Flamelet modeling of thermo-diffusively unstable hydrogen-air flames
Hannes B\"ottler, Haris Lulic, Matthias Steinhausen, Xu Wen, Christian, Hasse, Arne Scholtissek

TL;DR
This paper evaluates flamelet-based models for predicting thermo-diffusive instabilities in hydrogen-air flames, demonstrating that a novel FPV approach with curvature considerations improves microstructure predictions while maintaining reasonable accuracy in global properties.
Contribution
The study introduces a new FPV model accounting for curvature variations, enhancing the prediction of cellular structures in unstable hydrogen flames compared to existing models.
Findings
The new FPV model better predicts flame front microstructure.
Both models reasonably reproduce global flame properties.
Curvature considerations improve cellular structure predictions.
Abstract
In order to reduce CO2 emissions, hydrogen combustion has become increasingly relevant for technical applications. In this context, lean H2-air flames show promising features but, among other characteristics, they tend to exhibit thermo-diffusive instabilities. The formation of cellular structures associated with these instabilities leads to an increased flame surface area which further promotes the flame propagation speed, an important reference quantity for design, control, and safe operation of technical combustors. While many studies have addressed the physical phenomena of intrinsic flame instabilities in the past, there is also a demand to predict such flame characteristics with reduced-order models to allow computationally efficient simulations. In this work, a H2-air spherical expanding flame, which exhibits thermo-diffusive instabilities, is studied with flamelet-based modeling…
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