Title: Turbulent combustion Lecture 3
1Turbulent combustion (Lecture 3)
- Motivation (Lecture 1)
- Basics of turbulence (Lecture 1)
- Premixed-gas flames
- Turbulent burning velocity (Lecture 1)
- Regimes of turbulent combustion (Lecture 1)
- Flamelet models (Lecture 1)
- Non-flamelet models (Lecture 1)
- Flame quenching via turbulence (Lecture 1)
- Case study I Liquid flames (Lecture 2)
- (turbulence without thermal expansion)
- Case study II Flames in Hele-Shaw cells
(Lecture 2) - (thermal expansion without turbulence)
- Nonpremixed gas flames (Lecture 3)
- Edge flames (Lecture 3)
2Non-premixed flames
- Nonpremixed no inherent propagation rate (unlike
premixed flames where propagation rate SL) - No inherent thickness ? (unlike premixed flames
where thickness ?/SL) - in nonpremixed flames,
determined by equating convection time scale
?/U ?-1 to diffusion time scale ?2/? ? ?
(?/?)1/2 - Have to mix first then burn
- Burning must occur near stoichiometric contour
where reactant fluxes are in stoichiometric
proportions (otherwise surplus of one reactant) - Burning must occur near highest T since ?
exp(-E/RT) is very sensitive to temperature (like
premixed flames) - Simplest approach mixed is burned - chemical
reaction rates faster than mixing rates
3(No Transcript)
4Nonpremixed turbulent jet flames
- Laminar Lf Uodo2/D
- Turbulent (Hottel and Hawthorne, 1949)
- D uLI u Uo LI do ? Lf do
(independent of Re) - High Uo ? high u ? Da small - flame lifts off
near base (why base first?) - Still higher Uo - more of flame lifted
- When lift-off height flame height, flame blows
off (completely extinguished)
5Scaling of turbulent jets
- Determine scaling of mean velocity ( ), jet
width (rjet) and mass flux through jet ( ) with
distance from jet exit (x) - Assume u(x) , LI(x) rjet(x)
- Note that mass flux is not constant due to
entrainment! - Conservation of momentum flux (Q)
- Kinetic energy flux (K) (not conserved -
dissipated!) - KE dissipation
-
6Scaling of turbulent jets
Uo
12
x
rjet(x)
do
entrainment
7Scaling of turbulent jets
8Liftoff of turbulent jets
- Scaling suggests mean strain Redo3/2?/x2
- For fixed fuel ambient atmosphere (e.g. air),
strain rate at flamelet extinction (?ext)
constant - Liftoff height (xLO) (?/?ext)1/2 Redo3/4
uo3/4do3/4 - Experiments - closer to xLO uo1do0
- Alternative view
- Premixing at flame base causes flame to stabilize
at point where ST (premixed, stoichiometric)
mean velocity - more consistent
9EDGE FLAMES - motivation
- Reference Buckmaster, J., Edge flames, Prog.
Energy Combust. Sci. 28, 435-475 (2002) - Laminar flamelet model used to describe local
interaction of premixed nonpremixed flames with
turbulent flow - Various regions of turbulent flow will be
above/below critical extinction strain (?ext) - Issues
- Can flame holes or edges persist?
- Will extinguishment in high-? region spread to
other regions? - Will burning region re-ignite extinguished
region? - Will ? at edge locate (?edge) be at higher or
lower strain than extinction strain for uniform
flame (?ext)? - How is edge propagation rate affected by ??
- Lewis number effects?
10Edge flames
- Flame propagates from a burning region to a
non-burning region, or retreats into the burning
region - Could be premixed or non-premixed
? FLOW ?
