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1.
The influence of system parameters such as the flame location, Peclet number and Damköhler number on the bifurcation characteristics and flame dynamics of a ducted non-premixed flame with finite rate chemistry is presented in this paper. In the bifurcation plot with flame location as the bifurcation parameter, subcritical Hopf bifurcation is found for lower values of flame location and supercritical Hopf bifurcation for higher values of flame location, for all the Damköhler numbers used in this study. The flame shapes are captured at eight different phases of a cycle of time series data of acoustic velocity at both the fold and Hopf points for bifurcation with flame location as the parameter. We find that the range of flame height variations at the Hopf point is more than the range of flame height variations obtained at the fold point. We also find that the flame oscillates in the same phase as pressure fluctuation but in a phase different from both velocity and heat release rate fluctuations in the region of hysteresis for bifurcation with flame location. The non-dimensional hysteresis width is plotted as a function of Damköhler number for variation of flame location in the subcritical region. An inverse power law relation is found between the non-dimensional hysteresis width and the Damköhler number. The bifurcation plot with Peclet number as parameter shows a subcritical Hopf bifurcation.  相似文献   

2.
The interaction between turbulence and reactive scalar fields is discussed for the wrinkled flamelets regime of turbulent premixed combustion. Emphasis is placed on the effects associated with the turbulent straining term. In the regime of turbulent combustion under consideration, which corresponds to Karlovitz and Damköhler numbers such that Ka < 1 and Da > 1, a clear and simple formulation is proposed to explain and to model the influence of the correlation between velocity and reactive scalar gradients. This formulation is based on the conservative variables budget across one-dimensional premixed laminar flamelets. The analysis firmly confirms the dependence on both the Damköhler number and the expansion factor, a feature already foreseen in recent studies. Nevertheless, in contrast with previous work, (i) the scaling arguments used in the present contribution are different from those used in other recent proposals, and (ii) the proposed closures are not only deduced from dimensional arguments but also from the consideration of conservative variable budgets across laminar flamelets. The resulting functional dependence on the expansion factor is found to be influenced by the underlying one-dimensional flamelet representation and two possible closures are put forward to take this dependence into account. (iii) The two closures do not exhibit a proportionality to the mean scalar dissipation rate as suggested in previous studies but to the square of this quantity. This results in the presence of a second contribution proportional to in the modelled transport equation for the mean scalar dissipation rate, in addition to the modelled molecular dissipation term. (iv) Since previous Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) studies have been essentially devoted to the influence of the Damköhler number, the present DNS validation step is focused on the effects of the expansion rate. To this purpose, the proposed models are validated against three available DNS databases obtained for turbulent premixed flames with different values of the density ratio between unburned and fully burned gases.  相似文献   

3.
The nonlinear dynamics of striped diffusion flames, formed in a two-dimensional counterflow by diffusional–thermal instability with Lewis numbers sufficiently less than unity, is investigated numerically by examining various two-dimensional flame-structure solutions bifurcating from the one-dimensional steady solution. The Lewis numbers for fuel and oxidizer are identically set to be 0.3, and an overall single-step Arrhenius-type chemical reaction with a Zel'dovich number of 7 is employed as the chemistry model. Particular attention is focused on the flame-stripe solution branches in the sub-extinction regime and on the hysteresis encountered during the transition between different solution branches. In the numerical simulations, a nonlinear solution with eight stripes is first realized from the one-dimensional solution at a Damköhler number slightly greater than the extinction Damköhler number. The eight-stripe solution survives Damköhler numbers much smaller than the extinction Damköhler number until successive bifurcations, leading to the doubling of the pattern wavelength, occur at the subsequent forward-transition conditions. At the first forward-transition Damköhler number occurs the transition to a four-stripe solution, which in turn transits to a two-stripe solution at the second forward-transition Damköhler number, a value somewhat smaller than the first. However, further transition from a two-stripe solution to a one-stripe solution is not always possible even if a one-stripe solution can be accessed independently for particular initial conditions. The Damköhler-number ranges and shapes for the two-stripe and one-stripe solutions are found to be virtually identical, implying that each stripe could be an independent structure if the distance between stripes is sufficiently large. By increasing the Damköhler number, backward transitions can be observed. In comparison with the forward-transition Damköhler numbers, the corresponding backward-transition Damköhler numbers are always much greater, thereby indicating significant hysteresis between the stripe patterns of strained diffusion flames.  相似文献   

