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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Scalar dissipation rate based flamelet modelling of turbulent premixed flames

Kolla, Hemanth January 2010 (has links)
Lean premixed combustion has potential for reducing emissions from combustion devices without compromising fuel efficiency, but it is prone to instabilities which presents design difficulties. From emissions point of view reliable predictions of species formation rates in the flame zone are required while from the point of view of thermo-acoustics the prediction of spatial variation of heat release rate is crucial; both tasks are challenging but imperative in CFD based design of combustion systems. In this thesis a computational model for turbulent premixed combustion is proposed in the RANS framework and its predictive ability is studied. The model is based on the flamelet concept and employs strained laminar flamelets in reactant-to-product opposed flow configuration. The flamelets are parametrised by scalar dissipation rate of progress variable which is a suitable quantity to describe the flamelet structure since it is governed by convection-diffusion-reaction balance and represents the flame front dynamics. This paramaterisation is new. The mean reaction rate and mean species concentrations are obtained by integrating the corresponding flamelets quantity weighted by the joint pdf of the progress variable and its dissipation rate. The marginal pdf of the progress variable is obtained using β-pdf and the pdf of the conditional dissipation rate is presumed to be log-normal. The conditional mean dissipation rate is obtained from unconditional mean dissipation rate which is a modelling parameter. An algebraic model for the unconditional mean scalar dissipation rate is proposed based on the relevant physics of reactive scalar mixing in turbulent premixed flames. This algebraic model is validated directly using DNS data. An indirect validation is performed by deriving a turbulent flame speed expression using the Kolmogorov-Petrovskii-Piskunov analysis and comparing its predictions with experimental data from a wide range of flame and flow conditions. The mean reaction rate closure of the strained flamelets model is assessed using RANS calculations of statistically planar one-dimensional flames in corrugated flamelets and thin reaction zones regimes. The flame speeds predicted by this closure were close to experimental data in both the regimes. On the other hand, an unstrained flamelets closure predicts flame speed close to the experimental data in the corrugated flamelets regime, but over predicts in the thin reaction zones regime indicating an over prediction of the mean reaction rate. The overall predictive ability of the strained flamelets model is assessed via calculations of laboratory flames of two different configurations: a rod stabilised V-flame and pilot stabilised Bunsen flames. For the V-flame, whose conditions correspond to the corrugated flamelets regime, the strained and unstrained flamelets models yield similar predictions which are in good agreement with experimental measurements. For the Bunsen flames which are in the thin reaction zones regime, the unstrained flamelet model predicts a smaller flame brush while the predictions of the strained flamelets model are in good agreement with the experimental data. The major and minor species concentrations are also reasonably well predicted by the strained flamelets model, although the minor species predictions seem sensitive to the product stream composition of the laminar flamelets. The fluid dynamics induced attenuation of the reaction rate is captured by the strained flamelets model enabling it to give better predictions than the unstrained flamelets model in the thin reaction zones regime. The planar flames and laboratory flames calculations illustrate the importance of appropriately accounting for fluid dynamic effects on flamelet structure and the scalar dissipation rate based strained flamelet model seems promising in this respect. Furthermore, this model seems to have a wide range of applicability with a fixed set of model parameters.
2

