Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 22 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Flame behavior inside constant diameter cylindrical meso­scale combustor with different backward facing step size

Andi Sanata    
Lilis Yuliati    
Mega Nur Sasongko    
I Nyoman Gede Wardana    

Resumen

This research observes the behavior of the flame stability in a cylindrical meso-scale combustor at various backward facing step sizes. The backward facing step was varied by changing the size of the combustor inlet diameter while the size of the combustor outlet diameter was kept constant, keeping a constant contact area. Butane gas (C4H10) was used as fuel with air as the oxidizing agent. The results show that generally, the flame mode and area of the flame mode map are obtained for the conditions of the stable flame at combustor rim, stable flame in combustor, stable flame near the step, oscillating flame, oscillating spinning flame, spinning flame, flashback, and no ignition. Flame mode and flame mode map distribution depend on reactant flow velocity behavior, jet flow generating shear stress, vortex flow regulating wall-thermal interaction, and average flow generated by varying the backward facing step size at various equivalence ratio and reactant velocity in the test range. Jet flow destructs flame stability to be extinct due to strong shear stress. Vortex flow spins the flame while the transition from jet to vortex flow oscillates the spinning flame. Weak vortex at average flow plays an important role in wall-thermal interaction that keeps flame very stable. Decreasing the backward facing step size tends to widen the flame stability region, but the combustion process causes the flame to be flashed back. By setting the reactant velocity at a small backward facing step size to the condition where the weak vortex flow exists, flashback conditions could be avoided keeping the flame very stable. Stable flame tends to be performed around stoichiometric to the lean mixture and in the low to medium reactant flow velocity. At high reactant flow velocities, the flames tend to be unstable. However, at low to medium reactant flow velocity, the flame tends to be stable in the combustor

 Artículos similares

       
 
Xinzhi Wang, Mengyue Li, Quanyi Liu, Yudong Chang and Hui Zhang    
The accurate analysis of multi-scale flame development plays a crucial role in improving firefighting decisions and facilitating smart city establishment. However, flames? non-rigid nature and blurred edges present challenges in achieving accurate segmen... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Yu Meng, Wenming Sun, Hongbin Gu, Fang Chen and Ruixu Zhou    
Since flame stability is the key to the performance of scramjets, scramjet combustion mode and instability characteristics were investigated by using the POD method based on a cavity-stabilized scramjet. Experiments were developed on a directly connected... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Georgios Paterakis, Konstantinos Souflas, Andreas Naxakis and Panayiotis Koutmos    
This work investigates the non-reacting time averaged and fluctuating flow field characteristics downstream of a variety of axisymmetric baffles, operating in combination with an upstream double-cavity premixer arrangement. The study aims to broaden know... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Mohammad H. Nadimi-Shahraki, Mahdis Banaie-Dezfouli, Hoda Zamani, Shokooh Taghian and Seyedali Mirjalili    
Advancements in medical technology have created numerous large datasets including many features. Usually, all captured features are not necessary, and there are redundant and irrelevant features, which reduce the performance of algorithms. To tackle this... ver más
Revista: Computers

 
Omar Aguilar-Mejía, Hertwin Minor-Popocatl and Ruben Tapia-Olvera    
Proportional integral (PI) control is still the most widely deployed controller in the industrial drives due to its simplicity and the fact that it is easy to understand and implement. Nevertheless, they are successes applied to systems with a complex be... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences