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Article

LES and RANS Spray Combustion Analysis of OME3-5 and n-Dodecane

1
Institute of Powertrains and Automotive Technology, TU Wien, 1060 Vienna, Austria
2
Sandia National Laboratories, 7011 East Ave, Livermore, CA 94551, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Energies 2024, 17(10), 2265; https://doi.org/10.3390/en17102265
Submission received: 5 April 2024 / Revised: 24 April 2024 / Accepted: 26 April 2024 / Published: 8 May 2024
(This article belongs to the Section I1: Fuel)

Abstract

:
Clean-burning oxygenated and synthetic fuels derived from renewable power, so-called e-fuels, are a promising pathway to decarbonize compression–ignition engines. Polyoxymethylene dimethyl ethers (PODEs or OMEs) are one candidate of such fuels with good prospects. Their lack of carbon-to-carbon bonds and high concentration of chemically bound oxygen effectively negate the emergence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and even their precursors like acetylene (C2H2), enabling soot-free combustion without the soot-NOx trade-off common for diesel engines. The differences in the spray combustion process for OMEs and diesel-like reference fuels like n-dodecane and their potential implications on engine applications include discrepancies in the observed ignition delay, the stabilized flame lift-off location, and significant deviations in high-temperature flame morphology. For CFD simulations, the accurate modeling and prediction of these differences between OMEs and n-dodecane proved challenging. This study investigates the spray combustion process of an OME3 − 5 mixture and n-dodecane with advanced optical diagnostics, Reynolds-Averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS), and Large-Eddy Simulations (LESs) within a constant-volume vessel. Cool-flame and high-temperature combustion were measured simultaneously via high-speed (50 kHz) imaging with formaldehyde (CH2O) planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) representing the former and line-of-sight OH* chemiluminescence the latter. Both RANS and LES simulations accurately describe the cool-flame development process with the formation of CH2O. However, CH2O consumption and the onset of high-temperature reactions, signaled by the rise of OH* levels, show significant deviations between RANS, LES, and experiments as well as between n-dodecane and OME. A focus is set on the quality of the simulated results compared to the experimentally observed spatial distribution of OH*, especially in OME fuel-rich regions. The influence of the turbulence modeling is investigated for the two distinct ambient temperatures of 900 K and 1200 K within the Engine Combustion Network Spray A setup. The capabilities and limitations of the RANS simulations are demonstrated with the initial cool-flame propagation and periodic oscillations of CH2O formation/consumption during the quasi-steady combustion period captured by the LES.

