CSAR Seminar
SPEAKER: Asghar Afshari, Michigan State University
TITLE:
Large-Scale Simulations of Complex Turbulent Reacting Flows
DATE: Wednesday, August 16, 2006
TIME: 10:00 A.M.
PLACE: 2240 DCL
1304 W. Springfield Ave., Urbana, IL
ABSTRACT
A density-based, multi-block, computational model has been developed
for large eddy simulation (LES) of reacting and nonreacting, single-
and multi-phase, compressible turbulent flows in complex geometries and
generalized coordinate systems. The spatially-filtered form of the
compressible continuity, momentum, energy, and scalar equations are
solved together with various subgrid turbulence closures. All spatial
derivatives are approximated by a high-order compact differencing
scheme and time derivatives are modeled via a low-storage, three-stage,
third-order, Runge-Kutta method. The nonreacting, single-phase results
for isotropic, jet, and axisymmetric sudden expansion turbulent flows
are found to be in good agreement with those obtained via validated
numerical methods and with the available experimental data. Effects of
boundary conditions, inflow/outflow conditions, subgrid scale model,
and various physical and geometrical parameters on the flow in sudden
expansion are studied in detail. The simulated results indicate that
the high-order compact differencing scheme is an appropriate numerical
method for LES while the multi-block capability of the scheme enables
its application to complex geometries.
Simulations of reacting single-phase flows are also considered. For
this, a generalized Lagrangian/Eulerian, theoretical/numerical
methodology is developed in which the subgrid mixing and reaction is
obtained by the filtered mass density function (FMDF) methodology. The
LES/FMDF method has several advantages over conventional methods and is
implemented via a novel Lagrangian numerical scheme. The new
Lagrangian FMDF flow solver is coupled with the high-order multi-block
flow solver. This allows LES/FMDF to be extended to general coordinate
systems. The consistency, convergence, and accuracy of the FMDF and
the Monte Carlo solution of its equivalent, stochastic differential
equations are assessed for different flows. The consistency between
Eulerian and Lagrangian fields is established for non-reacting
isothermal and non-isothermal flows as well as reacting flows in an
axisymmetric, dump-combustor. The results show good consistency
between conventional LES and FMDF method for nonreacting and reacting
cases. The results obtained for turbulent reacting flow in a premixed
propane-air dump-combustor show favorable agreement with laboratory
data. The effects of the inlet flow and boundary conditions on the
turbulence and combustion within the combustor are also investigated in
details. The results of these investigations will be presented in my
seminar together with the results for two-phase reacting flows.