Frontiers in Forests and Global Change (Feb 2022)

Validation of Computationally Efficient Simulations of Douglas Fir Pyrolysis and Combustion Using Time-Resolved Frequency Comb Laser Measurements

  • Jeffrey F. Glusman,
  • Caelan B. Lapointe,
  • Amanda S. Makowiecki,
  • Sam Simons-Wellin,
  • Gregory B. Rieker,
  • John W. Daily,
  • Peter E. Hamlington

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2022.758689
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Computational simulations have the potential to provide low-cost, low-risk insights into wildland fire structure and dynamics. Simulation accuracy is limited, however, by the difficulty of modeling physical processes that span a wide range of spatial scales. These processes include heat transfer via radiation and turbulent advection, as well as both solid- and gas-phase chemistry. In the present study, we perform large eddy simulation (LES) with adaptive mesh refinement to model the multi-phase pyrolysis and combustion of dry Douglas fir, where temperature-based lookup tables corresponding to a multi-step pyrolysis mechanism are used to represent the composition of gas-phase pyrolysis products. Gas-phase and surface temperatures, mass loss, and water vapor mole fraction from the LES are shown to compare favorably with experimental measurements of a radiatively heated Douglas fir fuel sample undergoing pyrolysis and combustion beneath a cone calorimeter. Using frequency comb laser diagnostics, optical and infrared cameras, and a load cell, the experiments provide simultaneous in situ, time-resolved measurements of chemical composition, temperature, and mass loss. The present study thus combines cutting edge computational and experimental techniques with multi-step chemical pyrolysis modeling to provide a validated computational tool for the prediction of solid fuel pyrolysis and combustion relevant to wildland fires.

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