Title :
AMR Code Simulations of Turbulent Combustion in Confined and Unconfined SDF Explosions
Author :
Kuhl, Allen L. ; Bell, John B. ; Beckner, Vincent E.
Author_Institution :
Lawrence Livermore Nat. Lab. (LLNL), Livermore, CA, USA
Abstract :
A heterogeneous continuum model is proposed to describe the dispersion and combustion of an aluminum particle cloud in an explosion. It combines the gasdynamic conservation laws for the gas phase with a continuum model for the dispersed phase, as formulated by Nigmatulin. Inter-phase mass, momentum and energy exchange are prescribed by phenomenological models. It incorporates a combustion model based on the mass conservation laws for fuel, air and products; source/sink terms are treated in the fast-chemistry limit appropriate for such gasdynamic fields, along with a model for mass transfer from the particle phase to the gas. The model takes into account both the afterburning of the detonation products of the booster with air, and the combustion of the Al particles with air. The model equations were integrated by high-order Godunov schemes for both the gas and particle phases. Numerical simulations of the explosion fields from 1.5-g Shock-Dispersed-Fuel (SDF) charge in a 6.6 liter calorimeter were used to validate the combustion model. Then the model was applied to 10-kg Al-SDF explosions in a vented two-room structure and in an unconfined height-of-burst explosion. Computed pressure histories are in reasonable (but not perfect) agreement with measured waveforms. Differences are caused by physical-chemical kinetic effects of particle combustion which induce ignition delays in the initial reactive blast wave and quenching of reactions at late times. Current simulations give initial insights into such modeling issues.
Keywords :
combustion; explosions; fuel; kinetic theory; numerical analysis; turbulence; AMR code simulations; SDF explosions; aluminum particle cloud combustion; aluminum particle cloud dispersion; energy exchange; gasdynamic fields; heterogeneous continuum model; high-order Godunov schemes; ignition delays; inter-phase mass; mass conservation laws; mass transfer; numerical simulations; particle combustion; phenomenological models; physical-chemical kinetic effects; shock-dispersed-fuel charge; turbulent combustion; unconfined height-of-burst explosion; Atmospheric modeling; Combustion; Computational modeling; Explosions; Fuels; Mathematical model; Numerical models;
Conference_Titel :
DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program Users Group Conference (HPCMP-UGC), 2009
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5768-7
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5769-4
DOI :
10.1109/HPCMP-UGC.2009.24