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1.
A nonlinear equation describing curved stationary flames with arbitrary gas expansion theta = rho(fuel)/rho(burnt) is obtained in a closed form without an assumption of weak nonlinearity. The equation respects all conservation laws and takes into account vorticity production in the flame. In the scope of the asymptotic expansion for theta -->1, the new equation solves the problem of stationary flame propagation with accuracy of the sixth order in theta - 1. Its analytical solutions give the flame velocity in tubes of arbitrary width, which agrees with available results of direct numerical modeling.  相似文献   

2.
A novel vorticity–velocity formulation of the Navier–Stokes equations – the Mass-Conserving, Smooth (MC-Smooth) vorticity–velocity formulation – is developed in this work. The governing equations of the MC-Smooth formulation include a new second-order Poisson-like elliptic velocity equation, along with the vorticity transport equation, the energy conservation equation, and Nspec species mass balance equations. In this study, the MC-Smooth formulation is compared to two pre-existing vorticity–velocity formulations by applying each formulation to confined and unconfined axisymmetric laminar diffusion flame problems. For both applications, very good to excellent agreement for the simulation results of the three formulations has been obtained. The MC-Smooth formulation requires the least CPU time and can overcome the limitations of the other two pre-existing vorticity–velocity formulations by ensuring mass conservation and solution smoothness over a broader range of flow conditions. In addition to these benefits, other important features of the MC-Smooth formulation include: (1) it does not require the use of a staggered grid, and (2) it does not require excessive grid refinement to ensure mass conservation. The MC-Smooth formulation is a computationally attractive approach that can effectively extend the applicability of the vorticity–velocity formulation.  相似文献   

3.
Occurrences of fireball close to plant buildings due to the release of flammable hydrocarbon fuel caused by the formation of fuel vapour cloud poses severe safety concerns. On the availability of potential ignition source, the induced fireball would cause the damage to the structures of nuclear power plant by direct contact, radiation and/or convection of hot combustion products through the opening of air intakes and ducts. In the present paper, the accidental/ experimental observations and theoretical studies of fireball are summarised. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analyses have been carried out to study the behaviour of fireball using OpenFOAM CFD software. The parametric studies are conducted by varying the mass of fuel, inlet velocity and inlet diameter. The new correlations for fireball diameter and duration have been proposed based on the parametric studies using CFD simulations. The fireball with a larger amount of fuel releases the heat slower and for a longer duration. The high heat released rate (HRR) is observed in case of a larger inlet diameter used for the same mass. The incident radiation from the fireball is calculated at different locations to assess thermal hazard. Analysis performed show that various parameters like fireball diameter, duration and the radiative flux falling at different locations can be predicted well using CFD code.  相似文献   

4.
Stabilization of laminar lifted coflow jet flames of nitrogen-diluted methane was investigated experimentally and numerically. As the fuel jet velocity was increased, two distinct behaviors in liftoff height were observed depending on the initial fuel mole fraction; a monotonically increasing trend and a decreasing and then increasing trend (U-shaped behavior). The former was observed in the jet-developing region and the latter in the jet-developed region. Because the decreasing behavior of liftoff height with jet velocity has not been observed at ambient temperature, the present study focuses on decreasing liftoff height behavior. To elucidate the physical mechanism underlying the U-shaped behavior, numerical simulations of reacting jets were conducted by adopting a skeletal mechanism. The U-shaped behavior was related to the buoyancy. At small jet velocities, the relative importance of the buoyancy over convection was strong and the flow field was accelerated in the downstream region to stabilize the lifted flame. As the jet velocity increased, the relative importance of buoyancy decreased and the liftoff height decreased. As the jet velocity further increased, the flame stabilization was controlled by jet momentum and the liftoff height increased.  相似文献   

