On the Nature of Transverse Waves in Marginal Hydrogen Detonation Simulations using Boundary Layer Loss Modeling and Detailed Chemistry

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

10-1-2024

Abstract

Historically, it has been a challenge to simulate the experimentally observed cellular structures and marginal behavior of multi-dimensional, thin-channel hydrogen detonations in the presence of losses, even with detailed chemistry models. Very recently, a quasi-two-dimensional inviscid approach with a calorically perfect gas and two-step chemistry was pursued, where losses due to viscous boundary layers were modeled by the inclusion of an equivalent mass divergence in the lateral direction using Fay's source term formulation with Mirels’ compressible laminar boundary layer solutions. A similar approach was adopted for this study, but with the inclusion of thermally-perfect detailed chemistry in order to capture the correct ignition sensitivity of the gas to dynamic changes in the thermodynamic state behind the detonation front. In addition, the strength of transverse waves and their impact on the detonation front was investigated. Here, the detailed San Diego mechanism was applied. For marginal cases, where the detonation waves approach their failure limit, quasi-stable mode behavior was observed where the number of transverse waves monotonically decreased to a single strong wave over a long enough distance. The strong transverse waves were also found to be slightly weaker than the detonation front, indicating that they are not overdriven relative to the shocked gas in which they propagate, in agreement with recent studies. Numerical experiments at lower pressures close to the quenching limit also suggest the existence of additional longitudinal waves formed through wall-collision-induced autoignition of unburned gas pockets. These waves could potentially be stronger than the transverse waves and help stabilize and even sustain the detonation. Novelty and Significance This work extends previous numerical investigations of hydrogen detonations in thin channels by including thermally-perfect detailed chemistry and advection of the shock time scalar in Fay's mass divergence source term formulation with Mirels’ constant. This work is accurately able to recover experimental observations and also applies the mass divergence formulation to mixtures and conditions closer to the quenching limit than has been done before. The methodology used efficiently allows important details of marginal behavior found behind the detonation front to be resolved and quantified clearly. These numerical results suggest the existence of additional longitudinal waves behind the shock front which are found to play an important role in sustaining detonations at marginal conditions.

Keywords

boundary layer loss, detailed chemistry, marginal detonation, quasi-2D modeling, transverse detonation

Language

English

Publication Title

Combustion and Flame

Grant

N00014-23-1-2048

Rights

© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of The Combustion Institute. This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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