemical source term. The latter subgrid contribution is modeled by a similarity model based upon 2Δ, which is found to be superior to such a model based upon Δ. Using the 2Δ similarity model for the subgrid chemistry the LES produces good results, certainly in view of the fact that the LES is completely wrong if the subgrid chemistry model is omitted. The grid refinements of the LES show that the results for Δ = h do depend on the numerical scheme, much more than for h = Δ/2 and h = Δ/4. Nevertheless, modeling errors and discretization error may partially cancel each other; occasionally the Δ = h results were more accurate than the h ≤ Δ results. Finally, for this flame LES results obtained with the present similarity model are shown to be slightly better than those obtained with standard β-pdf closure for the subgrid chemistry.  相似文献   

2.
Large-eddy simulation (LES) of turbulent combustion with premixed flamelets is investigated in this paper. The approach solves the filtered Navier–Stokes equations supplemented with two transport equations, one for the mixture fraction and another for a progress variable. The LES premixed flamelet approach is tested for two flows: a premixed preheated Bunsen flame and a partially premixed diffusion flame (Sandia Flame D). In the first case, we compare the LES with a direct numerical simulation (DNS). Four non-trivial models for the chemical source term are considered for the Bunsen flame: the standard presumed beta-pdf model, and three new propositions (simpler than the beta-pdf model): the filtered flamelet model, the shift-filter model and the shift-inversion model. A priori and a posteriori tests are performed for these subgrid reaction models. In the present preheated Bunsen flame, the filtered flamelet model gives the best results in a priori tests. The LES tests for the Bunsen flame are limited to a case in which the filter width is only slightly larger than the flame thickness. According to the a posteriori tests the three models (beta-pdf, filtered flamelet and shift-inversion) show more or less the same results as the trivial model, in which subgrid reaction effects are ignored, while the shift-filter model leads to worse results. Since LES needs to resolve the large turbulent eddies, the LES filter width is bounded by a maximum. For the present Bunsen flame this means that the filter width should be of the order of the flame thickness or smaller. In this regime, the effects of subgrid reaction and subgrid flame wrinkling turn out to be quite modest. The LES-results of the second case (Sandia Flame D) are compared to experimental data. Satisfactory agreement is obtained for the main species. Comparison is made between different eddy-viscosity models for the subgrid turbulence, and the Smagorinsky eddy-viscosity is found to give worse results than eddy-viscosities that are not dominated by the mean shear. Paper presented on the Eccomas Thematic Conference Computational Combustion 2007, submitted for a special issue of Flow, Turbulence and Combustion.  相似文献   

3.
4.
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   

5.
This contribution is aimed at drawing the attention of the computational fluid dynamics community on the availability of an experimental database regarding turbulent lean premixed prevaporised (LPP) reacting flows stabilised behind a double symmetric, plane sudden expansion fed by two fully developed turbulent channel flows of air plus propane. This flow configuration can be thought of as a relevant benchmark for testing turbulence and/or combustion models aimed at helping for the design of reliable LPP combustion chambers. This database contains a large amount of raw and processed data regarding essentially the velocity field for one inert and three different reacting flows configurations. Additional pieces of information are available and concern the lean extinction properties and the wall static pressure evolution in the feeding channels. For the reacting flows, the presence of a large scale coherent motion is clearly visible in the velocity spectra and it is shown how a data processing based on the semi-deterministic approach that decomposes the velocity signal into the sum of its steady time average, its coherent fluctuations and its stochastic fluctuations can permit to evaluate their respective contribution to the total velocity fluctuations.  相似文献   

6.
Conditional Moment Closure for Large Eddy Simulations   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A conditional moment closure (CMC) based combustion model for large-eddy simulations (LES) of turbulent reacting flow is proposed and evaluated. Transport equations for the conditionally filtered species are derived that are consistent with the LES formulation and closures are suggested for the modelling of the conditional velocity, conditional scalar dissipation and the fluctuations around the conditional mean. A conventional β-probability density distribution of the scalar is used together with dynamic modelling for the sub-grid fluxes. The model is validated by comparison of simulations with measurements of a piloted, turbulent methane-air jet diffusion flame.  相似文献   

7.
Large eddy simulation (LES) models for flamelet combustion are analyzed by simulating premixed flames in turbulent stagnation zones. ALES approach based on subgrid implementation of the linear eddy model(LEM) is compared with a more conventional approach based on the estimation of the turbulent burning rate. The effects of subgrid turbulence are modeled within the subgrid domain in the LEM-LES approach and the advection (transport between LES cells) of scalars is modeled using a volume-of-fluid (VOF) Lagrangian front tracking scheme. The ability of the VOF scheme to track the flame as a thin front on the LES grid is demonstrated. The combined LEM-LES methodology is shown to be well suited for modeling premixed flamelet combustion. The geometric characteristics of the flame surfaces, their effects on resolved fluid motion and flame-turbulence interactions are well predicted by the LEM-LES approach. It is established here that local laminar propagation of the flamelets needs to be resolved in addition to the accurate estimation of the turbulent reaction rate. Some key differences between LEM-LES and the conventional approach(es) are also discussed. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

