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Assessment of a flamelet approach to evaluating mean species mass fractions in moderately and highly turbulent premixed flames

Lipatnikov, A. N. ; Nilsson, T. LU ; Yu, R. LU ; Bai, X. S. LU and Sabelnikov, V. A. (2021) In Physics of Fluids 33(4).
Abstract

Complex-chemistry direct numerical simulation (DNS) data obtained from lean methane-air turbulent flames are analyzed to perform a priori assessment of predictive capabilities of the flamelet approach to evaluating mean concentrations of various species in turbulent flames characterized by Karlovitz numbers K a = 6.0, 74.0, and 540. Six definitions of a combustion progress variable c are probed and two types of probability density functions (PDFs) are adapted: (i) actual PDFs extracted directly from the DNS data or (ii) presumed β-function PDFs obtained using the DNS data on the first two moments of the c-field. Results show that the mean density, the mean temperature, and the mean mass fractions of CH4, O2, H2O, CO2, CO, CH2O, CH3, and... (More)

Complex-chemistry direct numerical simulation (DNS) data obtained from lean methane-air turbulent flames are analyzed to perform a priori assessment of predictive capabilities of the flamelet approach to evaluating mean concentrations of various species in turbulent flames characterized by Karlovitz numbers K a = 6.0, 74.0, and 540. Six definitions of a combustion progress variable c are probed and two types of probability density functions (PDFs) are adapted: (i) actual PDFs extracted directly from the DNS data or (ii) presumed β-function PDFs obtained using the DNS data on the first two moments of the c-field. Results show that the mean density, the mean temperature, and the mean mass fractions of CH4, O2, H2O, CO2, CO, CH2O, CH3, and HCO are very well predicted using the temperature-based combustion progress variable c T and the actual PDF. For other considered species, the quantitative predictions are worse but still appear to be encouraging (with the exception of CH3O at K a = 540). The use of the flamelet library obtained from the equidiffusive laminar flame improves results for H2, HO2, and H2O2 at the highest Karlovitz number. Alternative definitions of the combustion progress variable perform worse and the reasons for this are explored. The use of the β-function PDF yields worse results for intermediate species such as OH, O, H, CH3, and HCO, with this PDF being significantly different from the actual PDF. Application of the flamelet approach to rates of production/consumption of various species is also addressed and implications of obtained results for modeling are discussed.

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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Physics of Fluids
volume
33
issue
4
article number
045121
publisher
American Institute of Physics (AIP)
external identifiers
  • scopus:85104245904
ISSN
1070-6631
DOI
10.1063/5.0047500
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
12158fd4-5154-4b74-a6f6-82de789ca257
date added to LUP
2021-04-26 10:41:26
date last changed
2022-04-27 01:41:25
@article{12158fd4-5154-4b74-a6f6-82de789ca257,
  abstract     = {{<p>Complex-chemistry direct numerical simulation (DNS) data obtained from lean methane-air turbulent flames are analyzed to perform a priori assessment of predictive capabilities of the flamelet approach to evaluating mean concentrations of various species in turbulent flames characterized by Karlovitz numbers K a = 6.0, 74.0, and 540. Six definitions of a combustion progress variable c are probed and two types of probability density functions (PDFs) are adapted: (i) actual PDFs extracted directly from the DNS data or (ii) presumed β-function PDFs obtained using the DNS data on the first two moments of the c-field. Results show that the mean density, the mean temperature, and the mean mass fractions of CH4, O2, H2O, CO2, CO, CH2O, CH3, and HCO are very well predicted using the temperature-based combustion progress variable c T and the actual PDF. For other considered species, the quantitative predictions are worse but still appear to be encouraging (with the exception of CH3O at K a = 540). The use of the flamelet library obtained from the equidiffusive laminar flame improves results for H2, HO2, and H2O2 at the highest Karlovitz number. Alternative definitions of the combustion progress variable perform worse and the reasons for this are explored. The use of the β-function PDF yields worse results for intermediate species such as OH, O, H, CH3, and HCO, with this PDF being significantly different from the actual PDF. Application of the flamelet approach to rates of production/consumption of various species is also addressed and implications of obtained results for modeling are discussed.</p>}},
  author       = {{Lipatnikov, A. N. and Nilsson, T. and Yu, R. and Bai, X. S. and Sabelnikov, V. A.}},
  issn         = {{1070-6631}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  publisher    = {{American Institute of Physics (AIP)}},
  series       = {{Physics of Fluids}},
  title        = {{Assessment of a flamelet approach to evaluating mean species mass fractions in moderately and highly turbulent premixed flames}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0047500}},
  doi          = {{10.1063/5.0047500}},
  volume       = {{33}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}