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On flames established with air jet in cross flow of fuel-rich combustion products

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Title On flames established with air jet in cross flow of fuel-rich combustion products
Names Katta, Viswanath R. (creator)
Blunck, David L. (creator)
Jiang, Naibo (creator)
Lynch, Amy (creator)
Gord, James R. (creator)
Roy, Sukesh (creator)
Date Issued 2015-06-15 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Elsevier and can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/fuel.
Abstract Advances in combustor technologies are driving aircraft gas turbine engines to operate at higher pressures,
temperatures and equivalence ratios. A viable approach for protecting the combustor from the
high-temperature environment is to inject air through the holes drilled on the surfaces. However, it is
possible that the air intended for cooling purposes may react with fuel-rich combustion products and
may increase heat flux. Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) has developed an experimental rig for
studying the flames formed between the injected cold air and the cross flow of combustion products.
Laser-based OH measurements revealed an upstream shift for the flames when the air injection velocity
was increased and downstream shift when the fuel content in the cross flow was increased. As conventional
understanding of the flame stability does not explain such shifts in flame anchoring location, a
time-dependent, detailed-chemistry computational-fluid-dynamics model is used for identifying the
mechanisms that are responsible. Combustion of propane fuel with air is modeled using a chemical-kinetics
mechanism involving 52 species and 544 reactions. Calculations reveled that the flames in the
film-cooling experiment are formed through autoignition process. Simulations have reproduced the various
flame characteristics observed in the experiments. Numerical results are used for explaining the
non-intuitive shifts in flame anchoring location to the changes in blowing ratio and equivalence ratio.
The higher diffusive mass transfer rate of hydrogen in comparison to the local heat transport enhances
H₂–O₂ mixing compared to thermal dissipation rate, which, in turn, affects the autoignition process.
While increasing the blowing ratio abates the differences resulting from non-equal mass and heat transport
rates, higher concentrations of hydrogen in the fuel-rich cross flows accelerate those differences.
Genre Article
Topic Jet-in-cross-flow
Identifier Katta, V. R., Blunck, D. L., Jiang, N., Lynch, A., Gord, J. R., & Roy, S. (2015). On flames established with air jet in cross flow of fuel-rich combustion products. Fuel, 150, 360-369. doi:10.1016/j.fuel.2015.02.006

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