4.
A knowledge of flame stability regimes in the presence of cylindrical bluff-bodies of various dimensions is essential to design non-premixed burners. The reacting flow field in such cases is reported to be three-dimensional and unsteady. In the literature, only a few experimental investigations with limited measurements are available. Therefore, in this work, a detailed numerical study of laminar cross-flow non-premixed methane–air flames in the presence of a square cylinder is presented. The flow, temperature, species and reaction fields have been predicted using a comprehensive transient three-dimensional reacting flow model with detailed chemical kinetics and variable thermo-physical properties, in order to get a good insight into the flame stabilisation phenomena. Further, analyses of quantities such as local equivalence ratio, cell Damköhler number, species velocity, net consumption rate of methane, which are not easily obtained through experiments even with detailed diagnostics, have been carried out. The influence of the flow field due to varying inlet velocity of the oxidiser, in the presence of the bluff-body, on flame anchoring location has been analysed in detail. Local equivalence ratio contours obtained from non-reacting flow calculations are seen to be quite useful in analysing the mixing process and in the prediction of flame anchoring locations when the flames are not separated. Cell Damköhler number has been calculated using cell size, species velocity of the fuel, which is a derived quantity, and the net reaction rate of the fuel. The flame zone, which is customarily inferred from the contours of temperature, CO and OH, is also shown to be predicted well by the contour line corresponding to a Damköhler number equal to unity. The net reaction rate of CH4 and the net rates of two dominant reactions, which consume methane, show clearly the variation in the flame anchoring locations in these three cases. Further, the three-dimensionality of these flames are analysed by plotting the mean temperature contours in yz planes. Finally, the unsteadiness in the separated flame case is analysed.  相似文献   

5.
In this work we use 3D direct numerical simulations (DNS) to investigate the average velocity conditioned on a conserved scalar in a double scalar mixing layer (DSML). The DSML is a canonical multistream flow designed as a model problem for the extensively studied piloted diffusion flames. The conditional mean velocity appears as an unclosed term in advanced Eulerian models of turbulent non-premixed combustion, like the conditional moment closure and transported probability density function (PDF) methods. Here it accounts for inhomogeneous effects that have been found significant in flames with relatively low Damköhler numbers. Today there are only a few simple models available for the conditional mean velocity and these are discussed with reference to the DNS results. We find that both the linear model of Kutznetzov and the Li and Bilger model are unsuitable for multi stream flows, whereas the gradient diffusion model of Pope shows very close agreement with DNS over the whole range of the DSML. The gradient diffusion model relies on a model for the conserved scalar PDF and here we have used a presumed mapping function PDF, that is known to give an excellent representation of the DNS. A new model for the conditional mean velocity is suggested by arguing that the Gaussian reference field represents the velocity field, a statement that is evidenced by a near perfect agreement with DNS. The model still suffers from an inconsistency with the unconditional flux of conserved scalar variance, though, and a strategy for developing fully consistent models is suggested.  相似文献   

6.
In the present work, three-dimensional turbulent non-premixed oblique slot-jet flames impinging at a wall were investigated using direct numerical simulation (DNS). Two cases are considered with the Damköhler number (Da) of case A being twice that of case B. A 17 species and 73-step mechanism for methane combustion was employed in the simulations. It was found that flame extinction in case B is more prominent compared to case A. Reignition in the lower branch of combustion for case A occurs when the scalar dissipation rate relaxes, while no reignition occurs in the lower branch for case B due to excessive scalar dissipation rate. A method was proposed to identify the flame quenching edges of turbulent non-premixed flames in wall-bounded flows based on the intersections of mixture fraction and OH mass fraction iso-surfaces. The flame/wall interactions were examined in terms of the quenching distance and the wall heat flux along the quenching edges. There is essentially no flame/wall interaction in case B due to the extinction caused by excessive turbulent mixing. In contrast, significant interactions between flames and the wall are observed in case A. The quenching distance is found to be negatively correlated with wall heat flux as previously reported in turbulent premixed flames. The influence of chemical reactions and wall on flow topologies was identified. The FS/U and FC/U topologies are found near flame edges, and the NNN/U topology appears when reignition occurs. The vortex-dominant topologies, FC/U and FS/S, play an increasingly important role as the jet turbulence develops.  相似文献   

