Shvab–Zeldovich formulation

The Shvab–Zeldovich formulation is an approach to remove the chemical-source terms from the conservation equations for energy and chemical species by linear combinations of independent variables, when the conservation equations are expressed in a common form. Expressing conservation equations in common form often limits the range of applicability of the formulation. The method was first introduced by V. A. Shvab in 1948[1] and by Yakov Zeldovich in 1949.[2]

Method edit

For simplicity, assume combustion takes place in a single global irreversible reaction

 

where   is the ith chemical species of the total   species and   and   are the stoichiometric coefficients of the reactants and products, respectively. Then, it can be shown from the law of mass action that the rate of moles produced per unit volume of any species   is constant and given by

 

where   is the mass of species i produced or consumed per unit volume and   is the molecular weight of species i.

The main approximation involved in Shvab–Zeldovich formulation is that all binary diffusion coefficients   of all pairs of species are the same and equal to the thermal diffusivity. In other words, Lewis number of all species are constant and equal to one. This puts a limitation on the range of applicability of the formulation since in reality, except for methane, ethylene, oxygen and some other reactants, Lewis numbers vary significantly from unity. The steady, low Mach number conservation equations for the species and energy in terms of the rescaled independent variables[3]

 

where   is the mass fraction of species i,   is the specific heat at constant pressure of the mixture,   is the temperature and   is the formation enthalpy of species i, reduce to

 

where   is the gas density and   is the flow velocity. The above set of   nonlinear equations, expressed in a common form, can be replaced with   linear equations and one nonlinear equation. Suppose the nonlinear equation corresponds to   so that

 

then by defining the linear combinations   and   with  , the remaining   governing equations required become

 

The linear combinations automatically removes the nonlinear reaction term in the above   equations.

Shvab–Zeldovich–Liñán formulation edit

Shvab–Zeldovich–Liñán formulation was introduced by Amable Liñán in 1991[4][5] for diffusion-flame problems where the chemical time scale is infinitely small (Burke–Schumann limit) so that the flame appears as a thin reaction sheet. The reactants can have Lewis number that is not necessarily equal to one.

Suppose the non-dimensional scalar equations for fuel mass fraction   (defined such that it takes a unit value in the fuel stream), oxidizer mass fraction   (defined such that it takes a unit value in the oxidizer stream) and non-dimensional temperature   (measured in units of oxidizer-stream temperature) are given by[6]

 

where   is the reaction rate,   is the appropriate Damköhler number,   is the mass of oxidizer stream required to burn unit mass of fuel stream,   is the non-dimensional amount of heat released per unit mass of fuel stream burnt and   is the Arrhenius exponent. Here,   and   are the Lewis number of the fuel and oxygen, respectively and   is the thermal diffusivity. In the Burke–Schumann limit,   leading to the equilibrium condition

 .

In this case, the reaction terms on the right-hand side become Dirac delta functions. To solve this problem, Liñán introduced the following functions

 

where  ,   is the fuel-stream temperature and   is the adiabatic flame temperature, both measured in units of oxidizer-stream temperature. Introducing these functions reduces the governing equations to

 

where   is the mean (or, effective) Lewis number. The relationship between   and   and between   and   can be derived from the equilibrium condition.

At the stoichiometric surface (the flame surface), both   and   are equal to zero, leading to  ,  ,   and  , where   is the flame temperature (measured in units of oxidizer-stream temperature) that is, in general, not equal to   unless  . On the fuel stream, since  , we have  . Similarly, on the oxidizer stream, since  , we have  .

The equilibrium condition defines[7]

 

The above relations define the piecewise function  

 

where   is a mean Lewis number. This leads to a nonlinear equation for  . Since   is only a function of   and  , the above expressions can be used to define the function  

 

With appropriate boundary conditions for  , the problem can be solved.

It can be shown that   and   are conserved scalars, that is, their derivatives are continuous when crossing the reaction sheet, whereas   and   have gradient jumps across the flame sheet.

References edit

  1. ^ Shvab, V. A. (1948). Relation between the temperature and velocity fields of the flame of a gas burner. Gos. Energ. Izd., Moscow-Leningrad.
  2. ^ Y. B. Zel'dovich, Zhur. Tekhn. Fiz. 19,1199(1949), English translation, NACA Tech. Memo. No. 1296 (1950)
  3. ^ Williams, F. A. (2018). Combustion theory. CRC Press.
  4. ^ A. Liñán, The structure of diffusion flames, in Fluid Dynamical Aspects of Combustion Theory, M. Onofri and A. Tesei, eds., Harlow, UK. Longman Scientific and Technical, 1991, pp. 11–29
  5. ^ Liñán, A., & Williams, F. A. (1993). Fundamental aspects of combustion.
  6. ^ Linán, A. (2001). Diffusion-controlled combustion. In Mechanics for a New Mellennium (pp. 487-502). Springer, Dordrecht.
  7. ^ Linán, A., Orlandi, P., Verzicco, R., & Higuera, F. J. (1994). Effects of non-unity Lewis numbers in diffusion flames.