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Analysis of flame propagation and autoignition for a lifted nitrogen-diluted hydrogen turbulent jet flame in a vitiated coflow

Abstract

The stabilizing mechanism of a lifted jet flame is thought to be controlled by either autoignition, flame propagation, or a combination of the two. Experimental data for a turbulent hydrogen diluted with nitrogen jet flame in a vitiated coflow at atmospheric pressure, demonstrates distinct stability regimes where a jet flame is either attached, lifted, lifted-unsteady, or blown out. A 1-D parabolic RANS model is used, where turbulence-chemistry interactions are modeled with the joint scalar-PDF approach, and mixing is modeled with the Linear Eddy Model. The model only accounts for autoignition as a flame stabilization mechanism. However, by comparing the local turbulent flame speed to the local turbulent mean velocity, maps of regions where the flame speed is greater than the flow speed are created, which allow an estimate of lift-off heights based on flame propagation. Model results for the attached, lifted, and lifted-unsteady regimes show that the correct trend is captured. Additionally, at lower coflow equivalence ratios flame propagation appears dominant, while at higher coflow equivalence ratios autoignition appears dominant. Copyright © 2011 by the Western States Section/Combustion Institute All rights reserved.

Category

Academic chapter/article/Conference paper

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Don Frederick
  • Andrew North
  • Jyh-Yuan Chen
  • Robert Dibble
  • Andrea Gruber

Affiliation

  • University of California, Berkeley
  • SINTEF Energy Research / Termisk energi

Year

2011

Publisher

Combustion Institute - Western States Section

Book

Fall Technical Meeting of the Western States Section of the Combustion Institute 2011, WSS/CI 2011

ISBN

978-161839304-3

Page(s)

170 - 180

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