7.
Two-dimensional large-eddy simulations of bluff-body stabilized flames of methane and propane, exhibiting significant finite-rate chemistry effects, are presented. A partial equilibrium/two-scalar exponential probability density function (PDF) combustion submodel is applied at the subgrid level. Subgrid scale motions are modelled with a first-order closure employing an anisotropic subgrid eddy-viscosity and two equations for the subgrid turbulent kinetic and scalar energies. Statistical independence of the joint PDF scalars is avoided and the necessary moments are obtained from an extended scale-similarity assumption. Extinction is accounted for by comparing the local turbulent Damköhler number against a ‘critical’ local limit related to the Gibson scalar scale and the reaction zone thickness in mixture fraction space. The post-extinction regime is modelled via a Lagrangian transport equation for a reactedness progress variable which follows a linear deterministic relaxation to its mean value (interaction by exchange with the mean model; IEM).Comparisons between simulations and measurements suggested the ability of the adopted methodology to represent the experimental variations in the momentum and scalar fields at conditions close to the lean or the rich blow-out limit. Favourable agreement was achieved in the calculation of the recirculation lengths and the peak temperature and turbulence levels in the near-wake region. Significant experimental trends, such as the suppression of the large-scale organized motions in the developing wake at low and medium fuel injection rates, and the re-emergence of the quasi-periodic shedding activity close to the lean limit, were also reproduced. Quantitative discrepancies increased in the prediction of major species, but the measured trends due to the effects of partial extinction were adequately recovered.  相似文献   

8.

Edges of diffusion flames in a counterflow burner are examined numerically for Lewis greater than unity. When the speed of propagation is plotted against Damköhler for a range of Lewis a fold bifurcation is observed. It is shown that there exist stable positively and negatively propagating edges for some Damköhler and Lewis number pairs. It is further shown that changed local conditions can lead to a transition from positive (advancing into the unburnt gasses) to negative (receding) propagation.  相似文献   

9.
The transient convective burning of n-octane droplets interacting within single-layer arrays in a hot gas flow perpendicular to the layer is studied numerically, with considerations of droplet surface regression, deceleration due to the drag of the droplets, internal liquid motion, variable properties, non-uniform liquid temperature and surface tension. Infinite periodic arrays, semi-infinite periodic arrays with one row of droplets (linear array) or two rows of droplets, and finite arrays with nine droplets with centers in a plane are investigated. All arrays are aligned orthogonal to the free stream direction. This paper compares the behavior of semi-infinite periodic arrays and finite arrays with the behavior of previously studied infinite periodic arrays. Furthermore, it identifies the critical values of the initial Damköhler number for bifurcations in flame behavior at various initial droplet spacing for all these arrays. The initial flame shape is either an envelope flame or a wake flame as determined by the initial Damköhler number, the array configuration and the initial droplet spacing. The critical initial Damköhler number separating initial wake flames from initial envelope flames decreases with increasing interaction amongst droplets at intermediate droplet spacing (when the number of rows in the array increases or the initial droplet spacing decreases for a specific number of rows in the array). In the transient process, an initial wake flame has a tendency to develop from a wake flame to an envelope flame, with the moment of wake-to-envelope transition advanced for the increasing interaction amongst droplets at intermediate droplet spacing. For the array with nine droplets with centers in a plane, the droplets at different types of positions have different critical initial Damköhler number and different wake-to-envelope transition time for initial wake flame.  相似文献   

10.
A computational study was conducted to investigate the characteristics of auto-ignition in a syngas mixture at high-pressure and low-temperature conditions in the presence of thermal inhomogeneities. Highly resolved one-dimensional numerical simulations incorporating detailed chemistry and transport were performed. The temperature inhomogeneities were represented by a global sinusoidal temperature profile and a local Gaussian temperature spike (hot spot). Reaction front speed and front Damköhler number analyses were employed to characterise the propagating ignition front. In the presence of a global temperature gradient, the ignition behaviour shifted from spontaneous propagation (strong) to deflagrative (weak), as the initial mean temperature of the reactant mixture was lowered. A predictive Zel'dovich–Sankaran criterion to determine the transition from strong to weak ignition was validated for different parametric sets. At sufficiently low temperatures, the strong ignition regime was recovered due to faster passive scalar dissipation of the imposed thermal fluctuations relative to the reaction timescale, which was quantified by the mixing Damköhler number. In the presence of local hot spots, only deflagrative fronts were observed. However, the fraction of the reactant mixture consumed by the propagating front was found to increase as the initial mean temperature was lowered, thereby leading to more enhanced compression-heating of the end-gas. Passive scalar mixing was not found to be important for the hot spot cases considered. The parametric study confirmed that the relative magnitude of the Sankaran number translates accurately to the quantitative strength of the deflagration front in the overall ignition advancement.  相似文献   

