Abstract

This article describes the macroscopic and microscopic features of flames spreading over solid-fuel surfaces by examining and comparing three models. The first model examines ignition and flame spread over a solid-fuel surface using a two-dimensional numerical simulation code. This model employs variable density, variable thermophysical properties and one-step global finite-rate chemistry. The second model, a macroscopic ‘field’ model, is solved in terms of the mixture fraction ( Z ) and total enthalpy ( H ) functions. Comparisons are made with numerical predictions for primitive quantities: temperature, species distributions and velocity fields; and derived quantities: heat flux, mass flux, mixture fraction, enthalpy function and flame stretch rate. The third model yields a ‘localized’ flame structure description near the flame attachment point. Theoretical formulas are produced for the quenching distance, the leading edge heat flux, and the flame structure, as characterized by reactivity, temperature field and species distributions. The analytical predictions are compared with numerical simulations to derive flame microstructure scaling parameters.

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