5.
The structure and propagation properties of diffusion neutral triple flames subject to buoyancy effects are studied numerically using a high-accuracy scheme. A wide range of gravity conditions, heat release, and mixing widths for a scalar mixing layer are computed for downward-propagating (in the same direction as the gravity vector) and upward-propagating (in the opposite direction to the gravity vector) triple flames. These results are used to identify non-dimensional quantities, which parametrize the triple flame responses. Results show that buoyancy acts primarily to modify the overall span of the premixed branches in response to gas acceleration across the triple flame. The impact of buoyancy on the structure of triple flame is less pronounced than its impact on the topology of the branches. The trailing diffusion branch is affected by buoyancy primarily as a result of the changes in the overall flame size, which consequently modifies the rates of diffusion of excess fuel and oxidizer from the premixed branches to the diffusion branch. A simple analytical model for the triple flame speed, which accounts for both buoyancy and heat release is developed. Comparisons of the proposed model with the numerical results for a wide range of gravity, heat release and mixing width conditions, yield very good agreement. The analysis shows that under neutral diffusion, downward propagation reduces the triple flame speed, while upward propagation enhances it. For the former condition, a critical Froude number may be evaluated, which corresponds to a vanishing triple flame speed.  相似文献   

6.
An integrable version of the Weyl-Dirac geometry is presented. This framework is a natural generalization of the Riemannian geometry, the latter being the basis of the classical general relativity theory. The integrable Weyl-Dirac theory is both coordinate covariant and gauge covariant (in the Weyl sense), and the field equations and conservation laws are derived from an action integral. In this framework matter creation by geometry is considered. It is found that a spatially confined, spherically symmetric formation made of pure geometric quantities is a massive entity. This may be treated either as a fundamental particle or as a cosmic body. In an F-R-W universe at the very beginning of the expansion phase the cosmic matter is created from an initial Planckian egg made of geometry, and during the following expansion geometric fields continue to stimulate the matter production.  相似文献   

7.
The instability attenuation mechanism of fuel staging was investigated in a CH4/H2 fueled dual-nozzle gas turbine combustor. Fuel staging was implemented using an asymmetry in fuel composition between the two nozzles. The fuel composition of the upper nozzle was varied while keeping that of the lower nozzle constant. Under these conditions, the self-excited and forced responses of fuel-staged flames were analyzed using OH* chemiluminescence imaging, OH planar laser-induced fluorescence, and particle image velocimetry. In the self-excited measurements, although strong combustion instability was exhibited in the symmetric condition, it weakened gradually with increasing asymmetry in fuel composition. The symmetric flame exhibited significant fluctuations in the heat release rate around the flame tip, which acted as the primary cause of driving combustion instability. However, in asymmetric flames, the H2 addition induced phase leads in heat release rate fluctuations at the upper region, which damped combustion instability. Thus, our observations revealed a high correlation between the phase leads and the attenuation of combustion instability. Analyses of the forced responses showed that the heat release rate fluctuations were induced by interactions between the flame and the shedding vortex released from the nozzle tip into the downstream. Although these characteristics of shedding vortices did not depend on the H2 addition, the change in the axial position of the flame caused by the H2 addition induced the relocation of the site, at which the flame interacted with the vortex. Subsequently, it induced phase leads in the heat release rate fluctuations. The phase difference of heat release rate fluctuations between the two flames due to this phase leads enlarged progressively with increasing asymmetry in fuel composition, leading to the attenuation of combustion instability in asymmetric conditions.  相似文献   

8.
An exact equation describing freely propagating stationary flames with arbitrary values of the gas expansion coefficient is obtained. This equation respects all conservation laws at the flame front, and provides a consistent nonperturbative account of the effect of vorticity produced by the curved flame on the front structure. It is verified that the new equation is in agreement with the approximate equations derived previously in the case of weak gas expansion.  相似文献   