11.
Low-temperature flames such as cool flames, warm flames, double flames, and auto-ignition assisted flames play a critical role in the performance of advanced engines and fuel design. In this paper, an overview of the recent progresses in understanding low-temperature flames and dynamics as well as their impacts on combustion, advanced engines, and fuel development will be presented. Specifically, at first, a brief review of the history of cool flames is made. Then, the recent experimental studies and computational modeling of the flame structures, dynamics, and burning limits of non-premixed and premixed cool flames, warm flames, and double flames are presented. The flammability limit diagram and the temperature-dependent chain-branching reaction pathways, respectively, for hot, warm, and cool flames at elevated temperature and pressure will be discussed and analyzed. After that, the effect of low temperature auto-ignition of auto-igniting mixtures at high ignition Damköhler numbers at engine conditions on the propagation of cool flames, warm flames, and double flames as well as turbulent flames will be discussed. Finally, a new platform using low temperature flames for the development and validation of chemical kinetic models of alternative fuels will be presented. Discussions of future research of the dynamics and control of low temperature flames under engine conditions will be made.  相似文献   

12.
We have studied flame propagation in a strained mixing layer formed between a fuel stream and an oxidizer stream, which can have different initial temperatures. Allowing the Lewis numbers to deviate from unity, the problem is first formulated within the framework of a thermo-diffusive model and a single irreversible reaction. A compact formulation is then derived in the limit of large activation energy, and solved analytically for high values of the Damköhler number. Simple expressions describing the flame shape and its propagation velocity are obtained. In particular, it is found that the Lewis numbers affect the propagation of the triple flame in a way similar to that obtained in the studies of stretched premixed flames. For example, the flame curvature determined by the transverse enthalpy gradients in the frozen mixing layer leads to flame-front velocities which grow with decreasing values of the Lewis numbers.

The analytical results are complemented by a numerical study which focuses on preferential-diffusion effects on triple flames. The results cover, for different values of the fuel Lewis number, a wide range of values of the Damköhler number leading to propagation speeds which vary from positive values down to large negative values  相似文献   

13.
The effects of body force/external pressure gradient on the statistical behaviours of the reaction progress variable variance and the terms of its transport equation have been investigated for different turbulence intensities using DNS data of statistically planar flames. Since the extent of flame wrinkling increases with the strengthening of body force promoting unstable stratification, the scalar variance has been found to decrease under strong body force promoting stability. This trend is particularly strong for low turbulence intensities where the probability density function of the reaction progress variable cannot be approximated by a bimodal distribution. Therefore, an algebraic relation for the reaction progress variable variance, derived based on a presumed bimodal probability density function of reaction progress variable, cannot be used for general flow conditions. The contributions of chemical reaction and scalar dissipation rates in the scalar variance transport equation remain leading order source and sink, respectively for all cases irrespective of the strength and direction of the body force. The counter-gradient type transport is found to weaken with increasing body force magnitude when the body force is directed from the heavier unburned gas to the lighter burned gas side of the flame brush, and vice versa. Although a scalar dissipation rate-based reaction rate closure can be utilised to model the reaction rate contribution to the scalar variance transport accurately, the dissipation rate contribution due to the gradient of the Favre-averaged reaction progress variable cannot be ignored and it plays a key role for large magnitudes of body force promoting stable stratification. An algebraic closure of the scalar dissipation rate, originally proposed for high Damköhler number combustion, has been modified for the thin reaction zones regime combustion by incorporating the effects of Froude number. This model has been shown to predict the scalar dissipation rate accurately for all cases considered here.  相似文献   

