Radiation Heat Transfer in Particle-Laden Gaseous Flame: Flame Acceleration and Triggering Detonation
M. A. Liberman, M. F Ivanov, A. D. Kiverin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how radiation heat transfer in particle-laden gases influences flame acceleration and the potential triggering of detonation, especially in supernova explosions, highlighting the importance of radiation preheating effects.
Contribution
It demonstrates that radiation heat transfer can dominate flame propagation and trigger detonation via temperature gradients, providing a new explanation for supernova detonation transitions.
Findings
Radiation preheating increases with lower flame velocities.
Temperature gradients from radiation can initiate deflagration or detonation.
Radiation-induced gradients may explain supernova detonation transitions.
Abstract
In this study we examine influence of the radiation heat transfer on the combustion regimes in the mixture, formed by suspension of fine inert particles in hydrogen gas. The gaseous phase is assumed to be transparent for the thermal radiation, while the radiant heat absorbed by the particles is then lost by conduction to the surrounding gas. The particles and gas ahead of the flame is assumed to be heated by radiation from the original flame. It is shown that the maximum temperature increase due to the radiation preheating becomes larger for a flame with lower velocity. For a flame with small enough velocity temperature of the radiation preheating may exceed the crossover temperature, so that the radiation heat transfer may become a dominant mechanism of the flame propagation. In the case of non-uniform distribution of particles, the temperature gradient formed due to the radiation…
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