Abstract

Flame acceleration and deflagration-to-detonation transition (DDT) in a channel containing an array of staggered cylindrical obstacles and a stoichiometric hydrogen-air mixture were studied by solving the fully-compressible reactive Navier-Stokes equations using a high-order numerical algorithm and adaptive mesh refinement. Four different longitudinal spacings (ls) of the neighboring obstacle rows (i.e., ls = 15.28, 19.1, 25.4, and 38.2 mm, corresponding to 1.2, 1.5, 2 and 3 times of obstacle diameter, respectively) were used to examine the effect of obstacle spacing on flame acceleration and DDT. The results show that the main mechanisms of flame acceleration and transition to detonation in all the cases studied are consistent. While the flame acceleration is caused by the growth of flame surface area in the initial stage, it is governed by shock-flame interactions in the later stage when shock waves are generated. The focusing of strong shocks at flame front is responsible for the initiation of detonation. It was found that the flame propagation speed and the DDT run-up distance and time are highly dependent on ls. Specifically, the flame acceleration declines as ls increases, since a larger ls leads to less disturbance of flow by obstacles per unit channel length. For detonation initiation, both the run-up distance and time increase with the increase of ls. It is interesting to note that the DDT distance and time increase significantly as ls increases from 19.1 mm to 25.4 mm. This is related to the slowdown of the increase rate of energy release over a period before DDT occurs under large ls condition, because every time the flame passes over an obstacle row the shock-flame interaction is delayed and numerous isolated pockets of unburned gas material are formed.

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