Title: Jacqueline Chen, Ed Richardson, Ray Grout, Tianfeng Lu,
1Reactive Scalar Mixing and Turbulence-Chemistry
Interactions in Turbulent Combustion
- Jacqueline Chen, Ed Richardson, Ray Grout,
Tianfeng Lu, - Chung K. Law, and Chun Sang Yoo
- Combustion Research Facility
- Sandia National Laboratories
- Livermore, CA
- jhchen_at_sandia.gov
- Symposium on Turbulence and Combustion
- August 3-4, 2009
- Cornell University
- Ithaca, New York
- Supported by the Division of Chemical Sciences,
Geosciences, and Biosciences, Office of Basic
Energy Sciences and the Office of Advanced
Scientific Computing Research of DOE
2Changing World of Fuels and Engines
- Fuel streams are rapidly evolving towards
renewable sources - Ethanol
- Biodiesel
- New engine technologies
- Direct Injection (DI)?
- Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI)?
- Low-temperature combustion
- High efficiency and low emissions requires mixed
combustion modes (dilute, high-pressure,
low-temp.)? - Sound scientific understanding is necessary to
develop predictive, validated multi-scale models!
3 Multi-scale Modeling of IC engine processes
- Multi-scale modeling describes IC engine
processes, from quantum scales up to
device-level, continuum scales - Multi-scale Strategy
- Use petascale computing power to peform direct
simulation at the atomistic and fine-continuum
scales (4 decades), and develop new
parameterizations that will enable bootstrapping
information upscale
4Petascale High Performance Computing
- Petascale computing for scientific discovery
- DOE INCITE Awards and NSF grants large computing
allocations
Cray XT5, ORNL 1.6 Pflop 2009
5Direct Numerical Simulation Code S3D
- Used to perform first-principles-based DNS of
reacting flows - Solves compressible reacting Navier-Stokes
equations - High-fidelity numerical methods
- Detailed reaction kinetics andmolecular
transport models - Multi-physics (sprays, radiation and soot) from
SciDAC-TSTC - Ported to all major platforms, scales well
- Particle tracking cabability
DNS provides unique fundamental insight into the
chemistry-turbulence interaction
Engineering CFD codes (RANS, LES)?
Physical models
DNS
6A Systematic Procedure for Dimension Reduction
Stiffness Removal
Skeletal mechanisms C2H4 30
species nC7H16 100 species
Detailed mechanisms C2H4 70 species nC7H16
500 species
Dimension Reduction With DRG
Time Scale Reduction With QSSA
Reduced mechanisms C2H4 20 species nC7H16 60
species
Minimal diffusive species C2H4 9
groups nC7H16 20 groups
Diffusive Species Bundling
On-the-flyStiffness Removal
Non-stiff reduced mechanisms C2H4 20
species nC7H16 60 species
Sponsored by DOD AFOSR
7Simulation Benchmark Data for Model Development
and Validation
8Role of DNS 2 Case Studies
- Stabilization of a Lifted Ethylene-Air Jet Flame
in Heated Coflow - Reactive Scalar Mixing in Premixed Methane/Air
Flames under Intense Turbulence
9Stabilization of Lifted Ethylene/Air Turbulent
Jet Flames in Heated Coflow
- Chun Sang Yoo and Jacqueline Chen
- Sandia National Laboratories
- Tianfeng Lu
- University of Connecticut
- Chung Law
- Princeton University
10Motivating Example Diesel Lift-off Stabilization
What is the role of ignition in lifted flame
stabilization?
Chemiluminescence from diesel lift-off
stabilization for 2 diesel, ambient 21 O2,
850K, 35 bar L. Pickett and S. Kook, 2008.
Lift-off distance (mm)
Time (ms)
11DNS of Lifted Ethylene-air Jet Flame in a Heated
Coflow
Ethylene-air lifted jet flame at Re10000
- 3D slot burner configuration
- Lx ? Ly ? Lz 30 ? 40 ? 6 mm3 with
- 1.28 billion grid points
- High fuel jet velocity (204m/s)
- coflow velocity (20m/s)
- Slot width, H 2.0mm
- Rejet 10,000 ?j 0.15ms
- 6 flow through times
- Cold fuel jet (18 C2H4/ 82 N2) at 550K,
- ?st 0.27
- Reduced C2H4/air chemistry (Lu and Law)
- 22 species 18 global reactions, 206 steps
- Hot coflow air at 1,550K
- Performed on CrayXT4 at ORNL on 30,000 cores and
7.5 million cpu-hrs - 240 TB field data, 50TB particle data
OH
HO2
12Favre Mean and Instantaneous Temperature and
Species Mass Fractions
CH2O
HO2
T
OH
13Temporal Evolution of Stabilization Point (left
branch)
0.33 ?j
0.77 ?j
Temporal evolution of OH mass fraction isocontour
5e-4 (5 of mean max) at t/?j 0.227 1.160
14Tracking of Stabilization Point
0.33
0.77
x
-u.n
15Conceptual Stabilization Mechanism
Su Mungal
Temporal evolution of OH mass fraction isocontour
at t/?j 0.227 1.160
1/ Ignition occurs in lean mixtures with low ? 2/
No self-propagation upstream with mixing
structure 3/ Local extinction occurs by high ? or
flame shortening occurs as the point is
convected downstream 4/ Ignition occurs in
another coherent jet structure
Convective velocity greater than displacement
speed for ?st 0.27
16Correlation with Large-Eddy Structure
Power spectrum of the stabilization point
fluctuations and the correlation function Ru
oscillations between axial velocity fluctuations
over a transverse separation of 2d1/2 at mean
stabilization height of 6H.