Non-premixed edge-flame in a counterflow
Kim et al., 2006
11Edge flames - nonpremixed - theory
- Daou and Linan, 1998
- Configuration as in previous slide
- No thermal expansion
- Non-dimensional stretch rate ? (??/SL2)1/2 or
Damköhler number SL2/?? ?-2 - SL steady unstretched SL of stoichiometric
mixture of fuel air streams - Effects of stretch
- Low ? flame advances, triple flame structure
- lean premixed, rich premixed trailing
non-premixed flame branches - Intermediate ? flame advances, but premixed
branches weaker - High ? flame retreats, only nonpremixed branch
survives - Note that stretch rate corresponding to zero edge
speed is always less than the extinction stretch
rate for the uniform (edgeless, infinite) flame
sheet - edge flames always weaker than uniform
flames - retreat in the presence of less strain
than required to extinguish uniform flame - Le effects as expected - lower Le yields higher
edge speeds, broader extinction limits
12Edge flames - nonpremixed - theory
13Edge flames - nonpremixed - theory
- Daou and Linan, 1998 (lF ?(LeFuel - 1))
14Edge flames - nonpremixed - theory
- Thermal expansion effect (Ruetsch et al., 1995)
U/SL (?8/?f)1/2 with proportionality constant
shown
(?8/?f)1/2
15Edge flames - nonpremixed - with heat loss
- Daou et al., 2002
- ? dimensionless heat loss 7.5?/Pe2 Pe ?
SLd/? (see Cha Ronney, 2006) - With heat loss trailing non-premixed branch
disappears at low ? - nonpremixed flame
extinguishes because mixing layer thickness
(?/?)1/2 (thus volume, thus heat loss) increases
while burning rate decreases
16Edge flames - premixed - theory
- Daou and Linan, 1999 - similar response of Uedge
to stretch as nonpremixed flames - also note
spots
17Experiments - nonpremixed edge-flames
- Cha Ronney (2006)
- Use parallel slots, not misaligned slots
- Use jet of N2 to erase flame, then remove jet
to watch advancing edge, or establish flame, then
zap with N2 jet to obtain retreating flame
18Edge flames - nonpremixed - experiment
Propagating
Retreating
Tailless
19Edge flames - nonpremixed - experiment
- Behavior very similar to model predictions with
heat loss - negative at low or high ?, positive
at intermediate ? with Uedge/SL 0.7(?8/?f)1/2
(prediction 1.8) - Propagation rates same for different gaps when
scaled by strain rate ? except at low ? (thus low
Vjet) where smaller gap ? more heat loss (higher
?)
20Edge flames - nonpremixed - experiment
- Dimensional Uedge vs. stretch (?) can be mapped
into scaled Uedge vs. scaled stretch rate (?) for
varying mixtures - Little effect of mixture strength when results
scaled by ?, except at low ?, where weaker
mixture ? lower SL ? higher ? - Dimensional Dimensionless
21Edge flames - nonpremixed - experiment
- High stretch (?) or heat loss (?) causes
extinction - experiments surprising consistent
with experiments, even quantitatively - Very difficult to see tailless flames in
experiments - Model assumes volumetric heat loss (e.g.