Finite-Rate Chemistry Effects in Turbulent Premixed Combustion

Dunn, Matthew John January 2008 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / In recent times significant public attention has been drawn to the topic of combustion. This has been due to the fact that combustion is the underlying mechanism of several key challenges to modern society: climate change, energy security (finite reserves of fossil fuels) and air pollution. The further development of combustion science is undoubtedly necessary to find improved solutions to manage these combustion science related challenges in the near and long term future. Combustion is essentially an exothermic process, this exothermicity or heat release essentially occurs at small scales, by small scales it meant these scales are small relative to the fluid length scales, for example heat release layer thicknesses in flames are typically much less than the fluid integral length scales. As heat release occurs at small scales this means that in turbulent combustion the small scales of the turbulence (which can be of the order of the heat release layer thickness) can possibly interact and influence the heat release and thus chemistry of the flame reaction zone. Premixed combustion is a combustion mode where the fuel and oxidiser are completely premixed prior to the flame reaction zone, this mode of combustion has been shown to be a promising method to maximise combustion efficiency and minimise pollutant formation. The continued and further application of premixed combustion to practical applications is limited by the current understanding of turbulent premixed combustion, these limitations in understanding are linked to the specific flame phenomena that can significantly influence premixed combustion in a combustion device, examples of such phenomena are: flame flashback, flame extinction and fuel consumption rate – all phenomena that are influenced by the interaction of the small scales of turbulence and chemistry. It is the study and investigation of the interaction of turbulence and chemistry at the small scales (termed finite-rate chemistry) in turbulent premixed flames that is the aim of this thesis which is titled “Finite-rate chemistry effects in turbulent premixed combustion”. Two very closely related experimental burner geometries have been developed in this thesis: the Piloted Premixed Jet Burner (PPJB) and the Premixed Jet Burner (PJB). Both feature an axisymmetric geometry and exhibit a parabolic like flow field. The PPJB and PJB feature a small 4mm diameter central jet from which a high velocity lean-premixed methane-air mixture issues. Surrounding the central jet in the PPJB is a 23.5mm diameter pilot of stoichiometric methane-air products, the major difference between the PPJB and the PJB is that the PJB does not feature a stoichiometric pilot. The pilot in the PPJB provides a rich source of combustion intermediates and enthalpy which promotes initial ignition of the central jet mixture. Surrounding both the central jet and pilot is a large diameter hot coflow of combustion products. It is possible to set the temperature of the hot coflow to the adiabatic flame temperature of the central jet mixture to simulate straining and mixing against and with combustion products without introducing complexities such as quenching and dilution from cold air. By parametrically increasing the central jet velocity in the PPJB it is possible to show that there is a transition from a thin conical flame brush to a flame that exhibits extinction and re-ignition effects. The flames that exhibit extinction and re-ignition effects have a luminous region near the jet exit termed the initial ignition region. This is followed by a region of reduced luminosity further downstream termed the extinction region. Further downstream the flame luminosity increases this region is termed the re-ignition region. For the flames that exhibit extinction and re-ignition it is proposed that intense turbulent mixing and high scalar dissipation rates drives the initial extinction process after the influence of the pilot has ceased (x/D>10). Re-ignition is proposed to occur downstream where turbulent mixing and scalar dissipation rates have decreased allowing robust combustion to continue. As the PJB does not feature a pilot, the flame stabilisation structure is quite different to the PPJB. The flame structure in the PJB is essentially a lifted purely premixed flame, which is an experimental configuration that is also quite unique. A suite of laser diagnostic measurements has been parametrically applied to flames in the PPJB and PJB. Laser Doppler Velocimetry (LDV) has been utilised to measure the mean and fluctuating radial and axial components of velocity at a point, with relevant time and length scale information being extracted from these measurements. One of the most interesting results from the LDV measurements is that in the PPJB the pilot delays the generation of high turbulence intensities, for flames that exhibit extinction the rapid increase of turbulence intensity after the pilot corresponds to the start of the extinction region. Using the LDV derived turbulence characteristics and laminar flame properties and plotting these flames on a traditional turbulent regime diagram indicates that all of the flames examined should fall in the so call distributed reaction regime. Planar imaging experiments have been conducted for flames using the PPJB and PJB to investigate the spatial structure of the temperature and selected minor species fields. Results from two different simultaneous 2D Rayleigh and OH PLIF experiments and a simultaneous 2D Rayleigh, OH PLIF and CH2O PLIF experiment are reported. For all of the flames examined in the PPJB and PJB a general trend of decreasing conditional mean temperature gradient with increasing turbulence intensity is observed. This indicates that a trend of so called flame front thickening with increased turbulence levels occurs for the flames examined. It is proposed that the mechanism for this flame front thickening is due to eddies penetrating and embedding in the instantaneous flame front. In the extinction region it is found that the OH concentration is significantly reduced compared to the initial ignition region. In the re-ignition region it is found that the OH level increases again indicating that an increase in the local reaction rate is occurring. In laminar premixed flames CH2O occurs in a thin layer in the reaction zone, it is found for all of the flames examined that the CH2O layer is significantly thicker than the laminar flame. For the high velocity flames beyond x/D=15, CH2O no longer exist in a distinct layer but rather in a near uniform field for the intermediate temperature regions. Examination of the product of CH2O and OH reveals that the heat release in the initial ignition region is high and rapidly decreases in the extinction region, an increase in the heat release further downstream is observed corresponding to the re-ignition region. This finding corresponds well with the initial hypothesis of an extinction region followed by a re-ignition region that was based on the mean chemiluminescence images. Detailed simultaneous measurement of major and minor species has been conducted using the line Raman-Rayleigh-LIF technique with CO LIF and crossed plane-OH PLIF at Sandia National Laboratories. By measuring all major species it is also possible to define a mixture fraction for all three streams of the PPJB. Using these three mixture fractions it was found that the influence of the pilot in the PPJB decays very rapidly for all but the lowest velocity flames. It was also found that for the high velocity flames exhibiting extinction, a significant proportion of the coflow fluid is entrained into the central jet combustion process at both the extinction region and re-ignition regions. The product of CO and OH conditional on temperature is shown to be proportion to the net production rate of CO2 for certain temperature ranges. By examining the product of CO and OH the hypothesis of an initial ignition region followed by an extinction region then a re-ignition region for certain PPJB flames has been further validated complementing the [CH2O][OH] imaging results. Numerical modelling results using the transported composition probability density function (TPDF) method coupled to a conventional Reynolds averaged Naiver Stokes (RANS) solver are shown in this thesis to successfully predict the occurrence of finite-rate chemistry effects for the PM1 PPJB flame series. To calculate the scalar variance and the degree of finite-rate chemistry effects correctly, it is found that a value of the mixing constant ( ) of approximately 8.0 is required. This value of is much larger than the standard excepted range of 1.5-2.3 for that has been established for non-premixed combustion. By examining the results of the RANS turbulence model in a non-reacting variable density jet, it is shown that the primary limitation of the predictive capability of the TPDF-RANS method is the RANS turbulence model when applied to variable density flows.
3

