4.7 Article

The interaction of high-speed turbulence with flames: Turbulent flame speed

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 158, Issue 2, Pages 301-326

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2010.09.002

Keywords

Turbulent premixed combustion; Turbulence; Flamelet; Turbulent flame speed; Hydrogen-air combustion

Funding

  1. Naval Research Laboratory, the Office of Naval Research, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research [F1ATA09114G005]
  2. National Science Foundation [TG-AST080006N]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Direct numerical simulations of the interaction of a premixed flame with driven, subsonic, homogeneous, isotropic, Kolmogorov-type turbulence in an unconfined system are used to study the mechanisms determining the turbulent flame speed. S-T, in the thin reaction zone regime. High intensity turbulence is considered with the r.m.s. velocity 35 times the laminar flame speed, S-L, resulting in the Damkohler number Da = 0.05. The simulations were performed with Athena-RFX, a massively parallel, fully compressible, high-order, dimensionally unsplit, reactive-flow code. A simplified reaction-diffusion model, based on the one-step Arrhenius kinetics, represents a stoichiometric H-2-air mixture under the assumption of the Lewis number Le = 1. Global properties and the internal structure of the flame were analyzed in an earlier paper, which showed that this system represents turbulent combustion in the thin reaction zone regime. This paper demonstrates that: (1) The flame brush has a complex internal structure, in which the isosurfaces of higher fuel mass fractions are folded on progressively smaller scales. (2) Global properties of the turbulent flame are best represented by the structure of the region of peak reaction rate, which defines the flame surface. (3) In the thin reaction zone regime, S-T is predominantly determined by the increase of the flame surface area, A(T), caused by turbulence. (4) The observed increase of S-T relative to S-L exceeds the corresponding increase of A(T) relative to the surface area of the planar laminar flame, on average, by approximate to 14%, varying from only a few percent to as high as approximate to 30%. (5) This exaggerated response is the result of tight flame packing by turbulence, which causes frequent flame collisions and formation of regions of high flame curvature greater than or similar to 1/delta(L), or cusps, where delta(L) is the thermal width of the laminar flame. (6) The local flame speed in the cusps substantially exceeds its laminar value, which results in a disproportionately large contribution of cusps to S-T compared with the flame surface area in them. (7) A criterion is established for transition to the regime significantly influenced by cusp formation. In particular, at Karlovitz numbers Ka greater than or similar to 20, flame collisions provide an important mechanism controlling S-T, in addition to the increase of A(T) by large-scale motions and the potential enhancement of diffusive transport by small-scale turbulence. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of The Combustion Institute.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available