Abstract

This study analyses the stability characteristics of the shear layer vortices (SLV) in a reacting jet in crossflow, analysing effects of flame position, momentum flux ratio ( $J$ ) and density ratio ( $S$ ). It utilizes 40 kHz particle image velocimetry to characterize the dominant SLV frequencies, streamwise evolution and convective/global stability characteristics for three different canonical configurations, one non-reacting and two reacting (‘R1’ and ‘R2’). In the non-reacting case, both convective and global instability is observed, depending upon $S$ and $J$ . Qualitatively similar $S$ dependencies occur for the R1 reacting case where the radial flame position lies outside the jet shear layer, albeit with slower SLV growth rates. When the flame lies inside the jet shear layer, the R2 reacting case, a qualitatively different behaviour is observed, as vorticity concentration in the shear layers is suppressed almost completely. Finally, we show that frequency and stability characteristics of the non-reacting and R1 cases can be scaled in a unified manner using a counter-current shear layer model. This model relates these SLV behaviours to a vorticity layer thickness, a velocity scale and an effective density ratio (noting that there are three distinct densities associated with the jet, the crossflow and the burned gases). These parameters were extracted from the data and used to collapse the frequency scaling, and to explain the transition to self-excited oscillatory behaviour.

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