Back to Search Start Over

Experimental investigation of the near field in sooting turbulent nonpremixed flames at elevated pressures.

Authors :
Boyette, Wesley R.
Elbaz, Ayman M.
Guiberti, Thibault F.
Roberts, William L.
Source :
Experimental Thermal & Fluid Science. Jul2019, Vol. 105, p332-341. 10p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

• Piloted turbulent nonpremixed jet flames are studied at high pressure/Re. • Soot inception zone migrates upstream as pressure increases, even for constant U. • Corrugation of OH layer increases as Re increases through density. • Frequency of OH layer separation increases as pressure/Re increase. • OH layer fragments into smaller "islands" as Re increases. A recently commissioned high-pressure combustion duct is used to investigate a family of ten, piloted, sooting, turbulent nonpremixed flames over a range of pressures and Reynolds numbers. For all conditions, the central jet is composed of 35% ethylene and 65% nitrogen by volume. In one series of flames, the Reynolds number is kept constant while the pressure is increased, whereas in the other series, the bulk jet velocity is maintained. The maximum pressure, p , is 5 bar and the maximum Reynolds number, Re, is 50,000. A DSLR camera and 10-kHz OH-PLIF are used to characterized the near field. DSLR camera images show that the length of the blue region immediately downstream of the nozzle decreases as the pressure increases, rapidly in the constant Reynolds number series, and gradually in the constant velocity series. Analysis of OH-PLIF images in the near field show that corrugation of the flame front is fairly insensitive to changes in pressure if the Reynolds number is held constant. As the Reynolds number (and pressure) is increased, the flame front becomes more corrugated and the frequency of OH layer extinction increases. This leads to smaller "islands" of OH that are separated by shorter distances. However, despite increased local extinction, the flames remain attached even as the Reynolds number is increased to more than twice the maximum Reynolds number that is possible at atmospheric pressure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08941777
Volume :
105
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Experimental Thermal & Fluid Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
136071670
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.expthermflusci.2019.04.008