Abstract

Hot-jet ignition is usually designed to reduce emissions in lean-burn combustion engines, and has potential in enabling novel pressure-gain combustion. Inspired by our experimental observations related to wave-rotor combustion chamber ignition, this work employs a numerical method to examine the sudden injection of a hot jet into a quiescent mixture of CH4–H2-air and the subsequent ignition. The goal is to provide the range of thermo-physical scalars that are supportive of successful ignition. The evolution of scalar fields is evaluated using large-eddy simulation (LES). The temporal evolution of mixture fraction, the squared gradient of mixture fraction (as indicative of scalar dissipation rate), strain rate, and intermediate species are investigated in order to find the appropriate physical conditions which support ignition. Independent distribution of stain rate and squared gradient of mixture fraction, especially in the leading head vortex, shows the necessity of correlated scalar analysis of the ignition process. Experimental and numerical methods are then employed to provide the qualitative and quantitative understanding of ignition process for fuels with two distinct hydrogen contents. Results show the meaningful difference in spatial distribution of local ignition as hydrogen content of the fuel increases.

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