9.
Combustion dynamics of inverted conical flames   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
An inverted conical flame anchored on a central bluff-body in an unconfined burner configuration features a distinctive acoustic response. This configuration typifies more complex situations in which the thermo-acoustic instability is driven by the interaction of a flame with a convective vorticity mode. The axisymmetric geometry investigated in this article features a shear region between the reactive jet and the surrounding atmosphere. It exhibits self-sustained oscillations for certain operating conditions involving a powerful flame collapse phenomenon with sudden annihilation of flame surface area. This is caused by a strong interaction between the flame and vortices created in the outer jet shear layer, a process which determines the amplitude of heat release fluctuation and its time delay with respect to incident velocity perturbations. This process also generates an acoustic field that excites the burner and synchronizes the vortex shedding mechanism. The transfer functions between the velocity signal at the burner outlet and heat release are obtained experimentally for a set of flow velocities fluctuations levels. It is found that heat release fluctuations are a strong function of the incoming velocity perturbation amplitude and that the time delay between these two quantities is mainly determined by the convection of the large scale vortices formed in the jet shear layer. A model is formulated, which suitably describes the observed instabilities.  相似文献   

10.
The axially symmetric steady-state motion of a viscous incompressible fluid in a region of the type of a spherical layer is considered. The boundary problem for the Navier-Stokes equations is formulated in terms of the stream function and vorticity. The solvability of this problem was previously established provided that the fluid flow rate through each layer boundary is sufficiently small. The main result of this study is in proving the solvability of the axially symmetric flow-through problem without limitations on the magnitude of the flow rate. The proof is based on the a priori Dirichlet estimate of the flow velocity field. The asymptotic properties of the solution near the symmetry axis are established conditionally. The proof procedure admits the generalization to the case of axially symmetric problems in multiply-connected domains.  相似文献   

11.
Compression waves can be generated during combustion processes and subsequently interact with flames to augment their behaviour. The study of these interactions thus far has been limited to shock and expansion waves only. In this study, the interaction of finite compression waves with a perturbed laminar flame is investigated using numerical simulations of the compressible Navier–Stokes equations with single-step chemical kinetics. The interaction is characterised using three independent parameters: the compression wavelength, the pressure ratio of the disturbance, and the perturbation amplitude of the flame interface. The results reveal a wide range of behaviours in terms of flame length and heat release rate that could occur during such an interaction. The results are compared to the classical reactive Richtmyer–Meshkov instability and the role of baroclinic torque and vorticity generation are shown to be primary drivers of the flow instability.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The present study experimentally investigates the structure and instabilities associated with extremely low-stretch (1 s−1) gaseous diffusion flames. Ultra-low-stretch flames are established in normal gravity by bottom burning of a methane/nitrogen mixture discharged from a porous spherically symmetric burner of large radius of curvature. OH-PLIF and IR imaging techniques are used to characterize the reaction zone and the burner surface temperature, respectively. A flame stability diagram mapping the response of the ultra-low-stretch diffusion flame to varying fuel injection rate and nitrogen dilution is explored. In this diagram, two main boundaries are identified. These boundaries separate the stability diagram into three regions: sooting flame, non-sooting flame, and extinction. Two distinct extinction mechanisms are noted. For low fuel injection rates, flame extinction is caused by heat loss to the burner surface. For relatively high injection rates, at which the heat loss to burner surface is negligible, flame radiative heat loss is the dominant extinction mechanism. There also exists a critical inert dilution level beyond which the flame cannot be sustained. The existence of multi-dimensional flame phenomena near the extinction limits is also identified. Various multi-dimensional flame patterns are observed, and their evolutions are studied using direct chemiluminescence and OH-PLIF imaging. The results demonstrate the usefulness of the present burner configuration for the study of low-stretch gaseous diffusion flames.  相似文献   

14.
Athree-dimensional model of a steady concurrent flame spread over a thin solid in a low-speed flowtunnel in microgravity has been formulated and numerically solved. The gas-phase combustion model includes the full Navier-Stokes equations for the conservation of mass, momentum, energy and species. The solid is assumed to be a thermally thin, non-charring cellulosic sheet and the solid model consists of continuity and energy equations whose solution provides boundary conditions for the gas phase. The gas-phase reaction is represented by a one-step, second-order, finite-rate Arrhenius kinetics and the solid pyrolysis is approximated by a one-step, zeroth-order decomposition obeying an Arrhenius law. Gas-phase radiation is neglected but solid radiative loss is included in the model. Selected results are presented showing detailed three-dimensional flame structures and flame spread characteristics.

