Title: Tesi
1University of Rome La Sapienza Dept. of
Mechanics and Aeronautics
Analysis of Small Scale Turbulence-Combustion
Interaction for LES Modeling
Valerio Parisi, Claudio Bruno DMA, University
La Sapienza, Rome, ITALY Eugenio Giacomazzi
ENE-IMP, ENEA C. R. Casaccia, Rome, ITALY At
present Graduate Student at Georgia Tech. 43rd
AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibits -
Reno, USA, 10-14 January, 2005 -
2Aims
- Analyze turbulence-chemistry interaction in LES
SGS - Focus on modeling kinetic energy production (or
destruction) by combustion - Propose new SGS model alternative to ?t
- Test new model using numerical simulation of
Sydney University experiments Masri et al., 2002
3Contents
- Conceptual approach
- SGS Fractal Model (FM)
- KE equation and its modeling at the SGS scale
- ROM analysis
- Testing of the KE equation model
- Conclusions
4Conceptual Approach (1/2)
- Develop new LES SGS model not based on ?t
- Test its realism / plausibility
- compare ROM of terms
- simulate U. Sydney burner using this group FM
SGS model (based on ?t) - compare source term in new SGS model with from
simulations - draw conclusions
5Conceptual Approach (2/2)
- SubGrig Scale Model
- energy cascade from ? (macro) to ? (dissipation
scale) modeled by means - of the Fractal Model (FM) Giacomazzi et
al., 2000 - combustion is assumed to take place inside fine
structures - modeled by Eddy Dissipation Concept (EDC)
- Magnussen, Hjertager e Lilleheie, 1989
- fine structures are assumed to behave
- as local tubular PSR (Perfectly Stirred
Reactor) - with characteristic sizes ? and ? (? gtgt?)
PSR
?
surrounding fluid
Reference system centered along the axis
6Simulations based on Fractal Model (FM) SGS
- FM is an algebric subgrid scale eddy viscosity
model - Giacomazzi et al., 2000
- In each computational cell the inertial cascade
is modeled by means of fractal theory - The dissipative scale ? estimated as
- Number of dissipative scales locally produced
- Eddy viscosity (being ?? the molecular viscosity)
length scale velocity scale time scale
? The FM model estimates eddy viscosity by means
of characteristic quantities at the dissipative
scale
7Kinetic Energy Equation (1/3)
Dot product Velocity ? Crocco-Vazsonyi
equation (variable density)
Effect of chemical reactions
Viscous dissipation
? Viscous stress tensor
This equation links the material derivative of
kinetic energy to spatial gradients due to
chemical reactions and viscous dissipation ? may
extract ?(V2/2) / ?t, rate of KE change!
8ROM Analysis (2/3)
- Substitute entropy transport equation inside
KE equation, - obtain the source S ?(V2/2)/?t
?
- Estimate importance of terms nondimensionalize
with reference quantities associated to the
dissipative scale - Characteristic numbers
RED BOX combustion-driven
BLUE BOX viscosity-driven
9Conclusions from Nondimensionalization (3/3)
- Combustion related terms on the RHS of ?(V2/2) /
?t - have the same order of magnitude
- ? subgrid reactor must be non adiabatic,
and -
include diffusive mass transport - are larger than viscous terms
- Any new SGS model must account for chemical heat
release effects on KE
- SGS based on ?t instead
- account only for turbulence fluidynamic
properties - do not include effects of combustion
thermodynamics (dilatation, ...)
Nondimensional analysis shows the importance of
developing new SGS models (not based on eddy
viscosity)
10Kinetic Energy Equation Application to Fine
Scales (1/5)
- LES ? split KE equation into filtered and
subgrid variables
Local quantity
filtered
subgrid (These are not fluctuations)
- Model this source, term by term, to account for
the effects of turbulencechemistry - interaction on resolved scales
- Subgrid (spatial) gradients modeled by means of
FM and EDC
11EDC Modeling the SGS Steady PSR Reactor (2/5)
- chemical reactions
- convection
- diffusion
Ficks law (for the time being)
- Energy transport equation
- chemical reactions
- conduction
- convection
Fouriers law
- Weighed average between reactor and
surrounding fluid 0 quantities
and inside the reactor
Function of known quantities (from cell and FM)
and in the surrounding fluid
12Modeling the Kinetic Energy Equation Assumptions
(3/5)
- Perfectly Stirred Reactor uniform fields inside
- Characteristic velocities
with and -
0 at the center of reactor - Spatial gradients
- The operator has only the radial
component -
- Second derivatives
(negative, dissipate energy) - Neglect kinetic energy contribution to total
enthalpy (Mach ltlt 1) - Entropy
13Modeling Vr (4/5)
- Vr is the instantaneous rate of change of
dissipative scale - reactor volume
- Density change due to combustion
- combustion
?