14.
Temporally resolved measurements of transient phenomena in turbulent flames, such as extinction, ignition or flashback, require cinematographic sampling of two-dimensional scalar fields. Hereby, repetition rates must exceed typical flame-inherent frequencies. The high sensitivity planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) has already proved to be a practical method for scalar imaging. The present study demonstrates the feasibility of generating tuneable narrowband radiation in the ultraviolet (UV) spectral range at repetition rates up to 5 kHz. Pulse energies were sufficiently high to electronically excite hydroxyl radicals (OH) produced in a partially-premixed turbulent opposed jet (TOJ) flame. Red-shifted fluorescence was detected two-dimensionally by means of an image-intensified CMOS camera. Sequences comprising up to 4000 frames per run were recorded. Besides statistically stationary conditions, extinction of a turbulent flame due to small Damköhler numbers is presented showing the potential of the technique.  相似文献   

15.
Turbulent flames are intrinsically curved. In the presence of preferential diffusion, curvature effects either enhance or suppress molecular diffusion, depending on the diffusivity of the species and the direction of the flame curvature. When a tabulated chemistry type of modeling is employed, curvature-preferential diffusion interactions have to be taken into consideration in the construction of manifolds. In this study, we employ multistage stage flamelet generated manifolds (MuSt-FGM) method to model autoigniting non-premixed turbulent flames with preferential diffusion effects included. The conditions for the modeled flame are in MILD combustion regime. To model the above-mentioned curvature-preferential diffusion interactions, a new mixture fraction which has a non-unity Lewis number is defined and used as a new control variable in the manifold generation. 1D curved flames are simulated to create the necessary flamelets. The resulting MuSt-FGM tables are used in the simulation of 1D laminar flames, and then also applied to turbulent flames using 2D direct numerical simulations (DNS). It was observed that when the curvature effects are included in the manifold, the MuSt-FGM results agree well with the detailed chemistry results; whereas the results become unsatisfactory when the curvature effects are ignored.  相似文献   

16.
A Large Eddy Simulation (LES) model capable of accurately representing finite-rate chemistry effects in turbulent premixed combustion is presented. The LES computations use finite-rate chemistry and implicit LES combustion modelling to simulate an experimentally well-documented lean-premixed jet flame stabilized by a stoichiometric pilot. The validity of the implicit LES assumption is discussed and criteria are expressed in terms of subgrid scale Damköhler and Karlovitz numbers. Simulation results are compared to experimental data for velocity, temperature and species mass fractions of CH4, CO and OH. The simulation results highlight the validity and capability of the present approach for the flame and in general the combustion regime examined. A sensitivity analysis to the choice of the finite-rate chemistry mechanism is reported, this analysis indicates that the one and two-step global reaction mechanisms evaluated fail to capture the reaction layer with sufficient accuracy, while a 20-species skeletal mechanism reproduces the experimental observations accurately including the key finite-rate chemistry indicators CO and OH. The LES results are shown to be grid insensitive and that the grid resolution within the bounds examined is far less important compared to the sensitivity of the finite-rate chemistry representation. The results are analyzed in terms of the flame dynamics and it is shown that intense small scale mixing (high Karlovitz number) between the pilot and the jet is an important mechanism for the stabilization of the flame.  相似文献   

17.
The statistical behaviour and the modelling of turbulent scalar flux transport have been analysed using a direct numerical simulation (DNS) database of head-on quenching of statistically planar turbulent premixed flames by an isothermal wall. A range of different values of Damköhler, Karlovitz numbers and Lewis numbers has been considered for this analysis. The magnitudes of the turbulent transport and mean velocity gradient terms in the turbulent scalar flux transport equation remain small in comparison to the pressure gradient, molecular dissipation and reaction-velocity fluctuation correlation terms in the turbulent scalar flux transport equation when the flame is away from the wall but the magnitudes of all these terms diminish and assume comparable values during flame quenching before vanishing altogether. It has been found that the existing models for the turbulent transport, pressure gradient, molecular dissipation and reaction-velocity fluctuation correlation terms in the turbulent scalar flux transport equation do not adequately address the respective behaviours extracted from DNS data in the near-wall region during flame quenching. Existing models for transport equation-based closures of turbulent scalar flux have been modified in such a manner that these models provide satisfactory prediction both near to and away from the wall.  相似文献   

