Stability of diffusion flames under shear flow: Taylor dispersion and the formation of flame streets

Prabakaran Rajamanickam, Aiden Kelly, Joel Daou*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)
3 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Diffusion flame streets, observed in non-premixed micro-combustion devices, align parallel to a shear flow. They are observed to occur in mixtures with high Lewis number (Le) fuels, provided that the flow Reynolds number, or the Peclet number Pe, exceeds a critical value. The underlying mechanisms behind these observations have not yet been fully understood. In the present paper, we identify the coupling between diffusive-thermal instabilities and Taylor dispersion as a mechanism which is able to explain the experimental observations above. The explanation is largely based on the fact that Taylor dispersion enhances all diffusion processes in the flow direction, leading effectively to anisotropic diffusion with an effective (flow-dependent) Lewis number in the flow direction which is proportional to 1/Le for Pe 1. Validation of the identified mechanism is demonstrated within a simple model by investigating the stability of a planar diffusion flame established parallel to a plane Poiseuille flow in a narrow channel. A linear stability analysis, leading to an eigenvalue problem solved numerically, shows that cellular (or finite wavelength) instabilities emerge for high Lewis number fuels when the Peclet number exceeds a critical value. Furthermore, for Peclet numbers below this critical value, longwave instabilities with or without time oscillations are obtained. Stability regime diagrams are presented for illustrative cases in a Le − Pe plane where various instability domains are identified. Finally, the linear analysis is supported and complemented by time dependent numerical simulations, describing the evolution of unstable diffusion flames. The simulations demonstrate the existence of stable cellular structures and show that the longwave instabilities are conducive to flame extinction.
Original languageEnglish
Article number113003
JournalCombustion and Flame
Volume257
Issue numberPart 2
Early online date17 Aug 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2023

Funding

This work was supported by the UK EPSRC through grant EP/V004840/1.

Keywords

  • Taylor dispersion
  • Diffusion flame streets
  • Diffusive-thermal instability
  • Micro-combustion

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