4.7 Article

Transfer function characteristics of bluff-body stabilized, conical V-shaped premixed turbulent propane-air flames

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 145, Issue 1-2, Pages 290-299

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2005.10.013

Keywords

combustion dynamics; transfer function; premixed flames; turbulence; bluff-body

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The response of bluff-body stabilized conical V-shaped premixed flames to periodic upstream velocity oscillations was characterized as a function of oscillation frequency, mean flow velocity, and equivalence ratio. The flame heat release response to the imposed velocity oscillations was determined from the CH* chemiluminescence captured by two photomultiplier (PMT) detectors at a wavelength of 430 rim. One of the PMTs viewed flame radiation in a 10-mm horizontal slice, 50 man above the bluff-body. The second PMT observed the overall flame radiation. The flame transfer function characteristics were deter-mined from the spectral analysis of the velocity and PMT signals. It was found that the flame heat release amplitude response is confined to low-frequency excitation below a Strouhal number of 4. The phase relationship of the transfer function for these turbulent flames was evaluated using the signal from the spatially masked PMT. The transfer function estimate based on these data exhibits second-order characteristics with a phase lag between the velocity and heat release signals. The localized heat-release response contains frequencies that are multiples of the excitation frequency, suggesting splitting and tilting of flame structures as well as some nonlinear effects. Increase of flame equivalence ratio from lean toward stoichiometric resulted in slight amplification of the high-frequency response. (c) 2005 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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