fbpx
Wikipedia

Premixed flame

A premixed flame is a flame formed under certain conditions during the combustion of a premixed charge (also called pre-mixture) of fuel and oxidiser. Since the fuel and oxidiser—the key chemical reactants of combustion—are available throughout a homogeneous stoichiometric premixed charge, the combustion process once initiated sustains itself by way of its own heat release. The majority of the chemical transformation in such a combustion process occurs primarily in a thin interfacial region which separates the unburned and the burned gases. The premixed flame interface propagates through the mixture until the entire charge is depleted.[1] The propagation speed of a premixed flame is known as the flame speed (or burning velocity) which depends on the convection-diffusion-reaction balance within the flame, i.e. on its inner chemical structure. The premixed flame is characterised as laminar or turbulent depending on the velocity distribution in the unburned pre-mixture (which provides the medium of propagation for the flame).

Different flame types of a Bunsen burner depend on oxygen supply. On the left a rich fuel mixture with no premixed oxygen produces a yellow sooty diffusion flame, and on the right a lean fully oxygen premixed flame produces no soot and the flame color is produced by molecular radical band emission.

Premixed flame propagation edit

Laminar edit

Under controlled conditions (typically in a laboratory) a laminar flame may be formed in one of several possible flame configurations. The inner structure of a laminar premixed flame is composed of layers over which the decomposition, reaction and complete oxidation of fuel occurs. These chemical processes are much faster than the physical processes such as vortex motion in the flow and, hence, the inner structure of a laminar flame remains intact in most circumstances. The constitutive layers of the inner structure correspond to specified intervals over which the temperature increases from the specified unburned mixture up to as high as the adiabatic flame temperature (AFT). In the presence of volumetric heat transfer and/or aerodynamic stretch, or under the development intrinsic flame instabilities, the extent of reaction and, hence, the temperature attained across the flame may be different from the AFT.

Laminar burning velocity edit

For a one-step irreversible chemistry, i.e.,  , the planar, adiabatic flame has explicit expression for the burning velocity derived from activation energy asymptotics when the Zel'dovich number   The reaction rate   (number of moles of fuel consumed per unit volume per unit time) is taken to be Arrhenius form,

 

where   is the pre-exponential factor,   is the density,   is the fuel mass fraction,   is the oxidizer mass fraction,   is the activation energy,   is the universal gas constant,   is the temperature,   are the molecular weights of fuel and oxidizer, respectively and   are the reaction orders. Let the unburnt conditions far ahead of the flame be denoted with subscript   and similarly, the burnt gas conditions by  , then we can define an equivalence ratio   for the unburnt mixture as

 .

Then the planar laminar burning velocity for fuel-rich mixture ( ) is given by[2][3]

 

where

 

and  . Here   is the thermal conductivity,   is the specific heat at constant pressure and   is the Lewis number. Similarly one can write the formula for lean   mixtures. This result is first obtained by T. Mitani in 1980.[4] Second order correction to this formula with more complicated transport properties were derived by Forman A. Williams and co-workers in the 80s.[5][6][7]

Variations in local propagation speed of a laminar flame arise due to what is called flame stretch. Flame stretch can happen due to the straining by outer flow velocity field or the curvature of flame; the difference in the propagation speed from the corresponding laminar speed is a function of these effects and may be written as: [8][9]

 

where   is the laminar flame thickness,   is the flame curvature,   is the unit normal on the flame surface pointing towards the unburnt gas side,   is the flow velocity and   are the respective Markstein numbers of curvature and strain.

Turbulent edit

In practical scenarios, turbulence is inevitable and, under moderate conditions, turbulence aids the premixed burning process as it enhances the mixing process of fuel and oxidiser. If the premixed charge of gases is not homogeneously mixed, the variations on equivalence ratio may affect the propagation speed of the flame. In some cases, this is desirable as in stratified combustion of blended fuels.

A turbulent premixed flame can be assumed to propagate as a surface composed of an ensemble of laminar flames so long as the processes that determine the inner structure of the flame are not affected.[10] Under such conditions, the flame surface is wrinkled by virtue of turbulent motion in the premixed gases increasing the surface area of the flame. The wrinkling process increases the burning velocity of the turbulent premixed flame in comparison to its laminar counterpart.

The propagation of such a premixed flame may be analysed using the field equation called as G equation[11][12] for a scalar   as:

 ,

which is defined such that the level-sets of G represent the various interfaces within the premixed flame propagating with a local velocity  . This, however, is typically not the case as the propagation speed of the interface (with resect to unburned mixture) varies from point to point due to the aerodynamic stretch induced due to gradients in the velocity field.