radiation) - mixing layer thickness can increase
indefinitely, get weak non-premixed branch that
can extinguish when premixed branches do not - Experiment - heat loss mainly due to conduction
to jet exits, mixing layer thickness limited by
jet spacing - Experiment (Cha Ronney, 2006)
Prediction (Daou et al., 2002)
22Edge flames - nonpremixed - experiment
- Lewis number effects VERY pronounced - at low Le,
MUCH higher Uedge than mixture with same SL (thus
?) with Le 1 - Opposite trend for Le gt 1
- Low Le (CH4-O2-CO2) High Le (C3H8-O2-N2)
- (Lefuel 0.74 LeO2 0.86) (Lefuel 1.86
LeO2 1.05)
23Edge flames - nonpremixed - experiment
- Zst stoichiometric mixture fraction
fraction of fuel inert in a stoichiometric
mixture of (fuelinert) (O2inert) (1 gt Zst gt
0) - High Zst flame sits near fuel side low Zst
flame sits near O2 side - but results not at all symmetric with respect to
Zst 0.5! - Due to shift in O2 concentration profile as Zst
increases to coincide more closely with location
of peak T, increases radical production (Chen
Axelbaum, 2005) (not symmetrical because most
radicals on fuel side, not O2 side)
24Edge flames - nonpremixed - experiment
- Heat loss limit (low ?, thus low strain) -
relationship between ? and ? independent of
mixture strength, gap, Le, Zst, etc. - Recall high ? (high strain) limit depends
strongly on Le but almost independent of ? (page
21) - Suggests relatively simple picture of
non-premixed edge flames
25Edge flames in low Le mixtures
- Diffusive-thermal instability for Lewis number ltgt
1 - High Le - imaginary growth rates - pulsating,
travelling waves - Low Le - real growth rates with maximum value at
finite wave number - cellular flames - Low-Le instability well known for premixed flames
- Encouraged by heat losses (Joulin Clavin,
1979), but near extinction conditions (high ? or
low Da) not required - Discouraged by stretch (Sivashinsky et al., 1981)
- Computations (Buckmaster Short 1999 Daou
Liñán 1999) (premixed) - Le ltlt 1 Instabilities not suppressed (or
reappear) at high ? - Sequence of behavior as ? increased wrinkled
continuous flames, travelling flame tubes,
isolated tubes - Analogous to flame balls - curvature/stretch
induced enhancement of flame temperature at low
Le - Similar for nonpremixed flames (Thatcher Dold,
2000)
26Edge flames in low Lewis number mixtures
- Computations by Buckmaster Short (1999)
Stationary single tube
27Edge flames with low Lewis number
- Kaiser et al., 2000
- Twin premixed, single premixed, nonpremixed
- H2-N2 vs. O2-N2
28Edge flames with low Lewis number
29Results - twin premixed - high Da
- Nearly flat (low ?) or moderately wrinkled
(higher ?) flames
- Moderately wrinkled flame
- 8.10H2, ? 120 s-1 (high Da, high ?)
- Nearly flat flame 8.77H2
- ? 45 s-1 (high Da, low ?)
30Results - twin premixed - lower Da
- Moving tubes emanating from center
- Still lower Da - stationary multiple tubes
- Stationary multiple tubes
- 6.96H2, ? 60 s-1
31Schematic of tube formation
32Results - twin premixed - very near limit
- Very low Da - stationary single or twin tubes
- High s - near wall - lower ? - slightly farther
from limit - Low s - near center - higher ? - slightly farther
from limit
Stationary twin tube near center (low ?)
(6.68H2, ? 60 s-1)
Stationary single tube near center (low ?)
(6.64H2, ? 60 s-1)
- Stationary single tube near wall (high ?)
(6.11H2, ? 100 s-1)
33Results - twin premixed - orthogonal view
- Verifies tube-like character of flames
- Upward curvature due to buoyancy much weaker than
flame tube curvature
Single tube standard view (6.64H2, ? 60 s-1)
- Single tube orthogonal view
- (6.50H2, ? 100 s-1)
34Results - twin premixed - turbulence
- High s - sudden transition to turbulent flow
- Occurs for all flame structures
- Rejet Vw/n 600 (w jet width), ? 140 s-1
- Re at transition independent of gap (d)
- Similar results found for inert counterflowing
jets - Slightly lower Re for single premixed
nonpremixed ( 500) - Prevents examination of lower Da via higher ?
6.9H2, ? 158 s-1
35Results - single premixed, decreasing H2
36Results - single premixed
- High Da - attached flames (low ?) or partially
attached V-flames (lower ?) - Apparent lower second flame due to shear layer
between hot burned gas cold unburned stream -
not a flame - same with air or N2
Attached flame (high Da, low ?)
Partially attached V-flame (high Da, high ?)
37Results - single premixed
- Lower Da - bridging tubes
- Still lower Da - moving tubes
38Results - single premixed
- Very low Da - flat single flames (!) attached to
nozzle exit - Considerable hysteresis - behavior different for
increasing vs. decreasing fuel conc.
