2002
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-1998-8_22
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Local Flame Structure in Hydrogen-Air Turbulent Premixed Flames

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Cited by 3 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Also, there are regions of high positive curvature (convex to the reactant side) trying to advance into the reactants (3rd frame in Figure 9 and 2nd frame in Figure 10), which eventually break apart due to excessive heat losses. It is found that heat release is maximized in negatively curved regions for both cases, consistent with previous studies of methane-air (Echekki and Chen, 1996) and hydrogen-air (Tanahashi et al, 1999) combustion. A stoichiometric hydrogen-air flame with u rms;in s l ¼ 3:41, l int;in δ l ¼ 0:85 and T r = 700 K was simulated by Tanahashi et al (1999), using a detailed mechanism and these conditions are similar to the inlet conditions for case A.…”
Section: Dns Of Fuel Combustion With Detailed Chemistrysupporting
confidence: 91%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Also, there are regions of high positive curvature (convex to the reactant side) trying to advance into the reactants (3rd frame in Figure 9 and 2nd frame in Figure 10), which eventually break apart due to excessive heat losses. It is found that heat release is maximized in negatively curved regions for both cases, consistent with previous studies of methane-air (Echekki and Chen, 1996) and hydrogen-air (Tanahashi et al, 1999) combustion. A stoichiometric hydrogen-air flame with u rms;in s l ¼ 3:41, l int;in δ l ¼ 0:85 and T r = 700 K was simulated by Tanahashi et al (1999), using a detailed mechanism and these conditions are similar to the inlet conditions for case A.…”
Section: Dns Of Fuel Combustion With Detailed Chemistrysupporting
confidence: 91%
“…The turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate is high at the inlet and so the initial laminar flame interacts with a relatively weaker turbulence than at the inlet. This cannot be avoided in simulations of this kind (Sankaran et al, 2006;Tanaka et al, 2011;Tanahashi et al, 1999;Thévenin et al, 2002), unless the turbulence Reynolds number, Re t ¼ u rms l int =v r , where v r is the kinematic viscosity of reactant mixture, is sufficiently low or turbulence is forced and these approaches have their own disadvantages.…”
Section: Flow Configuration and Boundary Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, for methane-air flame, they show relatively strong correlation. The reasons of these different correlations have been discussed based on elementary reactions and diffusivity of major atoms (46), (47) . The heat release rates tend to increase from C-C regime to S-S regime.…”
Section: Journal Of Thermal Science and Technologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, in turbulent premixed flames, for example, the increment in flame velocity is larger than that in the flamesurface area at Lewis numbers lower than unity 30,31) and at lean hydrogen-air mixtures. 32) Thus we need to consider not only the flame-surface area, but also the Lewis-number effect in studying flame velocity.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%