Abstract

In the current work the jet spray combustion reflecting an experimental piloted spray burner is simulated numerically. In the simulations the diluted ethanol spray evaporates in the hot surrounding, the gaseous fuel diffuses from spray fuel-rich core into the oxidizer fuel-lean region and autoignites. An in-house high-order compact difference LES solver is used to carry out the computations. The reaction rates are modelled using Implicit LES approach based on the single-step global reaction. The continuous phase is modelled in the Eulerian reference frame while the droplets in the Lagrangian form. The studies are focused on the influence of the co-flow temperature and spray initial Sauter mean diameter (SMD) on the flame lift-off height, autoignition delay and the reaction zone features. The results are compared with the experimental data and show good agreement in terms of lift-off height. It is almost linearly related to the co-flow temperatures. It is found that for the same fuel mass loading, droplets with smaller SMDs significantly shorten the autoignition delay. Moreover the autoignition delay and the lift-off heights are influenced mostly by the droplets SMD rather than by the co-flow temperature.

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