Abstract

A three-dimensional compressible Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) analysis has been carried out for head-on quenching of a statistically planar stoichiometric methane-air flame by an isothermal inert wall. A multi-step chemical mechanism for methane-air combustion is used for the purpose of detailed chemistry DNS. For head-on quenching of stoichiometric methane-air flames, the mass fractions of major reactant species such as methane and oxygen tend to vanish at the wall during flame quenching. The absence of text {OH} at the wall gives rise to accumulation of carbon monoxide during flame quenching because text {CO} cannot be oxidised anymore. Furthermore, it has been found that low-temperature reactions give rise to accumulation of text {HO}_{2} and mathrm {H}_{2}mathrm {O}_{2} at the wall during flame quenching. Moreover, these low temperature reactions are responsible for non-zero heat release rate at the wall during flame-wall interaction. In order to perform an in-depth comparison between simple and detailed chemistry DNS results, a corresponding simulation has been carried out for the same turbulence parameters for a representative single-step Arrhenius type irreversible chemical mechanism. In the corresponding simple chemistry simulation, heat release rate vanishes once the flame reaches a threshold distance from the wall. The distributions of reaction progress variable c and non-dimensional temperature T are found to be identical to each other away from the wall for the simple chemistry simulation but this equality does not hold during head-on quenching. The inequality between c (defined based on text {CH}_{4} mass fraction) and T holds both away from and close to the wall for the detailed chemistry simulation but it becomes particularly prominent in the near-wall region. The temporal evolutions of wall heat flux and wall Peclet number (i.e. normalised wall-normal distance of T = 0.9 isosurface) for both simple and detailed chemistry laminar and turbulent cases have been found to be qualitatively similar. However, small differences have been observed in the numerical values of the maximum normalised wall heat flux magnitude left ({Phi }_{max } right )_{mathrm {L}} and the minimum Peclet number (Pe_{min })_{mathrm {L}} obtained from simple and detailed chemistry based laminar head-on quenching calculations. Detailed explanations have been provided for the observed differences in behaviours of left ({Phi }_{max }right )_{mathrm {L}} and (Pe_{min })_{mathrm {L}}. The usual Flame Surface Density (FSD) and scalar dissipation rate (SDR) based reaction rate closures do not adequately predict the mean reaction rate of reaction progress variable in the near-wall region for both simple and detailed chemistry simulations. It has been found that recently proposed FSD and SDR based reaction rate closures based on a-priori DNS analysis of simple chemistry data perform satisfactorily also for the detailed chemistry case both away from and close to the wall without any adjustment to the model parameters.

Highlights

  • Inside combustor chambers, cooling of the walls is necessary, because the burned gas temperature is often higher than the melting point of the combustor material

  • The head-on quenching (HOQ) of statistically turbulent planar flames by an isothermal inert wall has been analysed in this study based on three-dimensional compressible Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) simulations for a representative single-step simple chemistry and a multi-step detailed chemical mechanism of methane-air mixture

  • The distributions of reaction progress variable c and non-dimensional temperature T remain identical to each other away from the wall for simple chemistry simulations but this equality does not hold during head-on quenching

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Summary

Introduction

Inside combustor chambers, cooling of the walls is necessary, because the burned gas temperature is often higher than the melting point of the combustor material. The maximum wall heat flux in turbulent head-on quenching of statistically planar turbulent flames increases with decreasing characteristic Lewis number and the quenching distance for turbulent sub-unity Lewis number (i.e. Le < 1) flames has been found to be smaller than the corresponding laminar flame value, whereas the quenching distance for turbulent flames with Le = 1, and Le > 1 remains comparable to their corresponding laminar values This DNS database was utilised to analyse the statistical behaviours of enstrophy [11], FSD [12] and scalar dissipation rate (SDR) [10, 13, 14] in the near-wall region. The implications of flame quenching on the species distribution in the near-wall region, in particular for the intermediate species, are impossible to extract from simple chemistry simulation data This analysis addresses the aforementioned gaps in the existing literature by carrying out three-dimensional DNS of head-on quenching of a statistically planar turbulent stoichiometric methane-air premixed flame by an isothermal inert wall. The main findings will be summarised and conclusions will be drawn in the final section of this paper

Mathematical Background and Numerical Implementation
Results & Discussion
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Conclusions
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