Under contrasting conditions, however, the inner structure of the premixed flame may be entirely disrupted causing the flame to extinguish either locally (known as local extinction) or globally (known as global extinction or blow-off). Such opposing cases govern the operation of practical combustion devices such as SI engines as well as aero-engine afterburners. The prediction of the extent to which the inner structure of flame is affected in turbulent flow is a topic of extensive research.

Premixed flame configuration edit

The flow configuration of premixed gases affects the stabilization and burning characteristics of the

Bunsen flame edit

In a Bunsen flame, a steady flow rate is provided which matches the flame speed so as to stabilize the flame. If the flow rate is below the flame speed, the flame will move upstream until the fuel is consumed or until it encounters a flame holder. If the flow rate is equal to the flame speed, we would expect a stationary flat flame front normal to the flow direction. If the flow rate is above the flame speed, the flame front will become conical such that the component of the velocity vector normal to the flame front is equal to the flame speed.

Stagnation flame edit

Here, the pre-mixed gases flow in such a way so as to form a region of stagnation (zero velocity) where the flame may be stabilized.

Spherical flame edit

In this configuration, the flame is typically initiated by way of a spark within a homogeneous pre-mixture. The subsequent propagation of the developed premixed flame occurs as a spherical front until the mixture is transformed entirely or the walls of the combustion vessel are reached.

Applications edit

Since the equivalence ratio of the premixed gases may be controlled, premixed combustion offers a means to attain low temperatures and, thereby, reduce NOx emissions. Due to improved mixing in comparison with diffusion flames, soot formation is mitigated as well. Premixed combustion has therefore gained significance in recent times. The uses involve lean-premixed-prevaporized (LPP) gas turbines and SI engines.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lewis, Bernard; Elbe, Guenther von (2012). Combustion, Flames and Explosions of Gases. Elsevier. ISBN 9780323138024.
  2. ^ Williams, F. A. (2018). Combustion theory. CRC Press.
  3. ^ Linan, A., & Williams, F. A. (1993). Fundamental aspects of combustion.
  4. ^ MITANI, T. (1980). Propagation velocities of two-reactant flames. Combustion Science and Technology, 21(3-4), 175-177.
  5. ^ Rogg, B., & Williams, F. A. (1985). Asymptotic analysis of laminar flame propagation with variable transport coefficients. Combustion science and technology, 42(5-6), 301-316.
  6. ^ Chelliah, H. K., & Williams, F. A. (1987). Asymptotic analysis of two-reactant flames with variable properties and Stefan-Maxwell transport. Combustion science and technology, 51(4-6), 129-144.
  7. ^ Rogg, B. (1986). On the accuracy of asymptotic flame speed predictions for two-reactant flames. Combustion science and technology, 45(5-6), 317-329.
  8. ^ Clavin, P., & Graña-Otero, J. C. (2011). Curved and stretched flames: the two Markstein numbers. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 686, 187-217.
  9. ^ Clavin, Paul, and Geoff Searby. Combustion Waves and Fronts in Flows: Flames, Shocks, Detonations, Ablation Fronts and Explosion of Stars. Cambridge University Press, 2016.
  10. ^ Peters, Norbert (2000). Turbulent combustion. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780511612701. OCLC 56066895.
  11. ^ Williams, F. A. (1985). Turbulent combustion. In The mathematics of combustion (pp. 97-131). Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics.
  12. ^ Kerstein, Alan R. (1988-01-01). "Field equation for interface propagation in an unsteady homogeneous flow field". Physical Review A. 37 (7): 2728–2731. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.37.2728. PMID 9899999.

premixed, flame, premixed, flame, flame, formed, under, certain, conditions, during, combustion, premixed, charge, also, called, mixture, fuel, oxidiser, since, fuel, oxidiser, chemical, reactants, combustion, available, throughout, homogeneous, stoichiometric. A premixed flame is a flame formed under certain conditions during the combustion of a premixed charge also called pre mixture of fuel and oxidiser Since the fuel and oxidiser the key chemical reactants of combustion are available throughout a homogeneous stoichiometric premixed charge the combustion process once initiated sustains itself by way of its own heat release The majority of the chemical transformation in such a combustion process occurs primarily in a thin interfacial region which separates the unburned and the burned gases The premixed flame interface propagates through the mixture until the entire charge is depleted 1 The propagation speed of a premixed flame is known as the flame speed or burning velocity which depends on the convection diffusion reaction balance within the flame i e on its inner chemical structure The premixed flame is characterised as laminar or turbulent depending on the velocity distribution in the unburned pre mixture which provides the medium of propagation for the flame Different flame types of a Bunsen burner depend on oxygen supply On the left a rich fuel mixture with no premixed oxygen produces a yellow sooty diffusion flame and on the right a lean fully oxygen premixed flame produces no soot and the flame color is produced by molecular radical band emission Contents 1 Premixed flame propagation 1 1 Laminar 1 1 1 Laminar burning velocity 1 2 Turbulent 2 Premixed flame configuration 2 1 Bunsen flame 2 2 Stagnation flame 2 3 Spherical flame 3 Applications 4 See also 5 ReferencesPremixed flame propagation editLaminar edit Under controlled conditions typically in a laboratory a laminar flame may be formed in one of several possible flame configurations The inner structure of a laminar premixed flame is composed of layers over which the decomposition reaction and complete oxidation of fuel occurs These chemical processes are much faster than the physical processes such as vortex motion in the flow and hence the inner structure of a laminar flame remains intact in most circumstances The constitutive layers of the inner structure correspond to specified intervals over which the temperature increases from the specified unburned mixture up to as high as the adiabatic flame temperature AFT In the presence of volumetric heat transfer and or aerodynamic stretch or under the development intrinsic flame instabilities the extent of reaction and hence the temperature attained across the flame may be different from the AFT Laminar burning velocity edit For a one step irreversible chemistry i e n F F n O O 2 P r o d u c t s displaystyle nu F rm F nu O rm O 2 rightarrow rm Products nbsp the planar adiabatic flame has explicit expression for the burning velocity derived from activation energy asymptotics when the Zel dovich number b 1 displaystyle beta gg 1 nbsp The reaction rate w displaystyle omega nbsp number of moles of fuel consumed per unit volume per unit time is taken to be Arrhenius form w B r Y F W F m r Y O 2 W O 2 n e E a R T displaystyle omega B left frac rho Y F W F right m left frac rho Y O 2 W O 2 right n e E a RT nbsp where B displaystyle B nbsp is the pre exponential factor r displaystyle rho nbsp is the density Y F displaystyle Y F nbsp is the fuel mass fraction Y O 2 displaystyle Y O 2 nbsp is the oxidizer mass fraction E a displaystyle E a nbsp is the activation energy R displaystyle R nbsp is the universal gas constant T displaystyle T nbsp is the temperature W F amp W O 2 displaystyle W F amp W O 2 nbsp are the molecular weights of fuel and oxidizer respectively and m amp n displaystyle m amp n nbsp are the reaction orders Let the unburnt conditions far ahead of the flame be denoted with subscript u displaystyle u nbsp and similarly the burnt gas conditions by b displaystyle b nbsp then we can define an equivalence ratio ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp for the unburnt mixture as ϕ n O 2 W O 2 n F W F Y F u Y O 2 u displaystyle phi frac nu O 2 W O 2 nu F W F frac Y F u Y O 2 u nbsp Then the planar laminar burning velocity for fuel rich mixture ϕ gt 1 displaystyle phi gt 1 nbsp is given by 2 3 S L 2 B l b r b m n n F m Y O 2 u m n 1 G n m a c p b r u 2 n O 2 W O 2 m n 1 b m n 1 L e O 2 n L e F m 1 2 e E a 2 R T b O b 1 displaystyle S L left frac 2B lambda b rho b m n nu F m Y O 2 u m n 1 G n m a c p b rho u 2 nu O 2 W O 2 m n 1 beta m n 1 mathrm Le O 2 n mathrm Le F m right 1 2 e E a 2RT b O beta 1 nbsp where G n m a 0 y n y a m d y displaystyle G n m a int 0 infty y n y a m dy nbsp and a b ϕ 1 L e F displaystyle a beta phi 1 mathrm Le F nbsp Here l displaystyle lambda nbsp is the thermal conductivity c p displaystyle c p nbsp is the specific heat at constant pressure and L e displaystyle mathrm Le nbsp is the Lewis number Similarly one can write the formula for lean ϕ lt 1 displaystyle phi lt 1 nbsp mixtures This result is first obtained by T Mitani in 1980 4 Second order correction to this formula with more complicated transport properties were derived by Forman A Williams and co workers in the 80s 5 6 7 Variations in local propagation speed of a laminar flame arise due to what is called flame stretch Flame stretch can happen due to the straining by outer flow velocity field or the curvature of flame the difference in the propagation speed from the corresponding laminar speed is a function of these effects and may be written as 8 9 U L S L S L M c d L k M a d L n n n displaystyle U L S L S L mathcal M c delta L kappa mathcal M a delta L mathbf n cdot nabla