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Application of PDF mixing models to premixed flames with differential diffusion

Application of PDF mixing models to premixed flames with differential diffusion
Application of PDF mixing models to premixed flames with differential diffusion
Differential diffusion alters the balance of reaction and diffusion in turbulent premixed combustion, affecting the performance and emissions of combustion devices. Modelling combustion devices with Probability or Filtered Density Function (PDF or FDF) methods provides an exact treatment for the change in composition due to chemical reaction, while molecular mixing has to be modelled. Previous PDF molecular mixing models do not account for differential diffusion in a manner which satisfies realizability requirements. A new approach for treating differential diffusion, which ensures realizability, is proposed for pairwise-exchange mixing models in general, and applied in the Interaction by Exchange with the Mean (IEM) model of Dopazo (1975), and in the Euclidean Minimum Spanning Tree (EMST) model of Subramaniam and Pope (1998). The new differential diffusion models are referred to as IEM-DD and EMST-DD respectively.

Results from two and three-dimensional DNS of turbulent premixed methane-air combustion show that mixing rates and conditional statistics of species mass fractions depend on species diffusivities and the combustion regime. Zero-dimensional PDF model results obtained for the two-dimensional DNS case show that the EMST-DD model best reproduces the features that characterize differential diffusion in the DNS. The essential feature of the EMSTDD
model, which accounts for its success in turbulent premixed combustion, is that differential mixing rates are imposed within a model which mixes locally in composition space
0010-2180
2398-2414
Richardson, E.S.
a8357516-e871-40d8-8a53-de7847aa2d08
Chen, J.H.
fd295f97-acff-4984-a655-ee18d3b2a734
Richardson, E.S.
a8357516-e871-40d8-8a53-de7847aa2d08
Chen, J.H.
fd295f97-acff-4984-a655-ee18d3b2a734

Richardson, E.S. and Chen, J.H. (2012) Application of PDF mixing models to premixed flames with differential diffusion. Combustion and Flame, 159 (7), 2398-2414. (doi:10.1016/j.combustflame.2012.02.026).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Differential diffusion alters the balance of reaction and diffusion in turbulent premixed combustion, affecting the performance and emissions of combustion devices. Modelling combustion devices with Probability or Filtered Density Function (PDF or FDF) methods provides an exact treatment for the change in composition due to chemical reaction, while molecular mixing has to be modelled. Previous PDF molecular mixing models do not account for differential diffusion in a manner which satisfies realizability requirements. A new approach for treating differential diffusion, which ensures realizability, is proposed for pairwise-exchange mixing models in general, and applied in the Interaction by Exchange with the Mean (IEM) model of Dopazo (1975), and in the Euclidean Minimum Spanning Tree (EMST) model of Subramaniam and Pope (1998). The new differential diffusion models are referred to as IEM-DD and EMST-DD respectively.

Results from two and three-dimensional DNS of turbulent premixed methane-air combustion show that mixing rates and conditional statistics of species mass fractions depend on species diffusivities and the combustion regime. Zero-dimensional PDF model results obtained for the two-dimensional DNS case show that the EMST-DD model best reproduces the features that characterize differential diffusion in the DNS. The essential feature of the EMSTDD
model, which accounts for its success in turbulent premixed combustion, is that differential mixing rates are imposed within a model which mixes locally in composition space

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Published date: July 2012
Organisations: Engineering Science Unit

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 203177
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/203177
ISSN: 0010-2180
PURE UUID: 8ea4bd36-2b90-47c5-b2f2-949a75c3aa4b
ORCID for E.S. Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7631-0377

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Date deposited: 14 Nov 2011 12:06
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:37

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Contributors

Author: E.S. Richardson ORCID iD
Author: J.H. Chen

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