Finite-Rate Chemistry Effects in Turbulent Premixed Combustion

Dunn, Matthew John January 2008 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / In recent times significant public attention has been drawn to the topic of combustion. This has been due to the fact that combustion is the underlying mechanism of several key challenges to modern society: climate change, energy security (finite reserves of fossil fuels) and air pollution. The further development of combustion science is undoubtedly necessary to find improved solutions to manage these combustion science related challenges in the near and long term future. Combustion is essentially an exothermic process, this exothermicity or heat release essentially occurs at small scales, by small scales it meant these scales are small relative to the fluid length scales, for example heat release layer thicknesses in flames are typically much less than the fluid integral length scales. As heat release occurs at small scales this means that in turbulent combustion the small scales of the turbulence (which can be of the order of the heat release layer thickness) can possibly interact and influence the heat release and thus chemistry of the flame reaction zone. Premixed combustion is a combustion mode where the fuel and oxidiser are completely premixed prior to the flame reaction zone, this mode of combustion has been shown to be a promising method to maximise combustion efficiency and minimise pollutant formation. The continued and further application of premixed combustion to practical applications is limited by the current understanding of turbulent premixed combustion, these limitations in understanding are linked to the specific flame phenomena that can significantly influence premixed combustion in a combustion device, examples of such phenomena are: flame flashback, flame extinction and fuel consumption rate – all phenomena that are influenced by the interaction of the small scales of turbulence and chemistry. It is the study and investigation of the interaction of turbulence and chemistry at the small scales (termed finite-rate chemistry) in turbulent premixed flames that is the aim of this thesis which is titled “Finite-rate chemistry effects in turbulent premixed combustion”. Two very closely related experimental burner geometries have been developed in this thesis: the Piloted Premixed Jet Burner (PPJB) and the Premixed Jet Burner (PJB). Both feature an axisymmetric geometry and exhibit a parabolic like flow field. The PPJB and PJB feature a small 4mm diameter central jet from which a high velocity lean-premixed methane-air mixture issues. Surrounding the central jet in the PPJB is a 23.5mm diameter pilot of stoichiometric methane-air products, the major difference between the PPJB and the PJB is that the PJB does not feature a stoichiometric pilot. The pilot in the PPJB provides a rich source of combustion intermediates and enthalpy which promotes initial ignition of the central jet mixture. Surrounding both the central jet and pilot is a large diameter hot coflow of combustion products. It is possible to set the temperature of the hot coflow to the adiabatic flame temperature of the central jet mixture to simulate straining and mixing against and with combustion products without introducing complexities such as quenching and dilution from cold air. By parametrically increasing the central jet velocity in the PPJB it is possible to show that there is a transition from a thin conical flame brush to a flame that exhibits extinction and re-ignition effects. The flames that exhibit extinction and re-ignition effects have a luminous region near the jet exit termed the initial ignition region. This is followed by a region of reduced luminosity further downstream termed the extinction region. Further downstream the flame luminosity increases this region is termed the re-ignition region. For the flames that exhibit extinction and re-ignition it is proposed that intense turbulent mixing and high scalar dissipation rates drives the initial extinction process after the influence of the pilot has ceased (x/D>10). Re-ignition is proposed to occur downstream where turbulent mixing and scalar dissipation rates have decreased allowing robust combustion to continue. As the PJB does not feature a pilot, the flame stabilisation structure is quite different to the PPJB. The flame structure in the PJB is essentially a lifted purely premixed flame, which is an experimental configuration that is also quite unique. A suite of laser diagnostic measurements has been parametrically applied to flames in the PPJB and PJB. Laser Doppler Velocimetry (LDV) has been utilised to measure the mean and fluctuating radial and axial components of velocity at a point, with relevant time and length scale information being extracted from these measurements. One of the most interesting results from the LDV measurements is that in the PPJB the pilot delays the generation of high turbulence intensities, for flames that exhibit extinction the rapid increase of turbulence intensity after the pilot corresponds to the start of the extinction region. Using the LDV derived turbulence characteristics and laminar flame properties and plotting these flames on a traditional turbulent regime diagram indicates that all of the flames examined should fall in the so call distributed reaction regime. Planar imaging experiments have been conducted for flames using the PPJB and PJB to investigate the spatial structure of the temperature and selected minor species fields. Results from two different simultaneous 2D Rayleigh and OH PLIF experiments and a simultaneous 2D Rayleigh, OH PLIF and CH2O PLIF experiment are reported. For all of the flames examined in the PPJB and PJB a general trend of decreasing conditional mean temperature gradient with increasing turbulence intensity is observed. This indicates that a trend of so called flame front thickening with increased turbulence levels occurs for the flames examined. It is proposed that the mechanism for this flame front thickening is due to eddies penetrating and embedding in the instantaneous flame front. In the extinction region it is found that the OH concentration is significantly reduced compared to the initial ignition region. In the re-ignition region it is found that the OH level increases again indicating that an increase in the local reaction rate is occurring. In laminar premixed flames CH2O occurs in a thin layer in the reaction zone, it is found for all of the flames examined that the CH2O layer is significantly thicker than the laminar flame. For the high velocity flames beyond x/D=15, CH2O no longer exist in a distinct layer but rather in a near uniform field for the intermediate temperature regions. Examination of the product of CH2O and OH reveals that the heat release in the initial ignition region is high and rapidly decreases in the extinction region, an increase in the heat release further downstream is observed corresponding to the re-ignition region. This finding corresponds well with the initial hypothesis of an extinction region followed by a re-ignition region that was based on the mean chemiluminescence images. Detailed simultaneous measurement of major and minor species has been conducted using the line Raman-Rayleigh-LIF technique with CO LIF and crossed plane-OH PLIF at Sandia National Laboratories. By measuring all major species it is also possible to define a mixture fraction for all three streams of the PPJB. Using these three mixture fractions it was found that the influence of the pilot in the PPJB decays very rapidly for all but the lowest velocity flames. It was also found that for the high velocity flames exhibiting extinction, a significant proportion of the coflow fluid is entrained into the central jet combustion process at both the extinction region and re-ignition regions. The product of CO and OH conditional on temperature is shown to be proportion to the net production rate of CO2 for certain temperature ranges. By examining the product of CO and OH the hypothesis of an initial ignition region followed by an extinction region then a re-ignition region for certain PPJB flames has been further validated complementing the [CH2O][OH] imaging results. Numerical modelling results using the transported composition probability density function (TPDF) method coupled to a conventional Reynolds averaged Naiver Stokes (RANS) solver are shown in this thesis to successfully predict the occurrence of finite-rate chemistry effects for the PM1 PPJB flame series. To calculate the scalar variance and the degree of finite-rate chemistry effects correctly, it is found that a value of the mixing constant ( ) of approximately 8.0 is required. This value of is much larger than the standard excepted range of 1.5-2.3 for that has been established for non-premixed combustion. By examining the results of the RANS turbulence model in a non-reacting variable density jet, it is shown that the primary limitation of the predictive capability of the TPDF-RANS method is the RANS turbulence model when applied to variable density flows.
4

Numerical study of the characteristics of CNG, LPG and hydrogen turbulent premixed flames

