Numerical Simulation of AxiSymmetric Laminar Diffusion Flames with Soot


Book Description

Detailed numerical modeling of combustion phenomena, soot formation, and radi-ation is an active area of research. In this work a general-purpose, pressure-based,finite volume code for modeling laminar diffusion flames has been incorporatedinto the CFD code OpenFOAM. The code uses a mixture-averaged model for thecalculation of transport coefficients, and can be used to perform detailed modelingof multi-dimensional laminar flames using realistic molecular transport, and withdetailed chemical mechanisms containing hundreds of chemical species and reac-tions. Two soot models have been incorporated into the code: a semi-empiricaltwo-equation model, as well as a detailed Method of Moments with InterpolativeClosure (MOMIC). An emission-only, optically-thin radiation model has also beenincluded in the code to account for the radiative heat loss, and sophisticated radia-tion models with detailed calculations of spectral properties and radiative intensityhave also been included. The flame code showed excellent scalability on massivelydistributed, high-performance computer systems. The code has been validated bymodeling four axisymmetric, co-flowing laminar diffusion flames, and the resultshave been found to be mostly within experimental uncertainty, and comparableto results reported in the literature for the same and similar configurations. Anumber of parametric studies to study the effects of detailed gas-phase chemistry,soot models and radiation have also been performed on these flame configurations.It has been found that the flames considered in this work are all optically thin,and so the simple, emission-only, optically-thin radiation model can be used tomodel these flames with good accuracy and a reasonable computational effort. Inparticular, the detailed radiation models increase the computational cost by twoorders of magnitude, and thus their applicability in a detailed calculation may belimited.It was found that the two-equation soot model used in conjunction with a gas-phase mechanism that adequately describes the combustion of C2 hydrocarbons produces results in close agreement with experimental data for a 1-bar ethylene-airflame, a 10 bar methane-air flame, as well as an ethane-air flame at 10 bar. Thedetailed MOMIC soot model requires the use of a larger, more detailed gas-phasechemical mechanism containing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) with fourrings, and thus the computational cost associated with the MOMIC soot modelis significantly higher. The detailed model was used to model the flames, andcomputed soot levels were within a factor of two of the experimental values, whichis typically considered good agreement considering the complex physics involved.The last flame studied using both the soot models was a N2 -diluted ethylene-airflame, in which the predicted values of major gas-phase species were seen to be closeto the experimental values, but the soot levels were off by an order of magnitude.Notwithstanding the lack of agreement with measurements for this flame, the flamesolver with the soot models was demonstrated to be a robust, scalable, and generalcode with potential applications to a variety of laminar flames in the non-premixed,partially premixed and premixed regimes.




Direct Numerical Simulation for Turbulent Reacting Flows


Book Description

Contents: Description of accurate boundary conditions for the simulation of reactive flows. Parallel direct numerical simulation of turbulent reactive flow. Flame-wall interaction and heat flux modelling in turbulent channel flow. A numerical study of laminar flame wall interaction with detailed chemistry: wall temperature effects. Modeling and simulation of turbulent flame kernel evolution. Experimental and theoretical analysis of flame surface density modelling for premixed turbulent combustion. Gradient and counter-gradient transport in turbulent premixed flames. Direct numerical simulation of turbulent flames with complex chemical kinetics. Effects of curvature and unsteadiness in diffusion flames. Implications for turbulent diffusion combustion. Numerical simulations of autoignition in turbulent mixing flows. Stabilization processes of diffusion flames. References.







Numerical Simulation of the Laminar Diffusion Flame in a Simplified Burner. Revision 1


Book Description

The laminar ethylene-air diffusion flame in a simple laboratory burner was simulated with the COYOTE reactive flow program. This program predicts the flow field, transport, and chemistry for the purposes of code validation and providing physical understanding of the processes occurring in the flame. The authors show the results of numerical experiments to test the importance of several physical phenomena, including gravity, radiation, and differential diffusion. The computational results compare favorably with the experimental measurements, and all three phenomena are important to accurate simulations.




Numerical Simulation of the Laminar Diffusion Flame in a Simplified Burner


Book Description

The laminar ethylene-air diffusion fame in a simple laboratory burner was simulated with the COYOTE reactive flow program. This program predicts the flow field, transport, and chemistry for the purposes of code validation and providing physical understanding of the processes occurring in the flame. We show the results of numerical experiments to test the importance of several physical effects, including gravity, radiation, and differential diffusion. The computational results compare favorably with the experimental measurements.