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Yoo, Chun Sang
Combustion and Propulsion Lab.
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Decreasing liftoff height behavior in diluted laminar lifted methane jet flames

Author(s)
Van, KyuhoJung, Ki SungYoo, Chun SangOh, SoohyunLee, Byeong JunCha, Min SukPark, JeongChung, Suk Ho
Issued Date
2019-01
DOI
10.1016/j.proci.2018.05.031
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/24255
Fulltext
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1540748918300324
Citation
PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMBUSTION INSTITUTE, v.37, no.2, pp.2005 - 2012
Abstract
Stabilization of laminar lifted coflow jet flames of nitrogen-diluted methane was investigated experimentally and numerically. As the fuel jet velocity was increased, two distinct behaviors in liftoff height were observed depending on the initial fuel mole fraction; a monotonically increasing trend and a decreasing and then increasing trend (U-shaped behavior). The former was observed in the jet-developing region and the latter in the jet-developed region. Because the decreasing behavior of liftoff height with jet velocity has not been observed at ambient temperature, the present study focuses on decreasing liftoff height behavior. To elucidate the physical mechanism underlying the U-shaped behavior, numerical simulations of reacting jets were conducted by adopting a skeletal mechanism. The U-shaped behavior was related to the buoyancy. At small jet velocities, the relative importance of the buoyancy over convection was strong and the flow field was accelerated in the downstream region to stabilize the lifted flame. As the jet velocity increased, the relative importance of buoyancy decreased and the liftoff height decreased. As the jet velocity further increased, the flame stabilization was controlled by jet momentum and the liftoff height increased.
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
ISSN
1540-7489
Keyword (Author)
BuoyancyCoflow jetEdge flameLaminar flameLifted flame
Keyword
EDGE-FLAMETRIBRACHIAL FLAMESCOFLOW JETSSTABILIZATIONPROPAGATIONINSTABILITYMECHANISMFIELD

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