- Strouhal number shows 3 dominant correlation
function frequencies in the near - field of planar jet (Thomas and Goldschmidt 1986)
- From the dominant frequencies of the spectra the
fluctuations of the stabilization point - appear to be correlated with the passage of
large-scale flow structures
17Chemical Explosive Mode and Damköhler Number
Da l/
18Conclusions
- Lifted ethylene/air jet flame in heated coflow is
stabilized by autoignition upstream of the high
temperature flame - Chemical observables include high levels of HO2,
and low levels of CH3 and CH2O. - Autoignition occurs at a preferred mixture
fraction (fuel-lean) and at low scalar
dissipation rate. - Dynamics of stabilization are determined by
competition between upstream autoignition and
convective motion of the jet. Ignition is
characterized by high front speeds (gt 100 m/s)
and relaxation on longer diffusive timescales to
laminar propagation speeds (lt 10 m/s). - Chemical explosive mode analysis (CEMA) useful to
pinpoint stabilization point and rich and lean
premixed branches. CEMA confirms occurrence of
autoignition upstream and on the rich side. Key
species and reactions were identified. - Correlation between large-scale jet mixing
structure and fluctuations in the lift-off
height.
19Reactive Species Mixing Rates in Turbulent
Premixed Methane-Air Combustion
- E.S. Richardson, R.W. Grout and J.H. Chen
- Combustion Research Facility
- Sandia National Labs
- R. Sankaran (31D4)
- NCCS, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
20Introduction
- Industrial need for turbulent reacting flow
models capable of accurately predicting
combustion performance and pollutant emission. - Suitable combustion models typically require
turbulent mixing timescales/dissipation rates as
inputs. - Common practice to use
- Algebraic/transport models for the premixed flame
progress variable dissipation rate have been
studied/developed using simple chemistry DNS. - Analysis of reactive species mixing rates of in
3D premixed flame simulations with realistic
transport and chemistry.
21Dissipation rate equation (almost ) exact
Convection Diffusion
Dissipation
Turbulent transport Gradient source
Dilatation
Turbulence-chemistry interaction (T32)
Reaction
22Turbulent Premixed Slot Bunsen Flame
Time integration 4th order R-K
Finite difference 8th order
Grid spacing 20µm
Time step 2ns
Case A Case C
Slot width H1.2mm H1.8mm
Jet velocity uj60ms-1 Uj100ms-1
Coflow velocity 15ms-1 25ms-1
Domain size 12Hx12Hx3H 13Hx12hx3H
- Constant Lewis number transport.
- 13 Species, non-stiff CH4-air reaction mechanism.
- Averages formed by integrating over the spanwise
direction and time.
SL 1.8ms-1
dL 0.3mm
tf 0.17ms
R. Sankaran et al. 31D4. R. Sankaran et al. Proc.
C.I. 2007
23Flame characteristics
Comparison of tt-1 and tc-1
Case A Case C
Ka(a/SL?k)2 2.3 5.2
Da(SLlt/dLu) 0.23 0.15
attf, x/Lx0.25 2.0 4.75
attf, x/Lx0.50 1.5 3.0
attf, x/Lx0.75 1.25 2.25
- Wrinkled/thickened flamelet regimes.
- Flame-flame interaction/pinch-off.
- tc-1 1/2Cf tt-1
24Species timescale ratios ti-1/tO2-1 (case C)
x/Lx0.50
x/Lx0.25
- Lewis number
- effects?
- Damhöhler number effects?
Species LeO2/Lei
CO 1.01
OH 1.54
H2 3.72
H 6.35
x/Lx0.50
x/Lx0.75
25ei transport equation case C
26Model development
- Algebraic and transport models for ec exist which
account for dilatation and propagation effects
seen here focus on flamelet based models for
intermediate species dissipation rates - Develop model for tc/ti
- c and Y are available in the PDF method.
- Take conditional dissipation rate from laminar
flame solutions at attf0.05, 1.5, 3.0.
- Improved estimate for ti
- Implicitly includes dilatation and propagation
effects acting on the progress variable.
Denotes estimates based on laminar flame
structure.
27Flame normal species gradients, x/Lx0.5
28Ratios of species gradients, x/Lx0.5
OHO2
COO2
H2O2
HO2
29Scalar alignment characteristics
Case A Case C
- Alignment is weak in the thickened preheat
zone. - Largest gradients of the intermediate species are
aligned with progress variable - 1D approximation reasonable.
30Model predictions with low-strain flame solution
C
x/Lx0.25
x/Lx0.50
- attf0.05.
- Correct shape.
- Laminar strain rate can be adjusted to give
quantitatively correct predictions
x/Lx0.50 case A
x/Lx0.75
Symbols DNS No Symbols model
31Conclusions
- Confirmed roles of propagation and dilatation in
thin/thickened flame mixing. - Intermediate species gradients set by
chemistry/dissipation balance. - Species time scale ratios explained and modelled
by laminar flamelet structure. - Need to develop mixing models which correctly
reflect the differing mixing rates in flame
structures.