Victorien P. Blanchard, Yacine Bechane, Nicolas Q. Minesi, Stéphane Q.E. Wang, Benoît Fiorina, Christophe O. Laux
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This paper presents quantitative experimental data generated for the validation of plasma-assisted combustion (PAC) simulations. These data are then used to validate the phenomenological model of Castela et al. They are also useful to test other PAC models. In the experiment presented here, Nanosecond Repetitively Pulsed (NRP) discharges are applied to a lean-premixed turbulent methane-air flame initially near the lean blow-off limit. The discharges significantly enhance the combustion and stabilize the flame after a few pulses. Electrical and optical diagnostics are employed to extensively quantify the transient and steady state of the plasma-stabilization process. The flame shape is characterized by OH* chemiluminescence imaging. In the discharge region, OH density profiles are obtained by 1D laser-induced fluorescence, and the gas temperature is measured by optical emission spectroscopy measurements. The local gas temperature increases by 1250 K, and the OH number density rises sevenfold when NRP discharges are applied. These results evidence the cumulative thermal and chemical effects of NRP discharges, which are especially challenging to replicate numerically. A Large Eddy Simulation (LES) of the experiment is performed. Combustion chemistry is modeled by an analytically reduced mechanism, while the plasma discharge is described by the low-CPU cost phenomenological model of Castela et al., which aims to capture the main thermal and chemical effects induced by the discharges. The model of Castela et al. is validated in the burnt gases by the remarkable agreement between the simulations and the experiments regarding the flame shape, the local gas temperature, and the OH number density. More generally, this work demonstrates the relevance of simplified plasma models in LES solvers to simulate complex plasma-assisted burners.
期刊介绍:
The mission of the journal is to publish high quality work from experimental, theoretical, and computational investigations on the fundamentals of combustion phenomena and closely allied matters. While submissions in all pertinent areas are welcomed, past and recent focus of the journal has been on:
Development and validation of reaction kinetics, reduction of reaction mechanisms and modeling of combustion systems, including:
Conventional, alternative and surrogate fuels;
Pollutants;
Particulate and aerosol formation and abatement;
Heterogeneous processes.
Experimental, theoretical, and computational studies of laminar and turbulent combustion phenomena, including:
Premixed and non-premixed flames;
Ignition and extinction phenomena;
Flame propagation;
Flame structure;
Instabilities and swirl;
Flame spread;
Multi-phase reactants.
Advances in diagnostic and computational methods in combustion, including:
Measurement and simulation of scalar and vector properties;
Novel techniques;
State-of-the art applications.
Fundamental investigations of combustion technologies and systems, including:
Internal combustion engines;
Gas turbines;
Small- and large-scale stationary combustion and power generation;
Catalytic combustion;
Combustion synthesis;
Combustion under extreme conditions;
New concepts.