18.
An improved version of the Lagrangian multiple mapping conditioning model coupled with large eddy simulation (MMC-LES) is applied to compute the structure of a range of turbulent mixed-mode flames stabilised on the Sydney piloted burner with compositionally inhomogeneous inlet. The calculations are compared with detailed measurements. While premixed MMC-LES models are yet to be developed, the most commonly deployed version and code for MMC-LES uses a mixture-fraction-based approach and a sparse-Lagrangian notional particle method that is most suitable for non-premixed combustion. The improvements reported here are due to (i) a more rigorous density coupling approach, (ii) a more refined mixing time scale, and (iii) selective particle intensification to improve localness in physical space as well as mixture fraction space. This intensification is selectively applied in upstream regions where mixed-mode combustion dominates and is relaxed further downstream as the jet flames transition to a non-premixed flame structure. The computed results show good agreement with experimental data hence confirming the feasibility of the improved MMC-LES approach in being able to account for mixed-mode combustion as well as for finite-rate chemistry effects. These promising results warrant future extension of the selective particle intensification method to become automatically adaptive.  相似文献   

19.
Ammonia appears a promising hydrogen-energy carrier as well as a carbon-free fuel. However, there remain limited studies for ammonia combustion especially under turbulent conditions. To that end, using the spherically expanding flame configuration, the turbulent flame speeds of stoichiometric ammonia/air, ammonia/methane and ammonia/hydrogen were examined. The composition of blends studied are currently being investigated for gas turbine application and are evaluated at various turbulent intensities, covering different kinds of turbulent combustion regimes. Mie-scattering tomography was employed facilitating flame structure analysis. Results show that the flame propagation speed of ammonia/air increases exponentially with increasing hydrogen amount. It is less pronounced with increasing methane addition, analogous to the behavior displayed in the laminar regime. The turbulent to laminar flame speed ratio increases with turbulence intensity. However, smallest gains were observed at highest hydrogen content, presumably due to differences in the combustion regime, with the mixture located within the corrugated flamelet zone, with all other mixtures positioned within the thin reaction zone. A good correlation of the turbulent velocity based on the Karlovitz and Damköhler numbers is observable with the present dataset, as well as previous experimental measurements available in literature, suggesting that ammonia-based fuels may potentially be described following the usual turbulent combustion models. Flame morphology and stretch sensitivity analysis were conducted, revealing that flame curvature remains relatively similar for pure ammonia and ammonia-based mixtures. The wrinkling ratio is found to increase with both increasing ammonia fraction and turbulent intensity, in good agreement with measured increases in turbulent flame speed. On the other hand, in most cases, the flame stretch effect does not change significantly with increasing turbulence, whilst following a similar trend to that of the laminar Markstein length.  相似文献   

20.
The stability mechanism of laminar coflow jet diffusion flames in normal gravity has been studied computationally and experimentally. N-butane, the heaviest alkane in a gaseous state at ambient temperature and pressure, is used as the fuel since the reaction mechanism is similar to that of higher (liquid) hydrocarbons. The critical mean n-butane jet and coflowing air velocities at flame stability limits are measured using a small fuel tube burner (0.8 mm inner diameter). The time-dependent, axisymmetric numerical code with a detailed reaction mechanism (58 species and 540 reactions), molecular diffusive transport, and a radiation model, reveals a flame structure. A fuel-lean peak reactivity spot (i.e., reaction kernel), possessing the hybrid nature of diffusion-premixed flame structure at a constant temperature of ≈1560 K, is formed at the flame base and controls the flame stability. In a near-quiescent environment, the flame base resides below the fuel tube exit plane and thereby premixing is limited. As the coflowing air velocity is increased incrementally under a fixed fuel jet velocity, the flame base moves slightly above (≈1 mm) the burner exit and vigorous premixed combustion becomes prevailing. The local heat-release rate at the reaction kernel nearly doubles due to the increased convective oxygen flux (i.e., a blowing effect). The local Damköhler number, newly defined as a ratio of the square root of the local heat-release rate and the local velocity, decreases gradually first and drops abruptly at a critical threshold value and the flame base lifts off from the burner rim. The calculated coflow air velocity at liftoff is ≈0.38 m/s at the fuel jet velocity of 2 m/s, which is consistent with an extrapolated measured value of 0.41 m/s. This work has determined the critical Damköhler number at the stability limit quantitatively, for the first time, for laminar jet diffusion flames.  相似文献   

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