Mixing, Chemical Reactions, and Combustion in Supersonic Flows


Autoria(s): Cymbalist, Niccolo
Data(s)

2016

Resumo

<p>Experiments were conducted at the GALCIT supersonic shear-layer facility to investigate aspects of reacting transverse jets in supersonic crossflow using chemiluminescence and schlieren image-correlation velocimetry. In particular, experiments were designed to examine mixing-delay length dependencies on jet-fluid molar mass, jet diameter, and jet inclination.</p> <p>The experimental results show that mixing-delay length depends on jet Reynolds number, when appropriately normalized, up to a jet Reynolds number of 500,000. Jet inclination increases the mixing-delay length, but causes less disturbance to the crossflow when compared to normal jet injection. This can be explained, in part, in terms of a control-volume analysis that relates jet inclination to flow conditions downstream of injection.</p> <p>In the second part of this thesis, a combustion-modeling framework is proposed and developed that is tailored to large-eddy simulations of turbulent combustion in high-speed flows. Scaling arguments place supersonic hydrocarbon combustion in a regime of autoignition-dominated distributed reaction zones (DRZ). The proposed evolution-variable manifold (EVM) framework incorporates an ignition-delay data-driven induction model with a post-ignition manifold that uses a Lagrangian convected 'balloon' reactor model for chemistry tabulation. A large-eddy simulation incorporating the EVM framework captures several important reacting-flow features of a transverse hydrogen jet in heated-air crossflow experiment.</p>

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://thesis.library.caltech.edu/9742/1/CymbalistN_2016_thesis.pdf

Cymbalist, Niccolo (2016) Mixing, Chemical Reactions, and Combustion in Supersonic Flows. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/Z9G73BNR. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05242016-143905617 <http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05242016-143905617>

Relação

http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05242016-143905617

http://thesis.library.caltech.edu/9742/

Tipo

Thesis

NonPeerReviewed