Droplets and Sprays


Book Description

This book focuses on droplets and sprays relevant to combustion and propulsion applications. The book includes fundamental studies on the heating, evaporation and combustion of individual droplets and basic mechanisms of spray formation. The contents also extend to the latest analytical, numerical and experimental techniques for investigating the behavior of sprays in devices like combustion engines and gas turbines. In addition, the book explores several emerging areas like interactions between sprays and flames and the dynamic characteristics of spray combustion systems on the fundamental side, as well as the development of novel fuel injectors for specific devices on the application side. Given its breadth of coverage, the book will benefit researchers and professionals alike.













Scientific and Technical Aerospace Reports


Book Description

Lists citations with abstracts for aerospace related reports obtained from world wide sources and announces documents that have recently been entered into the NASA Scientific and Technical Information Database.




Heat Bibliography


Book Description










An Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Fuel Droplet Size on the Vaporization Process in a Turbulent Environment at Elevated Temperature and Pressure


Book Description

The performance of liquid-fuelled spray combustion systems has a massive impact on the efficiency of energy production in many sectors across the globe. Realistic combustors generate sub 100-μm droplets and operate under high pressure and temperature in strong turbulence. Investigations into droplet evaporation and combustion provide fundamental knowledge and validation data regarding the behaviour of sprays, and although single droplet approaches have been a staple of energy research for many decades, there is little information regarding the effect of turbulence and initial diameter, especially micro-sized, on droplet evaporation rates. The present experimental study develops, interprets, and correlates the results of almost 500 tests performed on isolated heptane and decane droplets. Droplets in the range of 110 - 770 μm (initial diameter) were generated and suspended on small intersecting micro-fibers in a spherical fan-driven chamber and exposed to quasi-zero mean turbulence of intensity up to 1.5 m/s, temperatures ranging from 25 - 100°C, and pressures between 1 and 10 bar. The results indicate that droplet size has a major influence on evaporation rate, as measured by the temporal reduction in droplet surface area, when the environment is turbulent. Evaporation rates increased with both initial diameter and turbulence intensity at all test conditions. The effectiveness of turbulence, defined as the ability of turbulence to improve the evaporation rate over the rate of a stagnant droplet at identical ambient conditions, increased with pressure but decreased with temperature. Both the ratio of Kolmogorov length scale to droplet diameter and the theoretical molar concentration gradient of fuel at the droplet surface are found to be excellent predictors of turbulence effectiveness. Correlation approaches utilizing a turbulent Reynolds number or a vaporization Damköhler number are suggested to predict the evaporation rate of a single droplet exposed to a purely turbulent flow field.