• Title/Summary/Keyword: Turbulent Burning Velocities

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Experimental Study on Turbulent Burning Velocities of Two-Component Fuel Mixtures of Methane, Propane and Hydrogen

  • Kido, Hiroyuki;Nakashima, Kenshiro;Nakahara, Masaya;Hashimoto, Jun
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.1-7
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    • 2001
  • In order to elucidate the turbulent burning velocity of the two-component fuel mixtures, the lean and rich two-component fuel mixtures, where methane, propane and hydrogen were used as fuels, were prepared keeping the laminar burning velocity nearly the same value. Clear difference in the measured turbulent burning velocity at the same turbulence intensity can be seen among the two-component fuel mixtures with different addition rate of fuel, even under nearly the same laminar burning velocity. The burning velocities of lean mixtures change almost monotonously as changing addition rate, those of rich mixtures, however, do not show such a monotony. These phenomena can be explained qualitatively from the local burning velocities, estimated by considering the preferential diffusion effect for each fuel component. In addition, a prediction expression of turbulent burning velocity proposed for the one-component fuel mixtures can be applied to the two-component fuel mixtures by using the estimated local burning velocity of each fuel mixture.

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Measurements of the Burning Velocities of Flamelets in a Turbulent Premixed Flame

  • Furukawa, Junichi;Noguchi, Yoshiki;Hirano, Toshisuke;Williams, Forman A.
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.65-70
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    • 2001
  • To investigate statistics of flamelet in a turbulent premixed flame and to obtain components of their burning velocities in a vertical plane above a pipe-flow burner, the local motion of flamelets with respect to gas are measured by specially arranged diagnostics, composed of an electrostatic probe with four identical sensors and a two-color four-beam LDV system. With this technique, the three-dimensional local flame-front-velocity vector is measured by the electrostatic probe for the first time, and simultaneously the axial and radial components of the local gas-velocity vector in a vertical plane above the vertically oriented burner are measured by the LDV system. Two components of burning velocities of planar flamelets can be obtained from these results and are found to be distributed over different directions and to range in magnitude from nearly zero to a few times the planar, unstrained adiabatic laminar burning velocity measured in the unburnt gas. It may be concluded from these results that turbulence exerts measurable influences on flamelets and causes at least some of them to exhibit increased burning velocity.

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Measurements of the Burning Velocities of Flamelets in a Turbulent Premixed Flame

  • Furukawa, Junichi;Noguchi, Yoshiki;Hirano, Toshisuke;Williams, Forman A.
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.62-68
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    • 2002
  • To investigate statistics of flamelet in a turbulent premixed flame and to obtain components of their burning velocities in a vertical plane above a pipe-flow burner, the local motion of flamelets with respect to gas are measured by specially arranged diagnostics, composed of an electrostatic probe with four identical sensors and a two-color four-beam LDV system. With this technique, the three-dimensional local flame- front-velocity vector is measured by the electrostatic probe for the first time, and simultaneously the axial and radial components of the local gas-velocity vector in a vertical plane above the vertically oriented burner are measured by the LDV system. Two components of burning velocities of planar flamelets can be obtained from these results and are found to be distributed over different directions and to range in magnitude from nearly zero to a few times the planar, un strained adiabatic laminar burning velocity measured in the unburnt gas. It may be concluded from these results that turbulence exerts measurable influences on flamelets and causes at least some of them to exhibit increased burning velocity.

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Validation of the Turbulent Burning Velocity Based on Asymptotic Zone Conditional Transport in Turbulent Premixed Combustion (영역조건평균에 기초한 난류예혼합 화염 전파 속도식 유도 및 검증)

  • Lee, Dong-Kyu;Huh, Kang-Y.
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.23-30
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    • 2008
  • An analytical expression for the turbulent burning velocity is derived from the asymptotic zone conditional transport equation at the leading edge. It is given as a sum of laminar and turbulent contributions, the latter of which is given as a product of turbulent diffusivity in unburned gas and inverse scale of wrinkling at the leading edge. It was previously shown that the inverse scale is equal to four times the maximum flame surface density in the wrinkled flamelet regime [1]. The linear behavior between $U_T$ and u' shows deviation with the inverse scale decreasing due to the effect of a finite flamelet thickness at higher turbulent intensities. DNS results show that $U_T/S^0_{Lu}$ may be given as a function of two dimensionless parameters, $u'/S^0_{Lu}$ and $l_t/\delta_F$, which may be transformed into another relationship in terms of $u'/S^0_{Lu}$, and Ka. A larger $l_t/{\delta}_F$ or a smaller Ka leads to a smaller scale of wrinkling, hence a larger turbulent burning velocity in the limited range of $u'/S^0_{Lu}$. Good agreement is achieved between the analytical expression and the turbulent burning velocities from DNS in both wrinkled and thickened-wrinkled flame regimes.

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An Experimental Study on the Turbulent Combustion Characteristics of Hydrocarbon Mixtures by Hydrogen Addition (수소를 첨가한 탄화수소 혼합기의 난류연소 특성에 관한 실험적 연구)

  • 김준효;한원희;키도히로유끼
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Automotive Engineers
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    • v.11 no.6
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    • pp.65-72
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    • 2003
  • In order to clarify turbulent combustion characteristics of hydrocarbon mixtures by hydrogen addition, turbulent burning velocities in a constant volume vessel were measured for both lean and rich hydrocarbon mixtures. Moreover, the configuration characteristics of turbulent flame was investigated in the wrinkled laminar flame region. A laser tomography technique was used to obtain the images of turbulent flame, and quantitative analyses were performed. As a result, the characteristics of turbulent burning velocity was shown a distinct difference with the addition rate of hydrogen between lean and rich mixtures. On the other hand, the obtained tomograms showed that the surface area of turbulent flame depends almost only on the turbulence intensity.

