Abstract

A numerical study is conducted of methane-air coflow diffusion flames at microgravity (μg) and normal gravity (lg), and comparisons are made with experimental data in the literature. The model employed uses a detailed gas phase chemical kinetic mechanism that includes PAH formation and growth, and is coupled to a sectional soot particle dynamics model. The model is able to accurately predict the trends observed experimentally with reduction of gravity without any tuning of the model for different flames. The microgravity sooting flames were found to have lower temperatures and higher volume fraction than their normal gravity counterparts. In the absence of gravity, the flame radii increase due to elimination of buoyance forces and reduction of flow velocity, which is consistent with experimental observations. Soot formation along the wings is seen to be surface growth dominated, while PAH condensation plays a more major role on centerline soot formation. Surface growth and PAH growth increase in microgravity primarily due to increases in the residence time inside the flame. The rate of increase of surface growth is more significant compared to PAH growth, which causes soot distribution to shift from the centerline of the flame to the wings in microgravity. Keywords: laminar diffusion flame,methane-air,microgravity, soot formation, numerical modelling

Highlights

  • Soot formation plays a crucial role within the context of fire spreading in microgravity, i.e. fire safety in manned spacecraft

  • In microgravity the soot volume fractions measured using laser extinction increased by a factor 2-4 compared to the same flame under normal gravity

  • According to Liu et al [15], these radiation heat losses are more significant at microgravity than 1g and completely alter the structure of the flame

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Summary

Introduction

Soot formation plays a crucial role within the context of fire spreading in microgravity, i.e. fire safety in manned spacecraft. In microgravity the soot volume fractions measured using laser extinction increased by a factor 2-4 compared to the same flame under normal gravity. The peak soot volume fractions of the microgravity flames were found to be higher than the normal gravity flames by a factor of 4–8.

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