Multidimensional direct numerical simulations of superknock in a thermally inhomogeneous DME/air mixture
Abstract
Superknock propensity in a stoichiometric dimethyl-ether (DME)/air mixture with temperature inhomogeneities at conditions relevant to internal combustion engines is investigated using multidimensional direct numerical simulations. To examine the detonation development, simulations are performed by varying the temperature fluctuations, characteristic length scale and initial mean temperature, with initial temperatures lying in the low-, intermediate-, and high-temperature chemistry regimes. The volumetric fraction of the mixture regions that is prone to detonation development, FD, which was proposed as a metric to predict the amplitude of knock intensity in previous studies by Luong et al., is adopted. Regardless of the initial mean temperatures, FD serves as a reliable indicator of the subsequent detonation development that can capture the level of knock intensity. Partially, FD shows a good correlation with the heat release fraction of the mixture regions with pressure greater than the equilibrium pressure, FH. The detonation regimes are also well captured by the predictive nondimensional numbers, ɛp and ξp, that are extended from ɛ and ξ in the regime diagram of Bradley et al.
This work was sponsored by KAUST and used the resources of the KAUST Supercomputing Laboratory.- Publication:
-
APS Division of Fluid Dynamics Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- 2020
- Bibcode:
- 2020APS..DFDG03002L