- Transition from moving tubes to flat flame -
standard view
Flat flame(s) - orthogonal view
39Results - non-premixed
40Results - non-premixed
- Flat flames at high Da - Burke-Schumann
(infinite-rate chemistry, mixing limited)
solution unconditionally stable - but why is there an apparent second flame???
Orthogonal view
41Results - non-premixed
- Moving tubes at lower Da - similar to premixed
flames - How can non-premixed flames exhibit premixed
flame instabilities? Near extinction, fuel or O2
leaksthrough flame front, causing partial
premixing of fuel and O2, creating
quasi-premixed-flame behavior
Orthogonal view
42Results - non-premixed
- Stationary multiple or single tubes at still
lower Da
3 tubes
1 tube
43References
- Buckmaster, J. D., Combust. Sci. Tech. 115, 41
(1996). - Buckmaster, J., Edge flames, Prog. Energy
Combust. Sci. 28, 435-475 (2002). - Buckmaster, J. D. and Short, M. (1999). Cellular
instabilities, sub-limit structures and
edge-flames in premixed counterflows. Combust.
Theory Modelling 3, 199-214. - M. S. Cha and S. H. Chung (1996).
Characteristics of lifted flames in nonpremixed
turbulent confined jets. Proc. Combust. Inst.
26, 121128 - M. S. Cha and P. D. Ronney, Propagation rates of
non-premixed edge-flames, Combustion and Flame,
Vol. 146, pp. 312 - 328 (2006). - R. Chen, R. L. Axelbaum, Combust. Flame 142
(2005) 6271. - R. Daou, J. Daou, J. Dold (2002). Effect of
volumetric heat-loss on triple flame propagation
Proc. Combust. Inst., Vol. 29, pp. 1559 - 1564. - J. Daou, A Liñán (1998). The role of unequal
diffusivities in ignition and extinction fronts
in strained mixing layers, Combust. Theory
Modelling 2, 449477 - J. Daou and A. Liñán (1999). Ignition and
extinction fronts in counterflowing premixed
reactive gases, Combust. Flame. 118, 479-488. - Hottel, H. C., Hawthorne, W. R., Third Symposium
(International) on Combustion, Combustion
Institute, Pittsburgh, Williams and Wilkins,
Baltimore, 1949, pp. 254-266. - Joulin, G. and Clavin, P. (1979). Linear
stability analysis of nonadiabatic flames
diffusional-thermal model. Combust. Flame 35,
139. - Kaiser, C., Liu, J.-B. and Ronney, P. D.,
Diffusive-thermal Instability of Counterflow
Flames at Low Lewis Number, Paper No. 2000-0576,
38th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV,
January 11-14, 2000. - N. I. Kim, J. I. Seo, Y. T. Guahk and H. D. Shin
(2006). The propagation of tribrachial flames
in a confined channel, Combustion and Flame,
Vol. 146, pp. 168 - 179.
44References
- Liu, J.-B. and Ronney, P. D., Premixed
Edge-Flames in Spatially Varying Straining
Flows, Combustion Science and Technology, Vol.
144, pp. 21-46 (1999). - Ruetsch, G. R., Vervisch, L. and Linan, A.
(1995). Effects of heat release on triple flames.
Physics of Fluids 7, 1447. - Shay, M. L. and Ronney, P. D., "Nonpremixed
Flames in Spatially-Varying Straining Flows,"
Combustion and Flame, Vol. 112, pp. 171-180
(1998). - Sivashinsky, G. I., Law, C. K. and Joulin, G.
(1982). On stability of premixed flames in
stagnation-point flow. Combustion Science and
Technology 28, 155-159. - R. W. Thatcher and J. W. Dold (2000). Edges of
flames that do not exist flame-edge dynamics in
a non-premixed counterflow. Combust. Theory
Modelling 4, 435-457. - Vedarajan, T. G., Buckmaster, J. D. and Ronney,
P. D., Two-dimensional Failure Waves and
Ignition Fronts in Premixed Combustion,
Twenty-Seventh International Symposium on
Combustion, Combustion Institute, Pittsburgh,
1998, pp. 537-544.