Influence of equivalence ratio on turbulent burning velocity and extreme fuel consumption rate in lean hydrogen-air turbulent flames
Journal article, 2022

Unsteady three-dimensional Direct Numerical Simulations of seven statistically one-dimensional, planar, highly turbulent, complex-chemistry, lean H2-air flames are performed using either mixture averaged or equidiffusive model of molecular transport. The equivalence ratio is varied from 0.35 to 0.70 and the Karlovitz number Ka is varied from 3 to 565. Normalized turbulent burning velocities UT/SL are strongly increased when using the mixture-averaged model, with an increase by a factor of 4.1 being documented even at Ka as high as 565. Here, SL is the laminar flame speed. Moreover, the increase in UT/SL is significantly more pronounced in leaner flames, which are characterized by a thinner reaction zone and a larger Zel’dovich number. Furthermore, UT/SL is increased by the turbulence length scale. The extreme (maximum over the computational domain at a single instant) local values of fuel consumption rate (FCR) exhibit a high degree of universality, i.e., in all studied cases and at all instants, these rates are close to the peak values of FCR obtained from the counterpart critically strained, twin, counter-flow laminar premixed flames. This finding appears to directly support a corner-stone hypothesis of the leading point concept of premixed turbulent burning, thus, suggesting the use of characteris­ tics of the critically strained laminar premixed flames as input parameters for models of turbulent combustion of lean H2/air mixtures.

Turbulent combustion Burning velocity Fuel consumption rate Leading point concept Lean hydrogen flames

Author

HsuChew Lee

Southern University of Science and Technology

Abouelmagd Abdelsamie

Otto von Guericke Universitaet Magdeburg

Peng Dai

Southern University of Science and Technology

Minping Wan

Southern University of Science and Technology

Andrei Lipatnikov

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Combustion and Propulsion Systems

Fuel

0016-2361 (ISSN)

Vol. 327 124969

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Energy Engineering

Roots

Basic sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.fuel.2022.124969

More information

Latest update

7/14/2022