1. Introduction

Oxygenated synthetic fuels promise to be a viable pathway to significantly reduce the CO2 footprint of hard-to-decarbonize applications. Concerning the potential of OMEs within engine applications, several studies identified mixtures of OME3 − 5 to be the most suitable alternative for diesel fuel because of the similar viscosity, lubricity, and boiling point, as well as lower volatility and higher cetane number compared to OME1 [1,2,3]. Hereby, the chemical structure of OMEs (CH3O(-CH2-O)n-CH3) is characterized by the number of oxymethylene ether groups (CH2-O) within. According to [4], a greater number of oxymethylene ether groups is beneficial for NOx emissions and only slightly reduces the thermal efficiency observed in a single-cylinder diesel engine. While Virt and Arnold [5] showed reduced particulate emissions and faster ignition, i.e., shorter ignition delays, for blends of diesel with up to 45 vol.% of OME3 − 5, Pélerin et al. [6] used a pure OME3 − 6 fuel comparing it to diesel in a heavy-duty engine. It was found that the OME3 − 6 fuel had drastically reduced soot and particulate emissions without increasing emission levels of NOx, hence effectively mitigating the soot-NOx trade-off typical for diesel engines. These observations were confirmed for engines fueled with both diesel–OMEs blends [7,8,9,10] and neat OMEs [3,11,12,13].
Besides engine operation aspects, the mixing and combustion characteristics of OMEs are crucial to extracting the fuel’s full potential and possibly guiding adaptations to future engine design needed for the widespread usage of OME fuels. Several studies, especially within the framework of the Engine Combustion Network (ECN) [14], worked with the same OME3 − 5 fuel composition used in this study. The macroscopic characteristics of the OME3 − 5 fuel mix compared to OME1, n-dodecane, and hydrotreated vegetable oil (HVO) were reported in [15] showing a longer liquid length and shorter ignition delay for OME3 − 5 compared to n-dodecane, despite its lower cetane number. The mixing process of OME3 − 5 was analyzed in comparison to n-dodecane and 1-octanol [16]. All fuels proved to have very similar mass distributions, and the differences in equivalence ratio distributions were solely a consequence of the different air requirements for stoichiometric mixing of the oxygenated fuels. Non-reacting as well as ignition characteristics of the OME3 − 5 fuel were studied in [17] within a constant-pressure vessel experimentally and numerically, employing Reynolds-Averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) calculations. Significant differences to n-dodecane were reported concerning the distribution of high-temperature reaction zones characterized by OH* chemiluminescence. The RANS calculations, tracking the OH species rather than the excited OH* radical, were able to depict the trends of higher OH accumulation in the spray symmetry plane for OME. The entire combustion process was shown not to exceed equivalence ratios greater than two for OME, which is, of course, in stark contrast to the combustion of n-paraffinic fuel like n-dodecane. These observations were confirmed for a single-cylinder optically accessible diesel engine in [18] using the same RANS setup and injection strategy and also recently by García-Oliver et al. [19] utilizing a different simulation setup and injection strategy but the same OME fuel. However, the simulations could not reproduce the strong OH* chemiluminescence signal in the spray center axis and the peak intensity near the flame lift-off length in either the constant-pressure vessel or the single-cylinder engine.
Pastor et al. [20] investigated the combustion characteristics of the OME3 − 5 fuel mixture for the standard operating condition of the ECN [14] using formaldehyde PLIF, signaling the rise of low-temperature reactions, and OH* chemiluminescence, indicating the onset of the high-temperature flame. The results demonstrated a clear separation of the cool flame and high-temperature reaction zone for one ECN standard injector (Spray A), but also a propagation of CH2O downstream of the flame lift-off length for a different injector with more than twice the size of the actual nozzle diameter (Spray D). The richer spray in the case of Spray D was assumed to impede the CH2O consumption at the spray axis.
A recent study by Kaario et al. [21] demonstrated the two-stage ignition characteristics for another oxygenated fuel, namely methanol, using Large-Eddy Simulations (LESs). The simulations showed that the methanol ignition is characterized by a higher heat release rate during the low-temperature chemistry or first-stage ignition and not during the high-temperature reactions, which is opposite to the behavior of classical two-stage ignition phenomena, e.g., for n-dodecane. The first-stage ignition was also shown to occur in a narrow range of temperatures and equivalence ratios for methanol, with its heat release rate two orders of magnitude smaller than that of n-dodecane. It was also demonstrated that n-dodecane has a temporally much more distinct two-stage ignition compared to methanol.
The differences in the transient two-stage ignition for OME fuels and n-dodecane are not yet determined conclusively. The present work aims to leverage numerical models to gain additional insights into the transition of the cool-flame propagation to the high-temperature ignition of an OME3 − 5 fuel mixture. Additionally, previous studies mainly focused on the standard ECN Spray A operating point with an ambient temperature of 900 K at the start of injection. Therefore, the impact of highly elevated ambient temperature on the auto-ignition process and the flame morphology of OME3 − 5 is investigated in the current study. For this, the ability of the constant volume pre-burn chamber at Sandia National Laboratories was utilized to achieve an ambient temperature of 1200 K at the start of fuel injection. The impact of the elevated temperature on the distribution of simulated OH and measured OH* chemiluminescence, especially, were of interest. Another focus of this work is to conduct an in-depth comparative analysis concerning the quality and limitations of the simulated results for RANS and LES calculations to identify possible areas of improvement for both turbulence modeling approaches based on experimental measurement.
First, the impact of highly elevated ambient temperature is described. Secondly, the findings on the cool-flame propagation and transition to high-temperature reactions are presented.