Abdel-Raheem, Mohamed A. January 2015 (has links)
Numerical simulations have proven itself as a significant and powerful tool for accurate prediction of turbulent premixed flames in practical engineering devices. The work presented in this thesis concerns the development of simulation techniques for premixed turbulent combustion of three different fuels, namely, CNG, LPG and Hydrogen air mixtures. The numerical results are validated against published experimental data from the newly built Sydney combustion chamber. In this work a newly developed Large Eddy Simulation (LES) CFD model is applied to the new Sydney combustion chamber of size 50 x 50 x 250 mm (0.625 litre volume). Turbulence is generated in the chamber by introducing series of baffle plates and a solid square obstacle at various axial locations. These baffles can be added or removed from the chamber to adapt various experimental configurations for studies. This is essential to understand the flame behaviour and the structure. The LES numerical simulations are conducted using the Smagorinsky eddy viscosity model with standard dynamic procedures for sub-grid scale turbulence. Combustion is modelled by using a newly developed dynamic flame surface density (DFSD) model based on the flamelet assumption. Various numerical tests are carried out to establish the confidence in the LES based combustion modelling technique. A detailed analysis has been carried out to determine the regimes of combustion at different stages of flame propagation inside the chamber. The predictions using the DFSD combustion model are evaluated and validated against experimental measurements for various flow configurations. In addition, the in-house code capability is extended by implementing the Lewis number effects. The LES predictions are identified to be in a very good agreement with the experimental measurements for cases with high turbulence levels. However, some disagreement were observed with the quasi-laminar case. In addition a data analysis for experimental data, regarding the overpressure, flame position and the flame speed is carried out for the high and low turbulence cases. Moreover, an image processing procedure is used to extract the flame rate of stretch from both the experimental and numerical flame images that are used as a further method to validate the numerical results. For the grids under investigation, it is concluded that the employed grid is independent of the filter width and grid resolution. The applicability of the DFSD model using grid-independent results for turbulent premixed propagating flames was examined by validating the generated pressure and other flame characteristics, such as flame position and speed against experimental data. This study concludes that the predictions using DFSD model provide reasonably good results. It is found that LES predictions were slightly improved in predicting overpressure, flame position and speed by incorporating the Lewis number effect in the model. Also, the investigation demonstrates the effects of placing multiple obstacles at various locations in the path of the turbulent propagating premixed flames. It is concluded that the pressure generated in any individual configuration is directly proportional to the number of baffles plates. The flame position and speed are clearly dependent on the number of obstacles used and their blockage ratio. The flame stretch extracted from both the experimental and numerical images shows that hydrogen has the highest stretch values over CNG and LPG. Finally, the regime of combustion identified for the three fuels in the present combustion chamber is found to lie within the thin reaction zone. This finding supports the use of the laminar flamelet modelling concept that has been in use for the modelling of turbulent premixed flames in practical applications.
5

Numerical modelling of compressible turbulent premixed hydrogen flames

Turquand D'Auzay, Charles January 2016 (has links)
Turbulent combustion has a profound effect on the way we live our lives; homes and businesses predominantly rely on power generated by burning some form of fuel, and the vast majority of transport of passengers and cargo are driven by combustion. Fossil fuels remain readily available and relatively cheap, and so will continue to power the modern world for the foreseeable future. Combustion of fossil fuels produces emissions that detrimentally affect air quality, particularly in highly-populated cities, and are also widely believed to be contributing to global climate change. Consequently, increasing attention is being focused on alternative fuels, increased efficiency and reduced emissions. One alternative fuel is hydrogen, which introduces challenges in end-usage, storage and safety that are not encountered with more conventional fuels. Advances in computational power and software technology means that numerical simulation has a growing role in the development of combustors and safety evaluation. Despite these advances, many challenges remain; the broad range of time and length scales involved are coupled with complex thermodynamics and chemistry on top of turbulent fluid mechanics, which means that detailed simulations of even relatively-simple burners are still prohibitively expensive. Engineering turbulent flame models are required to reduce computational expense, and the challenge is to retain as much of the flow physics as possible. Furthermore, the choice of numerical approach has a significant effect on the quality of simulation, and different target applications place different demands on the numerical scheme. In the case of hydrogen explosion, the approach needs to be able to capture a range of physical behaviours including turbulence, low-speed deflagration, high-speed shock waves and potentially detonations. One such numerical approach that has enjoyed widespread success is finite volumes schemes based on the Godunov method. These methods perform well at all speeds, and have positive shock-capturing capability, but recent studies have demonstrated difficulties with numerical stability for more complex thermodynamics, specifically in the case of fully-conservative methods for multi-component fluids with varying thermodynamic properties. A recent development is the so-called double-flux method, which retains many of the positive properties of the fully-conservative approaches and does not suffer from the same numerical instabilities, but is quasi-conservative and involves additional computational expense. The present work consolidates the state-of-the-art in the literature, and considers two equation sets, based on mass fraction and volume fraction, respectively, along with fully-conservative and quasiconservative schemes. Comprehensive validation and evaluation of the different approaches is presented. It was found that both quasi-conservative approaches performed well, with a better conservative behaviour for the quasi-conservative volume fraction, but a better stability for the quasi-conservative mass fraction. Finally, the numerical tool developed is applied to turbulent combustion of premixed hydrogen in the context of the semi-confined experiments from the University of Sydney. The LES results showed an good overall agreement with the experimental data, and the critical parameters such as overpressure and flame speed where globally well captured, highlighting the large potential of LES for safety analysis.
6

