Diffusive-thermal instabilities of diffusion flames: onset of cells and oscillations |
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Authors: | Philippe Metzener Moshe Matalon |
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Affiliation: | 1. Département de Mathématique, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne , 1015, Lausanne, Switzerland;2. McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science , Northwestern University , Evanston, Illinois, 60208-3122, USA |
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Abstract: | A comprehensive stability analysis of planar diffusion flames is presented within the context of a constant-density model. The analysis provides a complete characterization of the possible patterns that are likely to be observed as a result of differential and preferential diffusion when a planar flame becomes unstable. A whole range of physical parameters is considered, including the Lewis numbers associated with the fuel and the oxidizer, the initial mixture fraction, and the flow conditions. The two main forms of instability are cellular flames, obtained primarily in fuel-lean systems when the Lewis numbers are generally less than one, and planar pulsations, obtained in fuel-rich systems when the Lewis numbers are generally larger than one. The cellular instability is predominantly characterized by stationary cells of characteristic dimension comparable to the diffusion length, but smaller cells that scale on the reaction zone thickness are also possible near extinction conditions. The pulsating instability is characterized by planar oscillations normal to the flame sheet with a well-defined frequency comparable to the reciprocal of the diffusion time; high-frequency modes are also possible just prior to extinction. The analysis also alludes to other possible patterns, such as oscillating cellular structures, which result from competing modes of instability of comparable and/or disparate scales. The expected pattern depends of course on the underlying physical parameters. Consequently, stability boundaries have been identified for the onset of one or another form of the instability. The conditions for the onset of cellular and pulsating flames, as well as the predicted cell size and the frequency of oscillations, compare well with the experimental record. |
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Keywords: | Diffusion flames Diffusive-thermal instabilities Cellular flames Flame oscillation Planar unstrained diffusion flame |
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