In a parametric study, varying the tunnel (solid) widths and the flow velocity, two important three-dimensional effects have been investigated, namely wall heat loss and oxygen side diffusion. The lateral heat loss shortens the flame and retards flame spread. On the other hand, oxygen side diffusion enhances the combustion reaction at the base region and pushes the flame base closer to the solid surface. This closer flame base increases the solid burnout rate and enhances the steady flame spread rate. In higher speed flows, three-dimensional effects are dominated by heat loss to the side-walls in the downstream portion of the flame and the flame spread rate increases with fuel width. In low-speed flows, the flames are short and close to the quenching limit. Oxygen side diffusion then becomes a dominant mechanism in the narrow three-dimensional flames. The flame spreads faster as the solid width is made narrower in this regime. Additional parametric studies include the effect of tunnelwall thermal condition and the effect of adding solid fuel sample holders.  相似文献   

15.
This study investigates the characteristics of oscillating lifted flames in laminar coflow-jets experimentally and numerically by varying both fuel density (by varying propane and n-butane mixtures) and coflow density (by diluting air with N2/He mixtures). Two different lifted flame oscillation behaviors are observed depending on these parameters: oscillating tribrachial lifted flame (OTLF) and oscillating mode-change lifted flame (OMLF), where a rapid increase in flame radius is observed. The regimes of the two flames are identified from experiments, which shows that OMLF occurs only when the effect of the negative buoyancy on the flow field by the fuel heavier than air becomes significant at low fuel jet velocity. OMLFs are also identified to distinguish OTLF regime from flame extinction, which implies that an OMLF can be extinguished when the positive buoyancy becomes weak, losing its stabilizing effect, or when the negative buoyancy becomes strong, further enhancing its destabilizing effect. Transient numerical simulations of both OTLF and OMLF reveal that the OMLF occurs by a strong toroidal vortex and a subsequent counterflow-like structure induced by relatively-strong negative buoyancy. Such a drastic flow redirection significantly changes the fuel concentration gradient such that the OMLF changes its mode from a tribrachial flame mode (decreasing edge speed with fuel concentration gradient) to the premixed flame-like transition mode when the fuel concentration gradient becomes very small (increasing edge speed with fuel concentration gradient). Again, a tribrachial flame mode is recovered during a rising period of flame edge and repeats an oscillation cycle.  相似文献   

16.
Due to its nature as a carbon free fuel and carrying hydrogen energy ammonia has received a lot of attention recently to be used as an alternative to fossil fuel in gas turbine and internal combustion engines. However, several barriers such as long ignition delay, slow flame speed, and low reactivity need to be overcome before its practical applications in engines. One potential approach to improve the ignition can be achieved by using oxygen enriched combustion. In this study, oxygen-enriched combustion of ammonia is tested in a constant volume combustion chamber to understand its combustion characteristics like flame velocity and heat release rates. With the help of high speed Schlieren imaging, an ammonia-oxygen flame is studied inside the combustion chamber. The influence of a wide range of oxygen concentrations from 15 to 40% are tested along with equivalence ratios ranging from 0.9 to 1.15. Ammonia when ignited at an oxygen concentration of 40% with an equivalence ratio of ϕ= 1.1 at 10 bar has a maximum flame velocity of 112.7 cm/s. Reduced oxygen concentration also negatively affects the flame velocity, introducing instabilities and causing the flame to develop asymmetrically due to buoyancy effects inside the combustion chamber. Heat release rate (HRR) curves show that increasing the oxygen concentration from 21 to 35% of the mixture can help reduce the ignition delays. Peak HRR data shows increased sensitivity to air fuel ratios with increased oxygen concentrations in the ambient gas. HRR also shows an overall positive dependence on the oxygen concentration in the ambient gas.  相似文献   