A Computational Study of Ammonia Combustion

Khamedov, Ruslan 05 1900 (has links)
The utilization of ammonia as a fuel is a pragmatic approach to pave the way towards a low-carbon economy. Ammonia compromises almost 18 % of hydrogen by mass and accepted as one of the hydrogen combustion enablers with existing infrastructure for transportation and storage. From an environmental and sustainability standpoint, ammonia combustion is an attractive energy source with zero carbon dioxide emissions. However, from a practical point of view, the direct combustion of ammonia is not feasible due to the low reactive nature of ammonia. Due to the low combustion intensity, and the higher nitrogen oxide emission, ammonia was not fully investigated and there is still a lack of fundamental knowledge of ammonia combustion. In this thesis, the computational study of ammonia premixed flame characteristics under various hydrogen addition ratios and moderate or intense low oxygen dilution (MILD) conditions were investigated. Particularly, the heat release characteristics and dominant reaction pathways were analyzed. The analysis revealed that the peak of heat release for ammonia flame occurs near burned gas, which raises a question regarding the physics of this. Further analysis identified the dominant reaction pathways and the intermediate species (NH2 and OH), which are mainly produced in the downstream and back diffused to the leading edge and produce some heat in the low-temperature zone. To overcome low reactivity and poor combustion performance of pure ammonia mixture, the onboard ammonia decomposition to hydrogen and nitrogen followed by blending ammonia with hydrogen is a feasible approach to improve ammonia combustion intensity. With increasing hydrogen amount in the mixture, the enhancement of heat release occurs due to both transport and chemical effect of hydrogen. Another approach to mitigate the low reactive nature of ammonia may be eliminated by applying the promising combustion concept known as MILD combustion. The heat release characteristics and flame marker of ammonia turbulent premixed MILD combustion were investigated. The high fidelity numerical simulation was performed to answer fundamental questions of ammonia turbulent premixed combustion characteristics.
7

[en] CONTRIBUTION TO THE LARGE EDDY SIMULATION OF A TURBULENT PREMIXED FLAME STABILIZED IN A HIGH SPEED FLOW / [pt] CONTRIBUIÇÃO À SIMULAÇÃO DAS GRANDES ESCALAS DE UMA CHAMA TURBULENTA PRÉ‐MISTURADA ESTABILIZADA EM UM ESCOAMENTO A ALTA VELOCIDADE