8.
This paper proposes a combustion model based on a turbulent flame speed closure (TFC) technique for large eddy simulation (LES) of premixed flames. The model was originally developed for the RANS (Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes equations) approach and was extended here to LES. The turbulent quantities needed for calculation of the turbulent flame speed are obtained at the sub grid level. This model was at first experienced via an test case and then applied to a typical industrial combustor with a swirl stabilized flame. The paper shows that the model is easy to apply and that the results are promising. Even typical frequencies of arising combustion instabilities can be captured. But, the use of compressible LES may also lead to unphysical pressure waves which have their origin in the numerical treatment of the boundary conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Despite significant advances in the understanding and modelling of turbulent combustion, no general model has been proposed for simulating flames in industrial combustion devices. Recently, the increase in computational possibilities has raised the hope of directly solving the large turbulent scales using large eddy simulation (LES) and capturing the important time-dependant phenomena. However, the chemical reactions involved in combustion occur at very small scales and the modelling of turbulent combustion processes is still required within the LES framework. In the present paper, a recently presented model for the LES of turbulent premixed flames is presented, analysed and discussed. The flamelet hypothesis is used to derive a filtered source term for the filtered progress variable equation. The model ensures proper flame propagation. The effect of subgrid scale (SGS) turbulence on the flame is modelled through the flame-wrinkling factor. The present modelling of the source term is successfully tested against filtered direct numerical simulation (DNS) data of a V-shape flame. Further, a premixed turbulent flame, stabilised behind an expansion, is simulated. The predictions agree well with the available experimental data, showing the capabilities of the model for performing accurate simulations of unsteady premixed flames.  相似文献   

10.
Autoignition of an n-heptane plume in a turbulent coflow of heated air has been studied using the conditional moment closure (CMC) method with a second-order closure for the conditional chemical source term. Two different methodologies have been considered: (i) the Taylor expansion method, in which the second order correction was based on the solution of the full covariance matrix for the 31 reactive species in the chemical mechanism and hence was not limited to a few selected reactions, and (ii) the conditional PDF method, in which only the temperature conditional variance equation has been solved and its PDF assumed to be a β-function. The results compare favorably with experiment in terms of autoignition location. The structure of the reaction zone in mixture fraction space has been explored. The relative performance of the two methodologies is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Large-eddy simulations (LES) of a planar, asymmetric diffuser flow have been performed. The diverging angle of the inclined wall of the diffuser is chosen as 8.5°, a case for which recent experimental data are available. Reasonable agreement between the LES and the experiments is obtained. The numerical method is further validated for diffuser flow with the diffuser wall inclined at a diverging angle of 10°, which has served as a test case for a number of experimental as well as numerical studies in the literature (LES, RANS). For the present results, the subgrid-scale stresses have been closed using the dynamic Smagorinsky model. A resolution study has been performed, highlighting the disparity of the relevant temporal and spatial scales and thus the sensitivity of the simulation results to the specific numerical grids used. The effect of different Reynolds numbers of the inflowing, fully turbulent channel flow has been studied, in particular, Re b  = 4,500, Re b  = 9,000 and Re b  = 20,000 with Re b being the Reynolds number based on the bulk velocity and channel half width. The results consistently show that by increasing the Reynolds number a clear trend towards a larger separated region is evident; at least for the studied, comparably low Reynolds-number regime. It is further shown that the small separated region occurring at the diffuser throat shows the opposite behaviour as the main separation region, i.e. the flow is separating less with higher Re b . Moreover, the influence of the Reynolds number on the internal layer occurring at the non-inclined wall described in a recent study has also been assessed. It can be concluded that this region close to the upper, straight wall, is more distinct for larger Re b . Additionally, the influence of temporal correlations arising from the commonly used periodic turbulent channel flow as inflow condition (similar to a precursor simulation) for the diffuser is assessed.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The most common and reliable technique used for flame stabilization of industrial combustors with high thermal loads is the application of strongly swirling flows. In addition to stabilization, swirl flames offer the possibility to influence emission characteristics by simply changing the swirl intensity or the type of swirl generation. Despite of these major advantages, swirling flows tend to evolve flow instabilities, that considerably constitute a significant source of noise. In general, noise generation is substantially enhanced, when such a swirling flow is employed for flames. Thus, the minimization of the resulting noise emissions under conservation of the benefit of high ignition stability is one major design challenge for the development of modern swirl stabilized combustion devices. The present investigation makes an attempt to determine mechanisms and processes to influence the noise generation of flames with underlying swirling flows. Therefore, a new burner has been designed, that offers the possibility to vary geometrical parameters as well as the type of swirl generation, typically applied in industrial devices. Experimental data has been acquired for the isothermal flow as well as swirl flames by means of 3-D-LDV-diagnostics comprising the components of long-time averaged mean and rms-velocities as well as spectrally resolved velocity fluctuations for all components. The noise emission data was acquired with microphone probes resulting in sound pressure levels outside the zone of the perceptible fluid flow. Along to the experiments, numerical simulations using RANS and LES have been carried out for isothermal cases with different burner outlet geometries. The results of the measurements show a distinct rise of the sound pressure level, obtained by changing both the test setup from the isothermal into the flame configuration as well as the geometrical parameters. This is also resembled by the LES simulation results. Furthermore, a physical model has been developed from experiments and verified by the LES simulation, that explains the formation of coherent flow structures and allows to separate their contribution to the overall noise emission from ordinary turbulent noise sources.  相似文献   

