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Cool flame wave propagation in high-pressure spray flames

Zhong, Shenghui ; Xu, Shijie LU orcid ; Zhang, Fan ; Peng, Zhijun ; Chen, Longfei and Bai, Xue Song LU (2023) In Proceedings of the Combustion Institute 39(2). p.2513-2522
Abstract

Cool flame has an important impact on the performance and emission of advanced low-temperature combustion (LTC) internal combustion engines (ICEs) in which the liquid fuel is injected earlier at a lower ambient temperature (Tam) than that in the conventional diesel combustion engines. However, the cool flame characteristics of spray combustion under ICEs conditions are not fully understood, e.g., the effect of cool flame on the spray ignition and flame stabilization is not well studied. In this paper, the so-called cool flame wave propagation (CFWP) in the Engine Combustion Networks Spray A flames at three ambient temperatures Tam (800 K, 900 K and 1000 K) is analyzed using the data from large eddy simulation with... (More)

Cool flame has an important impact on the performance and emission of advanced low-temperature combustion (LTC) internal combustion engines (ICEs) in which the liquid fuel is injected earlier at a lower ambient temperature (Tam) than that in the conventional diesel combustion engines. However, the cool flame characteristics of spray combustion under ICEs conditions are not fully understood, e.g., the effect of cool flame on the spray ignition and flame stabilization is not well studied. In this paper, the so-called cool flame wave propagation (CFWP) in the Engine Combustion Networks Spray A flames at three ambient temperatures Tam (800 K, 900 K and 1000 K) is analyzed using the data from large eddy simulation with an improved Eulerian based transported probability density function sub-grid combustion model. A good agreement between the LES results and experimental data is obtained for the spray liquid penetration length, vapor fuel penetration length, mean pressure rise profile, and flame liftoff length. It is shown that CFWP in the spray ignition process promotes the ignition of the fuel-rich and cold reactant mixture, leading to the most reactive mixture shifting toward fuel-richer locations due to the spatial stratification of temperature and concentration, and turbulent mixing. As a result, the high temperature ignition (HTI) can be shortened compared to the ignition in the homogeneous mixture. At Tam = 800 K, the HTI kernels are consistently formed following the CFWP propagating toward the spray head region. However, as Tam increases, the spatial correlation between HTI kernels and CFWP fronts is weakened. On the other hand, the turbulent mixing (quantified using local scalar dissipation rate) contributes more to the formation of HTI kernels at higher Tam. The present results indicate that CFWP is more profound at lower Tam in the spray ignition process. Finally, it is found that cool flame propagates mainly into pre-reacted fuel-rich mixture in an ignition wave propagation mode from the spray upstream region toward downstream region, whereas the ignition assisted flame mode is found in the spray upstream region where the combustion heat release is negligible.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Cool flame wave propagation, Engine combustion network, Eulerian stochastic field, Spray combustion, Two-stage ignition
in
Proceedings of the Combustion Institute
volume
39
issue
2
pages
2513 - 2522
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85140830216
ISSN
1540-7489
DOI
10.1016/j.proci.2022.08.056
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
29dd9370-ba7f-4707-9187-a2ab7f4e2404
date added to LUP
2023-01-16 10:09:10
date last changed
2023-11-20 16:29:50
@article{29dd9370-ba7f-4707-9187-a2ab7f4e2404,
  abstract     = {{<p>Cool flame has an important impact on the performance and emission of advanced low-temperature combustion (LTC) internal combustion engines (ICEs) in which the liquid fuel is injected earlier at a lower ambient temperature (T<sub>am</sub>) than that in the conventional diesel combustion engines. However, the cool flame characteristics of spray combustion under ICEs conditions are not fully understood, e.g., the effect of cool flame on the spray ignition and flame stabilization is not well studied. In this paper, the so-called cool flame wave propagation (CFWP) in the Engine Combustion Networks Spray A flames at three ambient temperatures T<sub>am</sub> (800 K, 900 K and 1000 K) is analyzed using the data from large eddy simulation with an improved Eulerian based transported probability density function sub-grid combustion model. A good agreement between the LES results and experimental data is obtained for the spray liquid penetration length, vapor fuel penetration length, mean pressure rise profile, and flame liftoff length. It is shown that CFWP in the spray ignition process promotes the ignition of the fuel-rich and cold reactant mixture, leading to the most reactive mixture shifting toward fuel-richer locations due to the spatial stratification of temperature and concentration, and turbulent mixing. As a result, the high temperature ignition (HTI) can be shortened compared to the ignition in the homogeneous mixture. At T<sub>am</sub> = 800 K, the HTI kernels are consistently formed following the CFWP propagating toward the spray head region. However, as T<sub>am</sub> increases, the spatial correlation between HTI kernels and CFWP fronts is weakened. On the other hand, the turbulent mixing (quantified using local scalar dissipation rate) contributes more to the formation of HTI kernels at higher T<sub>am</sub>. The present results indicate that CFWP is more profound at lower T<sub>am</sub> in the spray ignition process. Finally, it is found that cool flame propagates mainly into pre-reacted fuel-rich mixture in an ignition wave propagation mode from the spray upstream region toward downstream region, whereas the ignition assisted flame mode is found in the spray upstream region where the combustion heat release is negligible.</p>}},
  author       = {{Zhong, Shenghui and Xu, Shijie and Zhang, Fan and Peng, Zhijun and Chen, Longfei and Bai, Xue Song}},
  issn         = {{1540-7489}},
  keywords     = {{Cool flame wave propagation; Engine combustion network; Eulerian stochastic field; Spray combustion; Two-stage ignition}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{2513--2522}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Proceedings of the Combustion Institute}},
  title        = {{Cool flame wave propagation in high-pressure spray flames}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.proci.2022.08.056}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.proci.2022.08.056}},
  volume       = {{39}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}