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Turbulent flame-wall interaction: a direct numerical simulation study

Abstract

A turbulent flame–wall interaction (FWI) configuration is studied using three-dimensional direct numerical simulation (DNS) and detailed chemical kinetics. The simulations are used to investigate the effects of the wall turbulent boundary layer (i) on the structure of a hydrogen–air premixed flame, (ii) on its near-wall propagation characteristics and (iii) on the spatial and temporal patterns of the convective wall heat flux. Results show that the local flame thickness and propagation speed vary between the core flow and the boundary layer, resulting in a regime change from flamelet near the channel centreline to a thickened flame at the wall. This finding has strong implications for the modelling of turbulent combustion using Reynolds-averaged
Navier–Stokes or large-eddy simulation techniques. Moreover, the DNS results suggest that the near-wall coherent turbulent structures play an important role on the convective wall heat transfer by pushing the hot reactive zone towards the cold solid surface. At the wall, exothermic radical recombination reactions become important, and are responsible for approximately 70% of the overall heat release rate at the wall. Spectral analysis of the convective wall heat flux provides an unambiguous picture of its spatial and temporal patterns, previously unobserved, that is directly related to
the spatial and temporal characteristic scalings of the coherent near-wall turbulent structures.

Category

Academic article

Client

  • Research Council of Norway (RCN) / 193816

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Andrea Gruber
  • Ramanan Sankaran
  • Evatt R Hawkes
  • Jacqueline H Chen

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Energy Research / Termisk energi
  • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • University of New South Wales
  • Sandia National Laboratories

Year

2010

Published in

Journal of Fluid Mechanics

ISSN

0022-1120

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Volume

658

Page(s)

5 - 32

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