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Extended flamelet model and improved interaction of chemistry and turbulence for modeling partially premixed combustion with a joint PDF method
Author(s) -
Hegetschweiler Michael,
Jenny Patrick
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
pamm
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1617-7061
DOI - 10.1002/pamm.200700718
Subject(s) - laminar flow , turbulence , combustion , mechanics , probability density function , diffusion flame , premixed flame , flame structure , chemistry , scalar (mathematics) , laminar flame speed , thermodynamics , statistical physics , physics , mathematics , statistics , combustor , geometry
Turbulent combustion is commonly categorized into premixed, non‐premixed and partially premixed combustion. For nonpremixed combustion simulations the laminar flamelet concept proved to be very valuable while for the more complex case of partially premixed combustion this model shows considerable deficiencies. Here, the classical laminar flamelet approach is extended to the partially premixed combustion regime. For that, the joint statistics of mixture fraction, scalar dissipation rate and a progress variable, calculated with a joint probability density function (PDF) method, is used to get the statistics of the compositions and of the chemical energy source term from pre‐processed flame tables. This approach can be compared with the unsteady flamelet concept; the main differences consists of the way the progress variable evolution is computed and in the pre‐computed flame tables. The progress variable describes the point of time a fluid parcel is consumed by a flame front. The fluid parcels are represented by computational particles, which are used for PDF methods. The pre‐computed flame tables are computed from steady solutions 2D stabilized flames propagating into an unburnt mixture with varying mixture fraction. The corresponding position of a fluid particle in such a 2D laminar flame is determined by its mixture fraction and a burning time; both to be modeled for each computational particle in the PDF simulation. Numerical experiments of turbulent diffusion jet flames demonstrate that this approach can be employed for challenging test cases. (© 2008 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)