14.
We consider the chemical reaction in a turbulent flow for the case that the time scale of turbulence and the time scale of the reaction are comparable. This process is complicated by the fact that the reaction takes place intermittently at those locations where the species are adequately mixed. This is known as spatial segregation. Several turbulence models have been proposed to take the effect of spatial segregation into account. Examples are the probability density function (PDF) and the conditional moment closure (CMC) models. The main advantage of these models is that they are able to parameterize the effects of turbulent mixing on the chemical reaction rate. As a price several new unknown terms appear in these models for which closure hypothesis must be supplied. Examples are the conditional dissipation 〈 χ ∣ φ 〉, the conditional diffusion 〈 κ ∇2 φ ∣ u, φ 〉 and the conditional velocity 〈 u ∣ φ 〉. In the present study we investigate these unknown terms that appear in the PDF and CMC model by means of a direct numerical simulation (DNS) of a fully developed turbulent flow in a channel geometry. We present the results of two simulations in which a scalar is released from a continuous line source. In the first we consider turbulent mixing without chemical reaction and in the second we add a binary reaction. The results of our simulations agree very well with experimental data for the quantities on which information is available. Several closure hypotheses that have been proposed in the literature, are considered and validated with help of our simulation results. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

15.
In this work we examine first the flow field of a confined jet produced by a turbulent flow in a long cylindrical pipe issuing in an abrupt angle diffuser. Second, we examine the dispersion of inertial micro-particles entrained by the turbulent flow. Specifically, we examine how the particle dispersion field evolves in the multiscale flow generated by the interactions between the large-scale structures, which are geometry dependent, with the smaller turbulent scales issued by the pipe which are advected downstream. We use Large-Eddy-Simulation (LES) for the flow field and Lagrangian tracking for particle dispersion. The complex shape of the domain is modelled using the immersed-boundaries method. Fully developed turbulence inlet conditions are derived from an independent LES of a spatially periodic cylindrical pipe flow. The flow field is analyzed in terms of local velocity signals to determine spatial coherence and decay rate of the coherent K–H vortices and to make quantitative comparisons with experimental data on free jets. Particle dispersion is analyzed in terms of statistical quantities and also with reference to the dynamics of the coherent structures. Results show that the particle dynamics is initially dominated by the Kelvin–Helmholtz (K–H) rolls which form at the expansion and only eventually by the advected smaller turbulence scales.  相似文献   

16.
This numerical investigation carried out on turbulent lean premixed flames accounts for two algebraic – the Lindstedt–Vaos (LV) and the classic Bray–Moss–Libby (BML) – reaction rate models. Computed data from these two models is compared with the experimental data of Kobayashi et al. on 40 different methane, ethylene and propane Bunsen flames at 1 bar, where the mean flame cone angle is used for comparison. Both models gave reasonable qualitative trend for the whole set of data, in overall. In order to characterize quantitatively, firstly, corrections are made by tuning the model parameters fitting to the experimental methane–air (of Le = 1.0) flame data. In case of the LV model, results obtained by adjusting the pre-constant, i.e., reaction rate parameter, CR, from its original value 2.6 to 4.0, has proven to be in good agreement with the experiments. Similarly, for the BML model, with the tuning of the exponent n, in the wrinkling length scale, Ly = Cllx(sL/u′)n from value unity to 1.2, the outcome is in accordance with the measured data. The deviation between the measured and calculated data sharply rises from methane to propane, i.e., with increasing Lewis number. It is deduced from the trends that the effect of Lewis number (for ethylene–air mixtures of Le = 1.2 and propane–air mixtures of Le = 1.62) is missing in both the models. The Lewis number of the fuel–air mixture is related to the laminar flame instabilities. Second, in order to quantify for its influence, the Lewis number effect is induced into both the models. It is found that by setting global reaction rate inversely proportional to the Lewis number in both the cases leads to a much better numerical prediction to this set of experimental flame data. Thus, by imparting an important phenomenon (the Lewis number effect) into the reaction rates, the generality of the two models is enhanced. However, functionality of the two models differs in predicting flame brush thickness, giving scope for further analysis.  相似文献   