Spectral Model of Turbulent Burning Velocity Taking Account of the Diffusivity of Deficient Reactant (부족성분 확산계수의 영향을 고려한 난류연소속도의 스펙트럼 모델)

  • 김준효
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Fisheries and Ocean Technology
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    • v.33 no.3
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    • pp.218-225
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    • 1997
  • The formerly proposed spectral model of turbulent burning velocity is refined for nonstoichiometric hydrocarbon mixtures. Refinements are made in regard to the following two points : (1) an effect of the diffusivity of deficient reactant on the turbulent burning velocity and (2) consideration of increasing laminar name thickness with a decrease in the laminar burning velocity A comparison between the predicted turbulent velocities and the measured ones is made. The predictions by the refined spectral model agree quantatively well with the experimental results in the regime of practical equivalence ratio, but not in the high and low equivalence ratio regime.

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Leading Edge Statistics of a Turbulent Premixed Flame (난류 예혼합 화염 선단부의 통계적 특성에 관한 수치적 연구)

  • Kwon, Jaesung;Huh, Kang Y.
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.13-20
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    • 2013
  • Leading edge statistics are obtained by direct numerical simulation(DNS) of freely propagating incompressible and stagnating compressible turbulent premixed flames. Conditional averages of velocities in terms of reaction progress variable, c, and local flame surface density, ${\sum}^{\prime}_f$, are defined and compared through the flame brush. It holds asymptotically that $<u>_f=<S_d>_f$ and $<u>_u-<u>_b=D_t/L_w$ with the characteristic length scale of $\bar{c}$ variation, $L_w$. It also holds that $<u>_b=<u>_f$ for a freely propagating flame under no mean strain rate. The turbulent burning velocity, $S_T$, is determined by the conditional statistics at the leading edge under large activation energy.

Structure of Turbulent Premixed Opposed Impinging Jet Flame with Simultaneous PIV/OH PLIF Measurements (PIV/OH PLIF 동시측정을 이용한 난류 대향 분출 예혼합화염 구조 연구)

  • Cho, Yong-Jin;Kim, Ji-Ho;Cho, Tae-Young;Yoon, Young-Bin
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.8 no.1
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    • pp.36-45
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    • 2003
  • The subject of turbulent premixed flames has been focused by many researchers for a number of decades. Especially, Borghi suggested a magnificent diagram classifying turbulent combustion areas and Lipatnikov and Chomiak modified this diagram. Recently, experimental techniques have been developed so that we can use PIV for measuring 2D velocity field and apply OH PLIF techniques for obtaining flame locations. In present study, a new diagram is proposed using strain rates and OH signal intensity. Thus, simultaneous PIV and OH PLIF measurements are used for shear strain rates and flame locations, respectively. It is believed that the shear strain rates represent flow characteristics such as turbulence intensity and the OH intensity indicates the flame characteristics such as burning velocities.

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Simulation of Turbulent Premixed Flame Propagation in a Closed Vessel (정적 연소실내 난류 예혼합화염 전파의 시뮬레이션)

  • 권세진
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers
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    • v.19 no.6
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    • pp.1510-1517
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    • 1995
  • A theoretical method is described to simulate the propagation of turbulent premixed flames in a closed vessel. The objective is to develop and test an efficient technique to predict the propagation speed of flame as well as the geometric structure of the flame surfaces. Flame is advected by the statistically generated turbulent flow field and propagates as a wave by solving twodimensional Hamilton-Jacobi equation. In the simulation of the unburned gas flow field, following turbulence properties were satisfied: mean velocity field, turbulence intensities, spatial and temporal correlations of velocity fluctuations. It is assumed that these properties are not affected by the expansion of the burned gas region. Predictions were compared with existing experimental data for flames propagating in a closed vessel charged with hydrogen/air mixture with various turbulence intensities and Reynolds numbers. Comparisons were made in flame radius growth rate, rms flame radius fluctuations, and average perimeter and fractal dimensions of the flame boundaries. Two dimensional time dependent simulation resulted in correct trends of the measured flame data. The reasonable behavior and high efficiency proves the usefulness of this method in difficult problems of flame propagation such as in internal combustion engines.

Reseach on Structure of Turbulent Premixed Opposed Impinging Jet Flame with Simultaneous PIV/OH PLIF measurements (PIV/OH PLIF 동시측정을 이용한 난류 대향 분출 예혼합화염 구조 연구)

  • Cho, Yong-Jin;Kin, Ji-Ho;Cho, Tae-Young;Yoon, Young-Bin
    • 한국연소학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2002.11a
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    • pp.1-9
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    • 2002
  • Simultaneous PIV and OH PLIF measurements are used for shear strain rates and flame locations, respectively. It is believed that the shear strain rates represent flow characteristics such as turbulence intensity and the OH intensity indicates the flame characteristics such as burning velocities. However, these are still lack of geometric information, which may be very important to flame quenching Hence, fractal dimensions 'Df) of the OH images are adopted as an additional information. Finally, the flame structure diagram proposed in this research has three parameters, which consist of strain rates, OH intensities and fractal dimensions. The results show that this diagram classifies turbulent premixed flames more effectively based on flame structures. The regime of weak turbulence is limited to narrow strain ranges and has the fractal dimension of about 2 In the regime of moderate turbulence, OH intensities increase as strain rates increase and the values of fractal dimensions are 1.8 Df 1.95. The regimes of thickened reaction and flame extinction (quenching) show bell-shaped and their values of fractal dimensions are 1.5 Df 1.7 and 0.9 Df 0.6, respectively.

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