Litcius/Paper detail

Modelling thermodiffusive instabilities in hydrogen flames and their impact on the combustion process in a direct-injection hydrogen engine

Andrea Scalambro, Andrea Piano, Federico Millo

2025Combustion and Flame11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hydrogen-fueled Internal Combustion Engines (H 2 -ICEs) are typically operated with lean mixtures to minimize NOx emissions and reduce the risk of abnormal combustion events. Due to hydrogen’s low Lewis number, premixed hydrogen-air flames in lean conditions exhibit strong thermodiffusive instabilities, which make the numerical simulation of the combustion process particularly challenging. Indeed, the intensity of these instabilities is significantly influenced by thermodynamic parameters – such as mixture temperature, pressure, and dilution rate – resulting in substantial variations in combustion behaviour across different operating conditions. Therefore, they have to be properly considered not only to ensure model robustness, but also to improve model accuracy over a wider range of operations. In this study, the combustion process in a Direct Injection H 2 -ICE was analyzed using 3D-CFD simulations, relying on a flamelet-based combustion model. Two sets of lookup flame speed maps were defined: laminar flame speed ( S L ) maps derived from standard 1D-CFD simulations in homogeneous reactor, and freely propagating flame speed ( S M ) maps which account for the effects of thermodiffusive instabilities. The model that uses S L maps required the recalibration of some combustion model parameters when changing the dilution rate to ensure consistency with experimental data. Instead, the model relying on S M maps featured a noticeable accuracy across different air-to-fuel ratios without the need for recalibration any combustion model parameter, highlighting the key role of thermodiffusive flame instabilities on the combustion process. Based on these findings, the impact of such instabilities was evaluated throughout the entire combustion process from both global and local perspectives. The relevance of thermodiffusive instabilities was observed to increase with the air-to-fuel ratio, thereby enhancing combustion speed in leaner mixtures. Additionally, the implementation of thermodiffusive instabilities was found to affect also preferred direction of flame propagation, as stronger instabilities were identified in the leanest and low-temperature portions of the flame front. Novelty and significance This study addresses a critical knowledge gap regarding the role of thermodiffusive flame instabilities in accurately replicating the combustion process of a direct-injection internal combustion engine within a RANS simulation framework. Indeed, while these instabilities have been shown to significantly enhance the mixture consumption rate in quiescent environments at low to moderate pressures and temperatures, particularly in lean mixtures, their impact on the burn rate under engine-like conditions has not yet been systematically investigated, to the best of the authors’ knowledge. This work provides a comprehensive analysis of the significance of these instabilities in the combustion process of a direct-injection hydrogen internal combustion engine. The analysis is conducted from both a global perspective, assessing their overall influence on the combustion process, and a local perspective, examining how they alter flame front characteristics when incorporated into the model.

Topics & Concepts

CombustionDilutionHydrogenMechanicsLewis numberDamköhler numbersAdiabatic flame temperatureProcess (computing)Laminar flowFlame structureCombustion chamberChemistryLaminar flame speedThermodynamicsRange (aeronautics)Internal combustion engineNOxConsistency (knowledge bases)Flame speedHomogeneous charge compression ignitionMaterials scienceNuclear engineeringPremixed flameWork (physics)Process engineeringComputer simulationAutomotive engineeringDiffusion flameAdvanced Combustion Engine TechnologiesCombustion and flame dynamicsHeat transfer and supercritical fluids
Modelling thermodiffusive instabilities in hydrogen flames and their impact on the combustion process in a direct-injection hydrogen engine | Litcius