14Modeled Kinetic Energy Equation (5/5)
SGS Source modeled as
15Testing of Model
Goal validate new source S by numerical
simulations of flame experiments done
at University of Sydney Masri et al.,
2002
16CFD HeaRT Code
- HeaRT Heat Release and Turbulence
- unsteady
- axi-symmetric
- solver
- explicit
- 3rd order accurate in time (Shu-Osher,
Runge-Kutta scheme) - 2nd order accurate in space (centered
differences) - parallelized ( ENEA )
- WS cluster
- FERONIA Alpha cluster (ENEA)
- 40 nodes
- each node has 2 CPUs with 1GB RAM and 4 MB Cache
17Checking the Source Term S (1/10)- Test case
Sydney University Burner Masri et al., 2002 -
- Non-premixed coaxial burner at p1atm
Computational domain 3 ZONES
Experiment
- Burner
- length 40cm
- radius 7.5cm
- Axial Pipe
- length 5cm
- radius 0.18cm
- Coaxial Pipe
- length 5cm
- radius 7.5cm
- Number of nodes
- 1,405,312
- Axial Jet CH4/H2
- Uz 118 m/s
- T 300 K
- Re 13500
- Coaxial Jet Aria
- Uz 40 m/s
- T 300 K
0
182D Nonreactive Test Case (2/10)
- Choose Axisymmetric 2D domain for
- simplicity
- lower computational cost
- Nonreactive flow Air only
- ? source term contains only viscous terms
Recirculation zone
? S is always negative (kinetic energy is
always dissipated)
Undisturbed Flow
Axial jet
(Instantaneous Flowfield)
19Compare New S and ?t (3/10)
- E.g. Radial profile at z10-4m
- ? S and ?t have opposite trend but same physical
meaning for xlt0.025m - Close to the walls (xgt0.025m)
- ? ReD increases (grid stretching)
- ? ?t increases (?ReD)
- ? viscous dissipation decreases
- ? magnitude of S decreases
- Axial profile at x5?10-4m
- ? opposite trend, same physical meaning
- minima and maxima due to eddies in
- recirculation zone (zlt0.15m)
- ? large dissipation linked to
- axial jet
- high speed
- high velocity gradients
203D Reactive Test Case
4/10
213D Reactive Case Source Distribution (5/10)
- Source term S
- ? may be positive and negative ? combustion can
produce kinetic energy (backscatter) - S field different than in the cold case S
depends on combustion
Reactive zone
Production of kinetic energy by combustion
Non reactive zone
Viscous Dissipation of kinetic energy
Viscous Dissipation of kinetic energy
(Field snapshot)
22Comparison Between Temperature and S Fields (6/10)
- S depends mostly on chemical reactions ? depends
on T - ? S and T have similar fields!
(Field snapshot 1)
23Comparison Between Temperature and S Fields (7/10)
- ? Combustion takes place
- within shear layers
- between eddies
- (where molecular
- mixing is faster)
- ? High subgrid kinetic energy
- production in shear layers
(Field snapshot 2)
24Instantaneous Expansion of Dissipative Scale
(8/10)
- Vr depends on chemical reactions
- depends on T
- ? Vr gt0 for exothermic reactions
- ? Vr lt0 for endothermic reactions
? Vr is very small with respect to but
dilatation is high!
25Analysis of Terms Involved in Kinetic Energy
Source (9/10)
Look at radial profiles of ,
and viscous dissipation terms at z10-4m
Viscous Terms
m2/s3
? always negligible
? S depends mainly on
- where there are chemical reactions
- viscous dissipation linked to
- in the axial jet
- high speed
- high speed gradients
- where there is no combustion
- and turbulence is less intense
26Compare New S and ?t (10/10)
Look at Profiles of S and along z at
x5?10-4m
- zgt0.16m
- ? no combustion
- ? S viscous terms only
- S order of magnitude lower than in the reactive
zone and in the axial jet - z0.12m
- ?
- ?
- model turns itself off
- automatically
- depends on T
- but not directly on chemistry
- ? S and not correlated
27Conclusions (1/2)
- Kinetic energy source S obtained via
Crocco-Vazsonyi equation correctly describes
physics of interaction between turbulence and
chemical reactions - In the nonreactive case S modeling obeys
expected physics, agrees with - Comparison with shows eddy viscosity
models do not account directly for effects of
combustion - In the reactive case
- S and not correlated they describe
different phenomena - S takes into account kinetic energy production
due to combustion, not considered by
The present no eddy viscosity type SGS model
based on S has been proposed to close LES
equations
28SGS Model Based on Kinetic Energy Source S (2/2)
- Advantages
- describes effects of combustion on
fluid-dynamics - does away with eddy viscosity , an
unphysical quantity - more realistic physical modeling of small scales
- Disadvantages
- computational cost
- S must be included in Navier-Stokes equations ex
novo - (not a simple change)
- ROM of S ? numerical instabilities?
- ? Keep testing!