mathbf n cdot mathbf n nbsp where d L displaystyle delta L nbsp is the laminar flame thickness k displaystyle kappa nbsp is the flame curvature n displaystyle mathbf n nbsp is the unit normal on the flame surface pointing towards the unburnt gas side v displaystyle mathbf v nbsp is the flow velocity and M c amp M a displaystyle mathcal M c amp mathcal M a nbsp are the respective Markstein numbers of curvature and strain Turbulent edit In practical scenarios turbulence is inevitable and under moderate conditions turbulence aids the premixed burning process as it enhances the mixing process of fuel and oxidiser If the premixed charge of gases is not homogeneously mixed the variations on equivalence ratio may affect the propagation speed of the flame In some cases this is desirable as in stratified combustion of blended fuels A turbulent premixed flame can be assumed to propagate as a surface composed of an ensemble of laminar flames so long as the processes that determine the inner structure of the flame are not affected 10 Under such conditions the flame surface is wrinkled by virtue of turbulent motion in the premixed gases increasing the surface area of the flame The wrinkling process increases the burning velocity of the turbulent premixed flame in comparison to its laminar counterpart The propagation of such a premixed flame may be analysed using the field equation called as G equation 11 12 for a scalar G displaystyle G nbsp as G t v G U L G displaystyle frac partial G partial t mathbf v cdot nabla G U L nabla G nbsp which is defined such that the level sets of G represent the various interfaces within the premixed flame propagating with a local velocity U L displaystyle U L nbsp This however is typically not the case as the propagation speed of the interface with resect to unburned mixture varies from point to point due to the aerodynamic stretch induced due to gradients in the velocity field Under contrasting conditions however the inner structure of the premixed flame may be entirely disrupted causing the flame to extinguish either locally known as local extinction or globally known as global extinction or blow off Such opposing cases govern the operation of practical combustion devices such as SI engines as well as aero engine afterburners The prediction of the extent to which the inner structure of flame is affected in turbulent flow is a topic of extensive research Premixed flame configuration editThe flow configuration of premixed gases affects the stabilization and burning characteristics of the Bunsen flame edit In a Bunsen flame a steady flow rate is provided which matches the flame speed so as to stabilize the flame If the flow rate is below the flame speed the flame will move upstream until the fuel is consumed or until it encounters a flame holder If the flow rate is equal to the flame speed we would expect a stationary flat flame front normal to the flow direction If the flow rate is above the flame speed the flame front will become conical such that the component of the velocity vector normal to the flame front is equal to the flame speed Stagnation flame edit Here the pre mixed gases flow in such a way so as to form a region of stagnation zero velocity where the flame may be stabilized Spherical flame edit In this configuration the flame is typically initiated by way of a spark within a homogeneous pre mixture The subsequent propagation of the developed premixed flame occurs as a spherical front until the mixture is transformed entirely or the walls of the combustion vessel are reached Applications editSince the equivalence ratio of the premixed gases may be controlled premixed combustion offers a means to attain low temperatures and thereby reduce NOx emissions Due to improved mixing in comparison with diffusion flames soot formation is mitigated as well Premixed combustion has therefore gained significance in recent times The uses involve lean premixed prevaporized LPP gas turbines and SI engines See also editFlamelet generated manifold Luminous flame Oxy fuelReferences edit Lewis Bernard Elbe Guenther von 2012 Combustion Flames and Explosions of Gases Elsevier ISBN 9780323138024 Williams F A 2018 Combustion theory CRC Press Linan A amp Williams F A 1993 Fundamental aspects of combustion MITANI T 1980 Propagation velocities of two reactant flames Combustion Science and Technology 21 3 4 175 177 Rogg B amp Williams F A 1985 Asymptotic analysis of laminar flame propagation with variable transport coefficients Combustion science and technology 42 5 6 301 316 Chelliah H K amp Williams F A 1987 Asymptotic analysis of two reactant flames with variable properties and Stefan Maxwell transport Combustion science and technology 51 4 6 129 144 Rogg B 1986 On the accuracy of asymptotic flame speed predictions for two reactant flames Combustion science and technology 45 5 6 317 329 Clavin P amp Grana Otero J C 2011 Curved and stretched flames the two Markstein numbers Journal of Fluid Mechanics 686 187 217 Clavin Paul and Geoff Searby Combustion Waves and Fronts in Flows Flames Shocks Detonations Ablation Fronts and Explosion of Stars Cambridge University Press 2016 Peters Norbert 2000 Turbulent combustion Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780511612701 OCLC 56066895 Williams F A 1985 Turbulent combustion In The mathematics of combustion pp 97 131 Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics Kerstein Alan R 1988 01 01 Field equation for interface propagation in an unsteady homogeneous flow field Physical Review A 37 7 2728 2731 doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 37 2728 PMID 9899999 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Premixed flame amp oldid 1183434694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.