A premixed flame is a flame formed under certain conditions during the combustion of a premixed charge (also called pre-mixture) of fuel and oxidiser. Since the fuel and oxidiser—the key chemical reactants of combustion—are available throughout a homogeneous Stoichiometry premixed charge, the combustion process once initiated sustains itself by way of its own heat release. The majority of the chemical transformation in such a combustion process occurs primarily in a thin interfacial region which separates the unburned and the burned gases. The premixed flame interface propagates through the mixture until the entire charge is depleted. The propagation speed of a premixed flame is known as the flame speed (or burning velocity) which depends on the convection-diffusion-reaction balance within the flame, i.e. on its inner chemical structure. The premixed flame is characterised as laminar or turbulent depending on the velocity distribution in the unburned pre-mixture (which provides the medium of propagation for the flame).
where is the pre-exponential factor, is the density, is the fuel mass fraction, is the oxidizer mass fraction, is the activation energy, is the universal gas constant, is the temperature, are the molecular weights of fuel and oxidizer, respectively and are the reaction orders. Let the unburnt conditions far ahead of the flame be denoted with subscript and similarly, the burnt gas conditions by , then we can define an equivalence ratio for the unburnt mixture as
Then the planar laminar burning velocity for fuel-rich mixture () is given byWilliams, F. A. (2018). Combustion theory. CRC Press.Linan, A., & Williams, F. A. (1993). Fundamental aspects of combustion.
where
and . Here is the thermal conductivity, is the specific heat at constant pressure and is the Lewis number. Similarly one can write the formula for lean mixtures. This result is first obtained by T. Mitani in 1980.MITANI, T. (1980). Propagation velocities of two-reactant flames. Combustion Science and Technology, 21(3-4), 175-177. Second order correction to this formula with more complicated transport properties were derived by Forman A. Williams and co-workers in the 80s.Rogg, B., & Williams, F. A. (1985). Asymptotic analysis of laminar flame propagation with variable transport coefficients. Combustion science and technology, 42(5-6), 301-316.Chelliah, H. K., & Williams, F. A. (1987). Asymptotic analysis of two-reactant flames with variable properties and Stefan-Maxwell transport. Combustion science and technology, 51(4-6), 129-144.Rogg, B. (1986). On the accuracy of asymptotic flame speed predictions for two-reactant flames. Combustion science and technology, 45(5-6), 317-329.
Variations in local propagation speed of a laminar flame arise due to what is called flame stretch. Flame stretch can happen due to the straining by outer flow velocity field or the curvature of flame; the difference in the propagation speed from the corresponding laminar speed is a function of these effects and may be written as: Clavin, P., & Graña-Otero, J. C. (2011). Curved and stretched flames: the two Markstein numbers. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 686, 187-217.Clavin, Paul, and Geoff Searby. Combustion Waves and Fronts in Flows: Flames, Shocks, Detonations, Ablation Fronts and Explosion of Stars. Cambridge University Press, 2016.
where is the laminar flame thickness, is the flame curvature, is the unit normal on the flame surface pointing towards the unburnt gas side, is the flow velocity and are the respective of curvature and strain.
A turbulent premixed flame can be assumed to propagate as a surface composed of an ensemble of laminar flames so long as the processes that determine the inner structure of the flame are not affected. Under such conditions, the flame surface is wrinkled by virtue of turbulent motion in the premixed gases increasing the surface area of the flame. The wrinkling process increases the burning velocity of the turbulent premixed flame in comparison to its laminar counterpart.
The propagation of such a premixed flame may be analysed using the field equation called as G equationWilliams, F. A. (1985). Turbulent combustion. In The mathematics of combustion (pp. 97-131). Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. for a scalar as:
which is defined such that the level-sets of G represent the various interfaces within the premixed flame propagating with a local velocity . This, however, is typically not the case as the propagation speed of the interface (with resect to unburned mixture) varies from point to point due to the aerodynamic stretch induced due to gradients in the velocity field.
Under contrasting conditions, however, the inner structure of the premixed flame may be entirely disrupted causing the flame to extinguish either locally (known as local extinction) or globally (known as global extinction or blow-off). Such opposing cases govern the operation of practical combustion devices such as SI engines as well as aero-engine afterburners. The prediction of the extent to which the inner structure of flame is affected in turbulent flow is a topic of extensive research.
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