Influence of gas compression on flame acceleration in the early stage of burning in tubes
Damir Valiev, V'yacheslav Akkerman, Mikhail Kuznetsov, Lars-Erik, Eriksson, Chung K. Law, Vitaly Bychkov

TL;DR
This study investigates how gas compression influences finger flame acceleration in tubes during early combustion, revealing that higher initial flame speeds reduce acceleration and maximum velocity, with experimental and numerical validation.
Contribution
Developed a first-order Mach number expansion theory showing gas compression moderates flame acceleration, supported by experiments and simulations for fast-burning flames.
Findings
Gas compression reduces flame acceleration rate.
Maximum flame tip velocity is decreased by compression.
Finger flame acceleration is followed by tulip flame formation.
Abstract
The mechanism of finger flame acceleration at the early stage of burning in tubes was studied experimentally by Clanet and Searby [Combust. Flame 105: 225 (1996)] for slow propane-air flames, and elucidated analytically and computationally by Bychkov et al. [Combust. Flame 150: 263 (2007)] in the limit of incompressible flow. We have now analytically, experimentally and computationally studied the finger flame acceleration for fast burning flames, when the gas compressibility assumes an important role. Specifically, we have first developed a theory through small Mach number expansion up to the first-order terms, demonstrating that gas compression reduces the acceleration rate and the maximum flame tip velocity, and thereby moderates the finger flame acceleration noticeably. This is an important quantitative correction to previous theoretical analysis. We have also conducted experiments…
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