FERNANDO OLIVEIRA DE ANDRADE 18 October 2017 (has links)
[pt] Uma metodologia híbrida envolvendo simulação de grandes escalas e função densidade probabilidade transportada (LES-PDF) é desenvolvida para realizar simulações de escoamentos turbulentos reativos a baixo número de Mach. Equações de transporte de massa, da quantidade de movimento e de um escalar são resolvidas em conjunto com uma equação de estado no contexto do método LES. A modelagem da turbulência é realizada pelo modelo clássico de Smagorinsky e a taxa de produção química é representada pela lei de Arrhenius, para reação de combustão única, global e irreversível. As equações de transporte são discretizadas no espaço e no tempo mediante o uso de esquemas de segunda ordem, sobre malhas cartesianas uniformes, no âmbito do método dos volumes finitos. Os efeitos da turbulência sobre a combustão na escala sub-filtro são determinados por uma abordagem lagrangeana da PDF, a qual faz uso da técnica de Monte Carlo: equações diferenciais estocásticas (SDE), equivalentes a equação de Fokker-Plank, são utilizadas para a variável de progresso da reação química. LES e PDF evoluem simultaneamente, trocando informações a cada passo de integração no tempo, de modo que o campo de velocidade filtrado, a freqüência turbulenta e o coeficiente de difusão são fornecidos por LES, enquanto o modelo PDF retorna a taxa de reação química filtrada. Devido ao elevado número de partículas empregado no modelo PDF, a paralelização do programa lagrangeano é realizada, com base na estratégia de decomposição de domínios, implementada no programa euleriano. O modelo final é usado para simular uma configuração experimental que consiste de uma chama de metano e ar, estabilizada entre escoamentos paralelos de gases queimados e gases frescos em um canal de seção transversal quadrada constante. Uma comparação detalhada entre os resultados obtidos e os dados experimentais é realizada. / [en] A hybrid Large Eddy Simulation / transported Probability Density Function (LES-PDF) computational model is developed to perform the numerical simulation of variable-density low Mach number turbulent reactive flows. Transport equations for mass, momentum, and scalars are solved together with an equation of state within the LES framework. Turbulence is modeled using the classical Smagorinsky closure whereas chemical reaction is first addressed thanks to a global single-step chemistry scheme. The governing equations are discretized using second order accuracy spatial and temporal approximations applied to uniform Cartesian meshes within a finite volume framework. The effects of subgrid scale (SGS) turbulence on the combustion processes are accounted for by means of a Lagrangian transported PDF model which is coupled with the LES solver. The PDF model relies on the use of a Monte Carlo technique: Stochastic Differential Equations (SDE), equivalent to the Fokker- Planck equations are considered for the progress variable. LES and PDF models are solved simultaneously, exchanging information at each integration time step, the velocity field, turbulence frequency and diffusion coefficient being provided by LES, whereas the PDF model returns the filtered chemical reaction rate. Parallelization of the Lagrangian solver has been performed based on the domain decomposition strategy, the same strategy being already implemented for the eulerian LES solver. The resulting computational model is used to perform the simulation of an experimental test case consisting of a CH4-air flame established between two streams of fresh and burnt pilot gases in a constant area square cross section channel. The accuracy of the numerical solutions provided by the hybrid LESPDF approach is assessed by detailed comparisons with experimental data.
8

Développement d'un modèle de flamme épaissie dynamique pour la simulation aux grandes échelles de flammes turbulentes prémélangées / Development of the dynamic thickened flame model for large eddy simulation of turbulent premixed combustion

Yoshikawa, Itaru 23 June 2010 (has links)
