A Computationally Efficient, Robust Methodology for Evaluating Chemical Timescales with Detailed Chemical Kinetics
S. M. Aithal

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new algebraic method for efficiently and robustly evaluating chemical timescales in turbulent reacting flows, matching traditional eigenvalue-based methods without added computational cost, suitable for large-scale simulations.
Contribution
A novel algebraic methodology for chemical timescale evaluation that is computationally efficient and robust, comparable to eigenvalue-based methods, for use in complex flow simulations.
Findings
The new method matches eigenvalue-based results in temporal characteristics.
It requires no additional computational cost compared to traditional methods.
Demonstrated effectiveness across various fuel-air mixtures and conditions.
Abstract
Turbulent reacting flows occur in a variety of engineering applications such as chemical reactors and power generating equipment (gas turbines and internal combustion engines). Turbulent reacting flows are characterized by two main timescales, namely, flow timescales and chemical (or reaction) timescales. Understanding the relative timescales of flow and reaction kinetics plays an important role, not only in the choice of models required for the accurate simulation of these devices but also their design/optimization studies. There are several definitions of chemical timescales, which can largely be classified as algebraic or eigenvalue-based methods. The computational complexity (and hence cost) depends on the method of evaluation of the chemical timescales and size of the chemical reaction mechanism. The computational cost and robustness of the methodology of evaluating the reaction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCombustion and flame dynamics · Heat transfer and supercritical fluids · Advanced Combustion Engine Technologies
