Abstract

The dynamic response of a turbulent, perfectly premixed flame, stabilized by means of an aerodynamic flameholder, to an upstream acoustic perturbation of the approaching flow is investigated by means of experimental and analytical tools, and simulated through a large eddy simulation of the reacting flow. It is found that the main contribution to the unsteady heat release rate is due to the fluctuation in area of the flame front, which in turn is strongly influenced by the corresponding response of the flow field to the acoustic perturbation. Numerical data show that perturbing a swirling flow that undergoes vortex breakdown results in a strong displacement of the breakdown position along its axis, while its outer part only weakly responds to the perturbation. This results in a translational motion of the flame's anchoring point, which ultimately leads to an unsteady variation of the flame area and, therefore, of the amount of heat released. This unsteady heat release mechanism can be described in a way similar to that used for characterizing the dynamic behaviour of ducted flames, stabilized by means of a bluff-body flameholder; differently from these models, however, the anchoring point of the flame can now fluctuate freely in space, and the time delay of the system is no longer identified with the travelling time of a perturbation of the flame element along it, but is now associated with the oscillation of the breakdown position. Controlling the interaction between breakdown and acoustics should allow for obtaining optimal flame dynamics, so as to limit and possibly avoid the occurrence of strong pulsation peaks whenever the combustion device is operated in an acoustically closed system.

Full Text
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