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Published 2017 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Simultaneous OH-PLIF and schlieren imaging of flame acceleration in an obstacle-laden channel

Abstract

Flame acceleration in stoichiometric H_2/O_2 at 12 and 25 kPa initial pressure in an obstacle-laden square cross-section channel was studied experimentally using planar laser-induced fluorescence imaging of hydroxyl radicals (OH-PLIF) and simultaneous high-speed schlieren imaging. Results were obtained resolving the explosion front structure as it develops immediately after ignition as a slow-flame to the eventual formation of a shock-flame complex in the fast-flame regime. The images provide a novel level of detail and allow for the determination of the effects of turbulence-flame and shock-flame interaction. In the slow-flame regime, vortex shedding off obstacle edges occurs over long time-scales, vortices are convected downstream and turbulent combustion takes place in the obstacle wakes. The fast-flame regime is marked by the presence of compression waves (and shock waves) which interact with the flame and cause macroscopic deformation of the flame and small-scale wrinkling due to Richtmyer-Meshkov instability. A quasi-steady fast-flame is characterized by the close proximity of the precursor shock and the turbulent flame. The flow-field that governs the flame shape is established impulsively by the precursor shock. Shock-flame interactions lead to flame front perturbations on both small and large scales. The OH-PLIF technique makes it possible to discern the flame front from other density interfaces that appear in the complex fast-flame structure observed in schlieren images and also eliminates the line-of-sight integration limitation.

Additional Information

© 2016 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. Available online 29 June 2016. The authors are grateful to the National Research Council Canada for the loan of the intensified camera and UV lens, to Dr. Matthew Johnson from Carleton University for the loan of the lasers and optics, and to Adam Steinberg for the loan of the OH narrow band filter.

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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October 20, 2023