Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6682146 Applied Energy 2016 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
In this study, a zero-dimensional combustion model, based on the Flame Surface Density equation, is enhanced with a model for the stretched laminar burning speed. Numerical results are compared with the experimental results of three lean air-fuel mixtures with isooctane, propane and methane as fuels, that have similar unstretched laminar burning speeds but different Lewis numbers. Laminar burning speed, flame radius, burnt mass fraction, and turbulent flame wrinkling are compared with experimental results. The simulation trends are similar to those of experimental results. Methane and propane (Lewis number 0.99 and 1.80 respectively) show similar wrinkling rates, while isooctane (Lewis number 2.90) has a lower wrinkling rate. The observed difference between computed burnt mass fraction with stretched and unstretched flame speed models reveals that the impact of stretch and Lewis number needs to be taken into account and that a stretched laminar burning speed must be used for modeling, especially for mixtures with a Lewis number much greater than unity.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
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