La simulation numérique est l’un des outils les plus puissants pour concevoir etoptimiser les systèmes industriels. Dans le domaine de la Dynamique des FluidesNumériques (CFD, "Computational Fluid Dynamics"), la simulation auxgrandes échelles (LES, "Large Eddy Simulation") est aujourd’hui largementutilisée pour calculer les écoulements turbulents réactifs, où les tourbillons degrande taille sont calculés explicitement, tandis que l’effet de ceux de petitetaille est modelisé. Des modèles de sous-mailles sont requis pour fermer leséquations de transport en LES, et dans le contexte de la simulation de la combustionturbulente, le plissement de la surface de flamme de sous-maille doitêtre modélisé.En général, augmenter le plissement de la surface de flamme de sous-maille favorisela combustion. L’amplitude de la promotion est donnée par une fonctiond’efficacité, qui est dérivée d’une hypothèse d’équilibre entre la production etla destruction de la surface de flamme. Dans les méthodes conventionnelles,le calcul de la fonction d’efficacité nécessite une constante qui dépend de lagéométrie de la chambre de combustion, de l’intensité de turbulence, de larichesse du mélange de air-carburant etc, et cette constante doit être fixée audébut de la simulation. Autrement dit, elle doit être déterminé empiriquement.Cette thèse développe un modèle de sous-maille pour la LES en combustionturbulente, qui est appelé le modèle dynamique de flammelette épaissie (DTF,"dynamic thickened flamelet model"), qui détermine la valeur de la constanteen fonction des conditions de l’écoulement sans utiliser des données empiriques.Ce modèle est tout d’abord testé sur une flamme laminaire unidimensionnellepour vérifier la convergence de la fonction d’efficacité vers l’unité (aucun plissementde la surface de flamme de sous-maille). Puis il est appliqué en combinaisonavec le modèle dynamique de Smagorinsky (Dynamic Smagorinskymodel) aux simulations multidimensionnelles d’une flamme en V, stabilisée enaval d’un dièdre. Les résultats de la simulation en trois dimensions sont alorscomparés avec les données expérimentales obtenues sur une expérience de mêmegéométrie. La comparaison montre la faisabilité de la formulation dynamique. / Numerical simulation is one of the most powerful tools to design and optimizeindustrial facilities. In the field of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD),Large Eddy Simulation (LES) is widely used to compute turbulent reactingflows, where larger turbulent motions are explicitly computed, while only theeffect of smaller ones is modeled. Subgrid models are required to close thetransport equations in LES, and in the context of the simulation of turbulentcombustion, the subgrid-scale wrinkling of the flame front must be modeled.In general, subgrid-scale flame wrinkling promotes the chemical reaction. Themagnitude of the promotion is given through an efficiency function derivedfrom an equilibrium assumption between production and destruction of flamesurface. In conventional methods, the calculation of the efficiency functionrequires a constant which depends on the geometry of the combustion chamber,turbulence intensity, the equivalence ratio of the fuel-air mixture, and so on;this constant must be prescribed at the beginning of the simulation. In otherwords, empirical knowledge is required.This thesis develops a subgrid-scale model for LES of turbulent combustion,called the dynamic thickened flamelet (DTF) model, which determines the valueof the constant from the flow conditions without any empirical input.The model is first tested in a one-dimensional laminar flame to verify the convergenceof the efficiency function to unity (no subgrid-scale flame front wrinkling).Then it is applied to multi-dimensional simulations of V-shape flamestabilized downstream of a triangular flame holder in combination with the dynamicSmagorinsky model. The results of the three-dimensional simulation arethen compared with the experimental data obtained through the experimentof the same geometry. The comparison proves the feasibility of the dynamicformulation.
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Explicit and implicit large eddy simulation of turbulent combustion with multi-scale forcing / Simulation des grandes échelles explicite et implicite de la combustion turbulente avec forçage multi-échelles