17.
Dynamics of buoyant diffusion flames from rectangular, square, and round fuel sources were investigated using direct numerical simulation (DNS). Fully three-dimensional simulations were performed employing high-order numerical methods and boundary conditions to solve governing equations for variable-density flow and finite-rate Arrhenius chemistry. Significant differences among the different cases were revealed in the vortex dynamics, entrainment rate, small-scale mixing, and consequently flame structures. Mixing and entrainment enhancement in non-circular flames in comparison with circular ones was explained using the Biot–Savart instability theory, which relates vortex dynamics to the local azimuthal curvature. An extension of the theory elucidated why rectangular flames entrain more efficiently and spread wider than square ones, although both configurations have corners. It also provided an explanation for the aspect ratio effects in the near field. In the far field, nonlinear effects were dominant and the general transport equations for vorticity were analyzed in detail. The corner effects and aspect ratio effects were shown to be augmented by the intricate interactions among vortex dynamics, combustion, and buoyancy through the various terms in the equations. The presence of corners in non-circular flames led to concentrated regions of fine-scale mixing and intense reactions centered around the corners. Moreover, the rectangular flames exhibited a different dynamic behavior from even the square one, by creating discrepancies in entrainment, mixing, and combustion between the minor and major axis directions. Increasing the aspect ratio exacerbated such directional discrepancies, and ultimately led to axis switching. It was the first time that axis switching was observed by DNS in a rectangular flame of aspect ratio 3, which raised further questions in combustion prediction and control. Finally, a unified explanation for corner and aspect ratio effects was given on the basis of the Biot–Savart instability theory and the vorticity transport equations.  相似文献   

18.
Combustion dynamics leading to thermoacoustic instability in a rearward-facing step stabilized premixed flame is experimentally examined with the objective of investigating the fluid dynamic mechanism that drives heat release rate fluctuations, and how it couples with the acoustic field. The field is probed visually, using linear photodiode arrays that capture the spatiotemporal distribution of CH* and OH*; an equivalence ratio monitor; and a number of pressure sensors. Results show resonance between the acoustic quarter wave mode of the combustion tunnel and a fluid dynamic mode of the wake. Under unstable conditions, the flame is convoluted around a large vortex that extends several step heights downstream. During a typical cycle, while the velocity is decreasing, the vortex grows, and the flame extends downstream around its outer edge. As the velocity reaches its minimum, becoming mostly negative, the vortex reaches its maximum size, and the flame collides with the upper wall; its leading edge folds, trapping reactants pockets, and its trailing edge propagates far upstream of the step. In the next phase, while the velocity is increasing, the heat release grows rapidly as trapped reactant’ pockets are consumed by flames converging towards their centers, and the upstream flame is dislodged back downstream. The heat release rate reaches its maximum halfway into the velocity rise period, leading the maximum velocity by about 90°. In this quarter-wave mode, the pressure leads the velocity by 90° as well, that is, it is in phase with the heat release rate. Numerical modeling results support this mechanism. Equivalence ratio contribution to the instability mechanism is shown to be minor, i.e., heat release dynamics are governed by the cyclical formation of the wake vortex and its interaction with the flame.  相似文献   

19.
The oscillating lifted flame in a laminar nonpremixed nitrogen-diluted fuel jet is known to be a result of buoyancy, though the detailed physical mechanism of the initiation has not yet been properly addressed. We designed a systematic experiment to test the hypothesis that the oscillation is driven by competition between the positive buoyancy of flame and the negative buoyancy of a fuel stream heavier than the ambient air. The positive buoyancy was examined with various flame temperatures by changing fuel mole fraction, and the negative buoyancy was investigated with various fuel densities. The density of the coflow was also varied within a certain range by adding either helium or carbon dioxide to air, to study how it affected the positive and negative buoyancies at the same time. As a result, we found that the range of oscillation was well-correlated with the positive and the negative buoyancies; the former stabilized the oscillation while the latter triggered instability and became a source of the oscillation. Further measurements of the flow fields and OH radicals evidenced the important role of the negative buoyancy on the oscillation, detailing a periodic variation in the unburned flow velocity that affected the displacement of the flame.  相似文献   

20.
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