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Citation
Tags
HERO ID
2669163
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Joint PDF Closure of Turbulent Premixed Flames
Author(s)
Hack, ML; Jenny, P
Year
2013
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Flow, Turbulence and Combustion
ISSN:
1386-6184
EISSN:
1573-1987
Volume
90
Issue
2
Page Numbers
373-386
DOI
10.1007/s10494-012-9438-4
Web of Science Id
WOS:000315042000009
Abstract
In this paper, a novel model for turbulent premixed combustion in the corrugated flamelet regime is presented, which is based on transporting a joint probability density function (PDF) of velocity, turbulence frequency and a scalar vector. Due to the high dimensionality of the corresponding sample space, the PDF equation is solved with a Monte-Carlo method, where individual fluid elements are represented by computational particles. Unlike in most other PDF methods, the source term not only describes reaction rates, but accounts for "ignition" of reactive unburnt fluid elements due to propagating embedded quasi laminar flames within a turbulent flame brush. Unperturbed embedded flame structures and a constant laminar flame speed (as expected in the corrugated flamelet regime) are assumed. The probability for an individual particle to "ignite" during a time step is calculated based on an estimate of the mean flame surface density (FSD), latter gets transported by the PDF method. Whereas this model concept has recently been published [21], here, a new model to account for local production and dissipation of the FSD is proposed. The following particle properties are introduced: a flag indicating whether a particle represents the unburnt mixture; a flame residence time, which allows to resolve the embedded quasi laminar flame structure; and a flag indicating whether the flame residence time lies within a specified range. Latter is used to transport the FSD, but to account for flame stretching, curvature effects, collapse and cusp formation, a mixing model for the residence time is employed. The same mixing model also accounts for molecular mixing of the products with a co-flow. To validate the proposed PDF model, simulation results of three piloted methane-air Bunsen flames are compared with experimental data and very good agreement is observed.
Keywords
Transported PDF method; Turbulent premixed flame modeling
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