Zhao, Song 03 May 2016 (has links)
Le contexte de cette étude est l’optimisation de la combustion turbulente prémélangée de syngaz pour la production propre d’énergie. Un brûleur CH4/air de type bec Bunsen avec forçage turbulent multi-échelles produit par un système de trois grilles, est simulé numériquement par différentes techniques de simulation des grandes échelles (SGE), et les résultats sont comparés à l’expérience. On a développé et appliqué une formulation bas-Mach du solveur Navier-Stokes basé sur différents schémas numériques, allant des différences finies centrées d’ordre 4 à des versions avancées des schémas WENO d’ordre 5. La méthodologie est évaluée sur une série de cas-tests classiques (flamme laminaire 1D prémélangée, turbulence homogène et isotrope en auto-amortissement), et sur des simulations 2D de la flamme turbulente prémélangée expérimentale. Les SGE implicites (ILES), i.e. sans aucune modélisation sous-maille, et explicites avec le modèle de flamme épaissie et un modèle de plissement sous-maille nouvellement élaboré (TFLES), sont appliquées à la simulation 3D du brûleur expérimental. Les résultats montrent que l’approche TFLES avec un schéma d’ordre élevé à faible dissipation numérique prédit correctement la longueur de la flamme et la densité de surface de flamme. La SGE implicite avec un schéma WENO avancé produit une flamme trop courte mais réaliste à condition que la taille de la maille soit de l’ordre de l’épaisseur de flamme laminaire. La représentation des interactions flamme/turbulence est néanmoins très différente entre TFLES et ILES. / The context of this study is the optimization of premixed turbulent combustion of syngas for clean energy production. A Bunsen-type CH4/air turbulent premixed burner with a multi-scale grid generator is simulated with different Large Eddy Simulation (LES) strategies and compared to experimental results. A low-Mach formulation of a compressible Navier-Stokes solver based on different numerical methods, ranging from 4th order central finite difference to 5th order advanced WENO schemes, is developed and applied. Classical test cases (1D laminar premixed flame, decaying HIT), and 2D simulations of the turbulent premixed flame are performed to assess the numerical methodology. Implicit LES (ILES), i.e. LES without any explicit subgrid modeling, and explicit LES with the Thickened Flame model and subgrid scale flame wrinkling modelling (TFLES) are applied to simulate numerically the 3D experimental burner. Results show that TFLES with a high-order low dissipation scheme predicts quite well the experimental flame length and flame surface density. ILES with advanced WENO schemes produces a slightly shorter although realistic flame provided the grid spacing is of order of the laminar flame thickness. The representation of flame/turbulence interactions in TFLES and ILES are however quite different.

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