Litcius/Paper detail

Efficient and accurate calculation of dispersion relations for intrinsically unstable premixed flames

Sofiane Al Kassar, Lukas Berger, Pasquale Eduardo Lapenna, Francesco Creta, Heinz Pitsch, Antonio Attili

2024Combustion and Flame19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Premixed flames are susceptible to hydrodynamic and thermodiffusive instabilities that wrinkle the flame front and lead to complex multiscale patterns. They strongly impact the flame propagation and dynamics, increasing the speed of a laminar flame by several folds, easily as large as a factor of five for lean hydrogen flames at high pressure. The dispersion relation, which represents the growth rate of the different harmonic components of the perturbation of the flame front for different wavelengths, is useful to understand the dynamics during the linear phase of flame instabilities. In this work, an efficient and accurate approach based on a Fourier analysis of flame wrinkling is proposed to calculate the dispersion relation. Differently from the typical approach based on perturbing the flame with a single wavelength, the flame is perturbed with a spectrum of sine waves and their growth is followed with a spectral analysis. With the present method, the full dispersion relation is computed with a single simulation; this is significantly more efficient computationally than running a series of simulations with a single-wavelength perturbation for each point of the dispersion relation. It is shown that the presented approach is accurate and also solves an issue encountered when a single perturbation is imposed to compute the growth rate of large wavelengths. Several numerical and initialisation parameters, including resolution, domain size, and amplitude of the initial perturbation, are studied systematically and assessed. Novelty and significance statement This paper presents a new approach to compute the entire dispersion relation of premixed flame instabilities with a single simulation, whereas previous work required several simulations. It provides clear guidelines for selecting simulation parameters, including resolution, initial perturbation amplitude, and domain size. It is shown that the method is accurate and robust. The method also proved effective for calculating the dispersion relation for low wavenumbers, which is often difficult.

Topics & Concepts

Dispersion (optics)Premixed flameCombustionStatistical physicsDispersion relationPhysicsMaterials scienceMechanicsChemistryCombustorPhysical chemistryOpticsCombustion and flame dynamicsAdvanced Combustion Engine TechnologiesFire dynamics and safety research