Analysis of Shear Effects on Mixing and Reaction Layers in Premixed Turbulent Stratified Flames using LES coupled to Tabulated Chemistry

Author(s):  
L. Dressler ◽  
F. Ries ◽  
G. Kuenne ◽  
J. Janicka ◽  
A. Sadiki
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-23
Author(s):  
Adrien Chatelier ◽  
Benoît Fiorina ◽  
Vincent Moureau ◽  
Nicolas Bertier

This work presents Large Eddy Simulations of the unconfined CORIA Rouen Spray Burner, fed with liquid n-heptane and air. Turbulent combustion modeling is based on the Filtered TAbulated Chemistry model for LES (F-TACLES) formalism, designed to capture the propagation speed of turbulent stratified flames. Initially dedicated to gaseous combustion, the filtered flamelet model is challenged for the first time in a turbulent spray flame configuration. Two meshes are employed. The finest grid, where both flame thickness and wrinkling are resolved, aims to challenge the chemistry tabulation procedure. At the opposite the coarse mesh does not allow full resolution of the flame thickness and exhibits significant unresolved contributions of subgrid scale flame wrinkling. Both LES solutions are extensively compared against experimental data. For both nonreacting and reacting conditions, the flow and spray aerodynamical properties are well captured by the two simulations. More interesting, the LES predicts accurately the flame lift-off height for both fine and coarse grid conditions. It confirms that the modeling methodology is able to capture the filtered turbulent flame propagation speed in a two-phase flow environment and within grid conditions representative of practical applications. Differences, observed for the droplet temperature, seem related to the evaporation model assumptions.


2012 ◽  
Vol 159 (8) ◽  
pp. 2704-2717 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Auzillon ◽  
Olivier Gicquel ◽  
Nasser Darabiha ◽  
Denis Veynante ◽  
Benoit Fiorina

Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 567
Author(s):  
Xudong Jiang ◽  
Yihao Tang ◽  
Zhaohui Liu ◽  
Venkat Raman

When operating under lean fuel–air conditions, flame flashback is an operational safety issue in stationary gas turbines. In particular, with the increased use of hydrogen, the propagation of the flame through the boundary layers into the mixing section becomes feasible. Typically, these mixing regions are not designed to hold a high-temperature flame and can lead to catastrophic failure of the gas turbine. Flame flashback along the boundary layers is a competition between chemical reactions in a turbulent flow, where fuel and air are incompletely mixed, and heat loss to the wall that promotes flame quenching. The focus of this work is to develop a comprehensive simulation approach to model boundary layer flashback, accounting for fuel–air stratification and wall heat loss. A large eddy simulation (LES) based framework is used, along with a tabulation-based combustion model. Different approaches to tabulation and the effect of wall heat loss are studied. An experimental flashback configuration is used to understand the predictive accuracy of the models. It is shown that diffusion-flame-based tabulation methods are better suited due to the flashback occurring in relatively low-strain and lean fuel–air mixtures. Further, the flashback is promoted by the formation of features such as flame tongues, which induce negative velocity separated boundary layer flow that promotes upstream flame motion. The wall heat loss alters the strength of these separated flows, which in turn affects the flashback propensity. Comparisons with experimental data for both non-reacting cases that quantify fuel–air mixing and reacting flashback cases are used to demonstrate predictive accuracy.


2017 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
pp. 535-559 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Heinrich ◽  
S. Ganter ◽  
G. Kuenne ◽  
C. Jainski ◽  
A. Dreizler ◽  
...  

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