17.
This paper presents an application of adaptive remeshing to the prediction of turbulent separated flows. The paper shows that the κ - ε model with wall functions can predict separated flows along smooth curved surfaces. Success is achieved if the wall functions exhibit values of y+ close to 30, and if meshes are fine enough to guarantee that wall function boundary conditions are grid converged. Adaptive remeshing proves to be a very cost effective tool in this context. The methodology is demonstrated on a problem possessing a closed form solution to establish the performance and reliability of the proposed approach. The method is then applied to prediction of turbulent flow in an annular, axisymmetric turnaround duct (TAD). Predictions from two computational models of the TAD are compared with experimental measurements. The importance of appropriate meshes to achieve grid independent solutions is demonstrated in both cases. Better agreement with measurements is obtained when partially developed profiles of u, κ, and ε are specified at the TAD inlet.  相似文献   

18.
The impact of flying debris against building envelopes during high winds is a major source of structural damage. For example, damage produced by Hurricanes Katrina and Ike in the United States on the facades of tall buildings, located in urban areas, has been documented. It is therefore of relevance to analyze the vulnerability of tall buildings to debris-induced non-structural damage in the general context of performance-based wind engineering. In order to analyze the random trajectory of debris in highly turbulent winds, a numerical model combined with a probability-based algorithm was recently proposed by the authors (Moghim and Caracoglia, 2013). This model investigates the trajectory of “compact debris”, defined as point-mass objects of negligible mass moments of inertia and for which the aerodynamics is predominantly controlled by the drag force. The model replicates both the inherent randomness in debris properties and the effect of wind shear and atmospheric turbulence to estimate debris trajectory and the likelihood of impact against vertical building facades in a probabilistic setting.This paper describes the comparison between numerical model results and wind tunnel experiments. Tests were carried out in the Northeastern University׳s small scale wind tunnel in both smooth flow and grid-generated turbulent flow. The motion of spheres and cubes, simulating compact debris objects, was investigated in two dimensions (2D) on a vertical plane.The 2D motion of compact objects of various sizes was captured by a high-speed digital camera at different flow speeds. Experimental results showed to be consistent with numerical simulations. They also confirmed that not only mean flow speed but also turbulence features can have a non-negligible effect on the trajectory of compact objects.  相似文献   

19.
We investigate the turbulence modeling of second moment closure used both in RANS and PITM methodologies from a fundamental point of view and its capacity to predict the flow in a low turbulence wind tunnel of small axisymmetric contraction designed by Uberoi and Wallis. This flow presents a complex phenomenon in physics of fluid turbulence. The anisotropy ratio of the turbulent stresses τ 11/τ 22 initially close to 1.4 returns to unity through the contraction, but surprisingly, this ratio gradually increases to its pre-contraction value in the uniform section downstream the contraction. This point constitutes the interesting paradox of the Uberoi and Wallis experiment. We perform numerical simulations of the turbulent flow in this wind tunnel using both a Reynolds stress model developed in RANS modeling and a subfilter scale stress model derived from the partially integrated transport modeling method. With the aim of reproducing the experimental grid turbulence resulting from the effects of the square-mesh biplane grid on the uniform wind tunnel stream, we develop a new analytical spectral method of generation of pseudo-random velocity fields in a cubic box. These velocity fields are then introduced in the channel using a matching numerical technique. Both RANS and PITM simulations are performed on several meshes to study the effects of the contraction on the mean velocity and turbulence. As a result, it is found that the RANS computation using the Reynolds stress model fails to reproduce the increase of anisotropy in the centerline of the channel after passing the contraction. In the contrary, the PITM simulation predicts fairly well this turbulent flow according to the experimental data, and especially, the “return to anisotropy” in the straight section of the channel downstream the contraction. This work shows that the PITM method used in conjunction with an analytical synthetic turbulence generation as inflow is well suited for simulating this flow, while allowing a drastic reduction of the computational resources.  相似文献   

20.
The probability density function (PDF) formulation of one scalar field undergoing diffusion, turbulent convection and chemical reaction is restated in terms of stochastic fields. These fields are smooth in space as they have a length scale similar to that of the PDF. Their evolution is described by a set of stochastic partial differential equations, which are solved using a finite volume scheme with a stochastic source term. The application of this methodology to a particular flow is shown first for a linear source term, with exact analytical solution for the mean and standard deviation, and then for a nonlinear reaction.  相似文献   

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