Boulder Fluid and Thermal Sciences Seminar Series

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

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3:30pm-4:30pm (refreshments at 3:15pm)
ME Conference Rooms
University of Colorado at Boulder

Add to Calendar 11/15/2017 3:30:00 PM 11/15/2017 4:30:00 PM 9 Boulder Fluid and Thermal Sciences Seminar ME Conference Rooms, University of Colorado, Boulder MM/DD/YYYY

Turbulent Combustion Modeling: A Combustion Perspective and a Turbulence Perspective

Michael Mueller Princeton University

Turbulent combustion modeling is a challenging multi-physics, multi-scale modeling problem. Both turbulence and combustion are already difficult multi-scale modeling problems, and the combination of the two brings in new interactions across various length scales and time scales that fundamentally change both the combustion processes and the turbulence. However, the prevailing practice in turbulent combustion modeling is to essentially decouple the two phenomena and approach the problem from independent combustion and turbulence modeling perspectives. From the combustion perspective, we have developed computationally efficient models for describing “multi-modal” turbulent combustion, that is, combustion beyond the asymptotic “modes” of premixed flames, nonpremixed flames, and homogeneous chemistry. As a first step of development, we developed models that locally identify the appropriate asymptotic mode. More recently, we developed a new approach that captures not only the three asymptotic regimes but also intermediate regimes at essentially the same computational cost as simpler approaches. From the turbulence perspective, which has received far less attention, we have utilized full-fidelity “numerical experiments” to identify the regimes in which combustion heat release can fundamentally alter turbulence. Based on the physical insights from these simulations, we developed new algebraic turbulence models that directly leverage information about the underlying flame structure and qualitatively capture, for the first time in the literature, the effects of combustion heat release on turbulence. The seminar will conclude with a look forward and proposes a completely new framework for a unified approach to turbulent combustion modeling potentially capable of capturing far richer interactions between turbulence and combustion.

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Acknowledgment

Support from Herbert and Karen Vogel is gratefully acknowledged through a Vogel Faculty Fellowship at the University of Colorado, Boulder.

Schedule

Location

The seminar is held at the Discovery Learning Center (DLC) at the University of Colorado. Parking is free with a permit, which is provided at the seminar. The location for parking is shown in the map below.

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