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Effects of Buoyancy on Laminar, Transitional, and Turbulent Gas Jet Diffusion FlamesGas jet diffusion flames have been a subject of research for many years. However, a better understanding of the physical and chemical phenomena occurring in these flames is still needed, and, while the effects of gravity on the burning process have been observed, the basic mechanisms responsible for these changes have yet to be determined. The fundamental mechanisms that control the combustion process are in general coupled and quite complicated. These include mixing, radiation, kinetics, soot formation and disposition, inertia, diffusion, and viscous effects. In order to understand the mechanisms controlling a fire, laboratory-scale laminar and turbulent gas-jet diffusion flames have been extensively studied, which have provided important information in relation to the physico-chemical processes occurring in flames. However, turbulent flames are not fully understood and their understanding requires more fundamental studies of laminar diffusion flames in which the interplay of transport phenomena and chemical kinetics is more tractable. But even this basic, relatively simple flame is not completely characterized in relation to soot formation, radiation, diffusion, and kinetics. Therefore, gaining an understanding of laminar flames is essential to the understanding of turbulent flames, and particularly fires, in which the same basic phenomena occur. In order to improve and verify the theoretical models essential to the interpretation of data, the complexity and degree of coupling of the controlling mechanisms must be reduced. If gravity is isolated, the complication of buoyancy-induced convection would be removed from the problem. In addition, buoyant convection in normal gravity masks the effects of other controlling parameters on the flame. Therefore, the combination of normal-gravity and microgravity data would provide the information, both theoretical and experimental, to improve our understanding of diffusion flames in general, and the effects of gravity on the burning process in particular.
Document ID
19930011000
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Bahadori, M. Yousef
(Science Applications International Corp. Torrance, CA., United States)
Stocker, Dennis P.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Vaughan, David F.
(Baldwin-Wallace Coll. Berea, OH., United States)
Zhou, Liming
(California Univ. Berkeley., United States)
Edelman, Raymond B.
(Rockwell International Corp. Canoga Park, CA., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
February 1, 1993
Publication Information
Publication: The Second International Microgravity Combustion Workshop
Subject Category
Inorganic And Physical Chemistry
Accession Number
93N20189
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS3-25982
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS3-22822
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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