Particle Pair Dispersion and Eddy Diffusivity in a High-Speed Premixed Flame
Ryan Darragh, Colin A.Z. Towery, Alexei Y. Poludnenko, and Peter E., Hamlington

TL;DR
This study investigates how classical turbulence theories apply to particle pair dispersion and eddy diffusivity in high-speed premixed flames, revealing that non-reacting flow models remain relevant despite heat release effects.
Contribution
It demonstrates the applicability of classical pair dispersion theories to turbulent premixed flames and explores heat release impacts on eddy diffusivity.
Findings
Classical dispersion scaling relations hold in high-turbulence flames.
Heat release influences particle dispersion and eddy diffusivity.
Eddy diffusivity predictions remain valid in reactive turbulent flows.
Abstract
Turbulent mixing is a physical process of fundamental importance in high-speed premixed flames. This mixing results in enhanced transport of temperature and chemical scalars, leading to potentially large changes in flame structure and dynamics. To understand turbulent mixing in non-reacting flows, a number of classical theories have been proposed to describe the scaling and statistics of dispersing fluid particle pairs, including predictions of the effective, or turbulent, eddy diffusivity. Here we examine the validity of these classical theories through the study of fluid particle pair dispersion and eddy diffusivity in highly turbulent premixed methane-air flames at a Karlovitz number of approximately 140. Using data from a direct numerical simulation and a higher-order Lagrangian tracking algorithm, particle pair centroids are seeded at different initial temperatures and separations,…
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