Abstract
A medium-scale (30 cm diameter) methanol pool fire was simulated using Sandia National Laboratories’ Sierra/Fuego low-Mach number multi-physics turbulent reacting flow code. Large Eddy Simulation (LES) with subgrid turbulent kinetic energy closure was used as the turbulence model. Combustion was modeled using a strained laminar flamelet library approach. Radiative heat transfer was modeled using the gray-gas approximation. This paper details analysis done to support a validation study for the fire model. In this analysis, integral quantities were primarily examined. The radiant fraction was computed and used as a model calibration parameter. Integrated buoyancy flux was calculated and compared to an engineering correlation. Entrainment rate was computed with and without a mixture fraction threshold filter and compared to engineering correlations. Turbulent kinetic energy was computed and the effect of mesh size on the subgrid and total turbulent kinetic energy was examined. Flame height was calculated using an intermittency definition with two input parameters. A sensitivity study was then conducted to determine the sensitivity of the estimated flame height to the input parameters. This analysis aided in achieving the primary validation study objectives by providing model calibration and expanding the scope of the validation effort. In addition, the range of physics examined was increased, enhancing the understanding of the model's overall performance and of the relationship between phenomena.
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