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Articles

Taylor-diffusion-controlled combustion in ducts

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Pages 1054-1069 | Received 01 Jul 2020, Accepted 16 Aug 2020, Published online: 01 Sep 2020
 

Abstract

An analysis is presented for the Burke–Schumann flame established when a fuel tank discharges with mean velocity U along a circular duct of radius a filled initially with air. Attention is focused on effects of interactions of shear with transverse diffusion resulting in enhanced longitudinal dispersion. The analysis accounts for preferential-diffusion effects arising for non-unity values of the fuel Lewis number LF, with the Peclet number Pe=Ua/Do based on the thermal diffusivity Do taken to be of order unity for generality. The solution to the associated Taylor-dispersion problem is described for times t much larger than the characteristic diffusion time across the pipe a2/Do, when the flame is embedded in a mixing region of increasing longitudinal extent moving with the mean velocity. At leading order in the limit ta2/Do, the longitudinal flame location, the burning rate, and the peak temperature are found to be a function of the effective Lewis number Leff=LF(1+Pe2/48)/(1+LF2Pe2/48), whose value changes from Leff=LF for Pe1 to Leff=1/LF for Pe1. As a result of this variation, the flame exhibits preferential-diffusion effects that depend fundamentally on Pe, with important implications in designs of microcombustion devices employing narrow channels and pipes.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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