2006
DOI: 10.1080/13647830500448347
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Stabilization mechanism of turbulent premixed flames in strongly swirled flows

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Cited by 37 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…After the sudden expansion into the combustion chamber (about 1:4 in area), recirculation zones are formed in the central and in the outer regions. These are confirmed by numerical simulations Biagioli 2006), as well as by LDA measurements in water flow experiments (Paschereit et al 1999) and by PIV measurements (Schuermans et al 2006). A section of the combustion chamber, from the burner exit plane to about one chamber diameter downstream, is made of UV transparent quartz glass and cooled by air.…”
Section: Experimental Set-upsupporting
confidence: 66%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…After the sudden expansion into the combustion chamber (about 1:4 in area), recirculation zones are formed in the central and in the outer regions. These are confirmed by numerical simulations Biagioli 2006), as well as by LDA measurements in water flow experiments (Paschereit et al 1999) and by PIV measurements (Schuermans et al 2006). A section of the combustion chamber, from the burner exit plane to about one chamber diameter downstream, is made of UV transparent quartz glass and cooled by air.…”
Section: Experimental Set-upsupporting
confidence: 66%
“…To simplify the analysis, the (time-averaged) flow direction is supposed to be parallel to this axis. Actually, this is not the case for the flow field of the investigated burner, as there is non-negligible radial in-flow of reactants towards the center of the combustor, as was confirmed by LES calculations (Biagioli 2006). However, considering the whole CZ, as it was defined above, we may assume that this inflow of reactants into CZ in transverse direction is small compared to the in-flow in axial direction.…”
mentioning
confidence: 80%
“…An example of this discrepancy is the combustion in a swirled flow studied in [29]. The flame here is stabilized by a vortex break-down system and the salient feature of combustion is a sudden displacement of the flame initially anchored by the back part of the central recirculation zone, then moving deeply into the burner and finally becoming anchored in the front part of it.…”
Section: Joint Rans/les Formulation Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…It is shown that LES can reproduce the flame behaviour across the full operating range, while the steady-state RANS model is not adequate. This deficiency is explained in [29] as that the RANS simulations used k-ε model, which cannot predict correctly the velocity swirl flow field in the burner. Obviously, the joint RANS/LES approach is not applicable to this case, at least, not with the standard k-ε turbulence model.…”
Section: Joint Rans/les Formulation Of the Problemmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The present work, thus, is oriented in this direction. A few earlier studies [12,15,16] hint that the reaction closures applied in RANS may have direct applicability in the context of LES too. However, whether such adopted reaction closures shall be globally valid requires thorough examination, over a variety of flame configurations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%