Abstract

Present-day demands on combustion equipment are increasing the need for improved understanding and prediction of turbulent combustion. Large eddy simulation (LES), in which the large-scale flow is resolved on the grid, leaving only the small-scale flow to be modeled, provides a natural framework for combustion simulations as the transient nature of the flow is resolved. In most situations; however, the flame is thinner than the LES grid, and subgrid modeling is required to handle the turbulence-chemistry interaction. Here we examine the predictive capabilities between LES flamelet models, such as the flamelet progress variable (LES-FPV) model, and LES finite rate chemistry models, such as the thickened flame model (LES-TFM), the eddy dissipation concept (LES-EDC) model, and the partially stirred reactor model (LES-PaSR). The different models are here used to examine a swirl-stabilized premixed flame in a laboratory gas turbine combustor, featuring the triple annular research swirler (TARS), for which high-quality experimental data is available. The comparisons include velocity and temperature profiles as well as combustor dynamics and NO formation.

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