Fire (Jul 2023)
Spherical Diffusion Flames of Ethylene in Microgravity: Multidimensional Effects
Abstract
The joint American–Russian Space Experiment Flame Design (Adamant) was implemented on the International Space Station (ISS) in the period from 2019 to 2022. The objectives of the experiment were to study the radiative extinction of spherical diffusion flames (SDF) around a porous burner (PB) under microgravity conditions, as well as the mechanisms of control of soot formation in the SDF. The objects of the study were the normal and inverse SDFs of gaseous ethylene in an oxygen atmosphere with nitrogen dilution at room temperature and pressures ranging from 0.5 to 2 atm. The paper presents the results of transient 1D and 2D calculations of 24 normal and 13 inverse SDFs with and without radiative extinction. The 1D calculations revealed some generalities in the evolution of SDFs with different values of the stoichiometric mixture fraction. The unambiguous dependences of the ratio of flame radius to fluid mass flow rate through the PB on the stoichiometric mixture fraction were shown to exist for normal and inverse SDFs. These dependences allowed important conclusions to be made on the comparative flame growth rates, flame lifetime, and flame radius at extinction for normal and inverse SDFs. The 2D calculations were performed for a better understanding of the various observed non-1D effects like flame asymmetry with respect to the center of the PB, flame quenching near the gas supply tube, asymmetrical flame luminosity, etc. The local mass flow rate of fluid through the PB was shown to be nonuniform with the maximum flow rate attained in the PB hemisphere with the attached fluid supply tube, which could be a reason for the flame asymmetry observed in the space experiment. The evolution of 2D ethylene SDFs at zero gravity was shown to be oscillatory with slow alterations in flame shape and temperature caused by the incepience of torroidal vortices in the surrounding gas. Introduction of the directional microgravity, on the level of 0.01g, led to the complete suppression of flame oscillations.
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