Abstract

This paper investigates the extinction characteristics of premixed stagnation flames (PSFs) with controlled heat losses and flow disturbances. The low-frequency air flow pulsations that imitate the operational transients in practical combustors were specially introduced. The tunable diode-laser absorption spectroscopy (TDLAS) measurement was applied to obtain the temperature profile and wall heat flux. It is found that, for steady flame with a fixed equivalence ratio, the extinction stretch rate dramatically increases as the wall heat flux decreases. The extinction criterion is summarized as a global Karlovitz number of 0.57 by establishing a relationship between the global and local stretch rates. Numerical simulations reveal that the local extinction Karlovitz number of steady PSFs is approximately 1.0 regardless of the conditions such as heat flux and equivalence ratio. Further experiments present that the air pulsations with a repetition of ∼5 Hz significantly deteriorate the flame stability. Particularly, for unsteady perturbed flames, the extinction stretch rate exhibits a nonlinear trend, yielding two regimes with discrepant sensitivities to wall heat flux. The unsteady simulation then highlights a local stretch rate overshoot in the presence of pulsation. It is caused by the time delay between the inlet velocity and flame front movement that eventually leads to poor flame stability. Moreover, in the high heat-flux regime, a smaller local stretch rate overshoot results in the weak dependence of extinction limits on heat fluxes.

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