Abstract
Fast and reliable high altitude re-ignition is a critical requirement for the development of alternative jet fuels (AJFs). To achieve stable combustion, a spark kernel needs to transit in a partially or fully extinguished flow to develop a flame front. Understanding the relight characteristics of the AJFs is complicated by the chaoticity of the turbulent flow and variations in the spark properties. The focus of this study is the prediction of such characteristics by high-fidelity simulations, with a specific focus on fuel composition effect on the ignition process. For this purpose, a previously developed computational framework is applied, which utilizes high-fidelity LES simulations, a hybrid tabulation approach for modeling forced ignition and detailed quantification of uncertainty resulting from initial and boundary conditions to predict ignition probability. The method is applied to two alternative fuels (named C1 and C5) and Jet-A fuel (named A2) under gaseous conditions. Results show that the mixing of kernel and fuel–air mixture is not affected by the ignition process, but chemistry effects strongly dominate ignition probability. In particular, C1 exhibits much lower ignition probability than the other two fuels, especially at lean operating conditions. More importantly, this behavior is contradictory to ignition delay experiments which predict longer delay times for C5 compared to C1. Comparisons with experiments show that the comprehensive modeling approach captures the ignition trends. Analysis of kernel trajectories in composition space shows that the variations are caused by the relative effects of kernel mixing, response to strain, and ignition properties of the fuel.
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