Abstract
This paper shows that the change in the number of moles of species during combustion can make a strong contribution to the acoustic power radiated by turbulent flames and cannot be systematically neglected. Starting from standard conservation equations, we derive an expression for the acoustic pressure radiated in the far field of a compact region of fluid where low Mach number non-isomolar combustion takes place. In this formulation, the contributions from ‘molar’ and thermal expansion appear explicitly. We also give a formulation in which the sound emission arising from purely non-stationary and from purely convective effects appear independently. As an application of the theory, we derive the acoustic power emitted by a premixed flame in the flamelet regime. Numerical evaluations show that the contribution of molar expansion to the acoustic power is between 2 and 5.6 dB (260% increase) for some common hydrocarbon-oxygen flames.