Abstract

This paper presents an experimental study of flame propagation through a partially-premixed flow following ignition. A combination of simultaneous high-speed acetone planar laser induced fluorescence (PLIF) and stereoscopic particle image velocimetry (SPIV) was utilized for time-resolved measurements of mixture fraction, flow field and flame position. This provides access to the major quantities needed to characterize non-premixed flames. High quality mixture fraction measurements with signal-to-noise ratios up to 120 for unity mixture fraction were made feasible using a combination of a conventional high-speed laser at 10kHz for LIF excitation and a wavelet based de-noising algorithm to reject camera noise. It was observed that flame propagation in the far-field of a partially-premixed jet takes place in a premixed mode, with the flame propagating through highly stratified mixtures until it approaches locations containing mixtures outside the flammability limits. In these areas the flame recedes and further propagation is controlled by mixing processes of air and fuel. Even though flame propagation is then mixing-controlled, the flame is not observed to switch into a non-premixed mode. Instead, mixing ahead of the flame takes place until locally premixed flammable mixtures are recovered for subsequent flame propagation.

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