Analysis of Flame Characteristics in a Laboratory-Scale Turbulent Lifted Jet Flame via DNS

A fully compressible 3D solver for reacting flows has been developed and applied to investigate a turbulent lifted jet flame in a vitiated coflow by means of direct numerical simulation (DNS) to validate the solver and analyze the flame characteristics. An eighth-order central differencing scheme is...

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Main Authors: Haiou Wang, Kun Luo, Fuxing Yi, Jianren Fan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-09-01
Series:International Journal of Spray and Combustion Dynamics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1260/1756-8277.5.3.225
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spelling doaj-a0b1ac019b57445a835825b5250de7ba2020-11-25T03:02:47ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Spray and Combustion Dynamics1756-82771756-82852013-09-01510.1260/1756-8277.5.3.22510.1260_1756-8277.5.3.225Analysis of Flame Characteristics in a Laboratory-Scale Turbulent Lifted Jet Flame via DNSHaiou WangKun LuoFuxing YiJianren FanA fully compressible 3D solver for reacting flows has been developed and applied to investigate a turbulent lifted jet flame in a vitiated coflow by means of direct numerical simulation (DNS) to validate the solver and analyze the flame characteristics. An eighth-order central differencing scheme is used for spatial discretization and a fourth-order Runge-Kutta method is employed for time integration. The DNS results agree well with the experimental measurements for the conditional means of reactive scalars. However, the lift-off height is under predicted. The mean axial velocity develops into a self-similar profile after x/D = 6. The normalized flame index is employed to characterize the combustion regime. It is found that at the flame base the gradients of the reactants are opposed and diffusion combustion is dominant. Further downstream, the contribution of premixed combustion increases and peaks at x/D = 8. Finally, the stabilization process is examined. The turbulent lifted flame is proved to stabilize in the lean mixtures and low scalar dissipation rate regions.https://doi.org/10.1260/1756-8277.5.3.225
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Haiou Wang
Kun Luo
Fuxing Yi
Jianren Fan
spellingShingle Haiou Wang
Kun Luo
Fuxing Yi
Jianren Fan
Analysis of Flame Characteristics in a Laboratory-Scale Turbulent Lifted Jet Flame via DNS
International Journal of Spray and Combustion Dynamics
author_facet Haiou Wang
Kun Luo
Fuxing Yi
Jianren Fan
author_sort Haiou Wang
title Analysis of Flame Characteristics in a Laboratory-Scale Turbulent Lifted Jet Flame via DNS
title_short Analysis of Flame Characteristics in a Laboratory-Scale Turbulent Lifted Jet Flame via DNS
title_full Analysis of Flame Characteristics in a Laboratory-Scale Turbulent Lifted Jet Flame via DNS
title_fullStr Analysis of Flame Characteristics in a Laboratory-Scale Turbulent Lifted Jet Flame via DNS
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of Flame Characteristics in a Laboratory-Scale Turbulent Lifted Jet Flame via DNS
title_sort analysis of flame characteristics in a laboratory-scale turbulent lifted jet flame via dns
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Spray and Combustion Dynamics
issn 1756-8277
1756-8285
publishDate 2013-09-01
description A fully compressible 3D solver for reacting flows has been developed and applied to investigate a turbulent lifted jet flame in a vitiated coflow by means of direct numerical simulation (DNS) to validate the solver and analyze the flame characteristics. An eighth-order central differencing scheme is used for spatial discretization and a fourth-order Runge-Kutta method is employed for time integration. The DNS results agree well with the experimental measurements for the conditional means of reactive scalars. However, the lift-off height is under predicted. The mean axial velocity develops into a self-similar profile after x/D = 6. The normalized flame index is employed to characterize the combustion regime. It is found that at the flame base the gradients of the reactants are opposed and diffusion combustion is dominant. Further downstream, the contribution of premixed combustion increases and peaks at x/D = 8. Finally, the stabilization process is examined. The turbulent lifted flame is proved to stabilize in the lean mixtures and low scalar dissipation rate regions.
url https://doi.org/10.1260/1756-8277.5.3.225
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AT fuxingyi analysisofflamecharacteristicsinalaboratoryscaleturbulentliftedjetflameviadns
AT jianrenfan analysisofflamecharacteristicsinalaboratoryscaleturbulentliftedjetflameviadns
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