Analysis of the flame dynamics in methane/hydrogen fuel blends at elevated pressures |
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Affiliation: | 1. SKLTCS, CAPT, BIC-ESAT, College of Engineering, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China;3. School of Engineering, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland EH8 3JL, UK;1. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Av. de la Universidad 30, Leganés 28911, Madrid, Spain;2. Institut Pprime, UPR 3346 CNRS, ISAE–ENSMA, BP 40109, Futuroscope-Chasseneuil Cedex 86961, France;3. ETSIAE, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Madrid 28040, Spain |
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Abstract: | We investigate the Flame Transfer Function (FTF) of a lean-premixed, laminar slit flame numerically. Based on the reference case at atmospheric pressure, we investigate four different scenarios: (i) varying the hydrogen content in the fuel at constant equivalence ratio (ER) (resulting in an increase of the laminar flame speed); (ii) varying the hydrogen content in the fuel at varying ER (resulting in a constant laminar flame speed); (iii) varying the operating pressures from 1 to 5 bar (resulting in a decrease of the laminar flame speed); and (iv) combining a hydrogen-enriched flame at an elevated pressure of 3 bar (resulting in the same flame speed as the reference case). We identify in this case that the laminar flame speed and the flame thickness impact the FTF independently. We show that the low-pass behavior of the flame is shifted towards higher frequencies when the operating pressure increases, and demonstrate that wrinkles along the flame front preserve in contrast to the atmospheric operating pressure configurations. These results are in line with past studies, that relate the dampening of flame front wrinkling to a decreasing Markstein length. We therefore conclude that a decreasing flame thickness, due to increasing operating pressure, causes a decreasing Markstein length and therefore less pronounced dampening of flame front wrinkles. |
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