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HERO ID
6066982
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Prediction of autoignition in a lifted methane/air flame using an unsteady flamelet/progress variable model
Author(s)
Ihme, M; See, Y
Year
2010
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Combustion and Flame
ISSN:
0010-2180
Volume
157
Issue
10
Page Numbers
1850-1862
DOI
10.1016/j.combustflame.2010.07.015
Web of Science Id
WOS:000281337800005
URL
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0010218010002038
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Abstract
An unsteady flamelet/progress variable (UFPV) model has been developed for the prediction of autoignition in turbulent lifted flames. The model is a consistent extension to the steady flamelet/progress variable (SFPV) approach, and employs an unsteady flamelet formulation to describe the transient evolution of all thermochemical quantities during the flame ignition process. In this UFPV model, all thermochemical quantities are parameterized by mixture fraction, reaction progress parameter, and stoichiometric scalar dissipation rate, eliminating the explicit dependence on a flamelet time scale. An a priori study is performed to analyze critical modeling assumptions that are associated with the population of the flamelet state space. For application to LES, the UFPV model is combined with a presumed PDF closure to account for subgrid contributions of mixture fraction and reaction progress variable. The model was applied in LES of a lifted methane/air flame. Additional calculations were performed to quantify the interaction between turbulence and chemistry a posteriori. Simulation results obtained from these calculations are compared with experimental data. Compared to the SFPV results, the unsteady flamelet/progress variable model captures the autoignition process, and good agreement with measurements is obtained for mixture fraction, temperature, and species mass fractions. From the analysis of scatter data and mixture fraction-conditional results it is shown that the turbulence/chemistry interaction delays the ignition process towards lower values of scalar dissipation rate, and a significantly larger region in the flamelet state space is occupied during the ignition process.
Keywords
Turbulent combustion; Autoignition; Lifted flames; Non-premixed combustion; Unsteady flamelet modeling; Large-eddy simulation
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