2. Setup

Experiments and simulations were conducted using a common-rail single axial hole piezo injector named Spray A3 with a measured diameter of 94 μ m. The injector has a convergent nozzle with a K-factor of 3.2. More details of the injector are referenced in [22].

2.1. Fuels

The multi-component oxymethylene ether fuel mix in the study, from now on simply OME, is detailed in its composition of different components by an analysis conducted by Analytik Service Gesellschaft (ASG) [23] shown in Table 1.
The most important physical and chemical properties of n-dodecane, hereinafter simply DOD, and OME are given in Table 2 with values taken from the batch report of ASG and from [15]. Additionally, the heat of evaporation derived from the internal AVL FIRE® database at a temperature of 90 °C is shown in Table 2 for both fuels.

2.2. Operating Points

The operating points realizing the medium (OP1) and high ambient temperature (OP2) conditions used for the experiments and simulations in this study are shown in Table 3.

2.3. Experimental Setup

Experiments were performed inside an optically accessible constant volume pre-burn chamber at Sandia. The operating conditions can be found in Table 3. Ambient conditions were controlled using a pre-burn technique. Details on the vessel and its operation can be found in previous works and on the ECN website. High-speed planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) imaging of CH 2 O was performed using a burst-mode Quasi-Modo Nd:YAG laser operating at 355 nm and 50 kHz. A Semrock multiline CH 2 O filter was used for spectral filtering, as well as a 450 nm shortpass filter to attenuate soot incandescence at longer wavelengths. Further details on the PLIF technique can be found in [22] regarding corrections for background luminosity and laser spatial and temporal variations. High-speed OH* chemiluminescence was performed simultaneously with a 308 nm OH* filter and 358 nm shortpass filter. Further details on the OH* technique can be found in [24]. Phantom v2512 high-speed cameras were used for imaging of both diagnostics. The ignition delay was also measured by using a piezoelectric pressure transducer. It was positioned in a lower corner of the vessel, opposite the injector. The pressure measurements were adjusted for the the time delay caused by the speed of sound and the distance from ignition site to pressure transducer according to [25]. Further details can be found on the ECN website [14].

2.4. Numerical Setup

The RANS calculations were carried out with AVL FIRE® R2020.1. LES calculations were performed using CONVERGE 3.0 CFD code.
However, both codes have employed a similar modeling framework using the Lagrangian–Eulerian approach. In this framework, liquid fuels are modeled as stochastic particles in a Lagrangian manner. On the other hand, the gaseous flow field is solved in the traditional Eulerian formulation. The momentum and heat/mass exchange processes between the liquid and gaseous phases are modeled and not resolved. Spray breakup was modeled in all cases by the KH-RT methods [26]. The spray plume cone angle for the simulations was set to 14°, following the results on Spray A near-field measurements in [27].
The liquid injection was realized with the Blob method that initializes the liquid parcels with a size corresponding to the actual nozzle exit diameter of the injector. The same methodology to generate the injection rates is employed for all calculations. The publicly available tool from the Polytechnical University of Valencia [28] guarantees a standardized method for numerical studies to create consistent injection rate profiles for the ECN Spray A3 injector. Figure 1 depicts the rates of injections for DOD and OME for an injection pressure of p i n j = 1500 bar and for an injection duration of t i n j = 1500 μ s as stated in Table 3 for the studied operating points.
In all cases, the combustion was modeled using chemical kinetic solvers with the well-stirred reactor assumption for each computational cell using the multi-zone technique. This approach clusters cells with similar thermodynamic conditions (temperature and equivalence ratio). The chemical reactions are solved for the mean of these clusters and the results are mapped back to the respective cells. The clustering and mapping-back procedures are applied according to [29].
A major goal of the current research is to ensure sufficient resolution of the mixture within the turbulent flow field when coupled to a direct chemistry integration approach that avoids mechanism-reduction compromises that alter or de-emphasize cool-flame ( C H 2 O ) prediction. RANS calculations with enabled turbulence chemistry interaction (TCI) were set as benchmark tests and did not show any meaningful differences in global ignition characteristics (ignition delay, flame lift-off length) or flame morphology when compared to simulations using the multi-zone speed-up option. This indicates a well-resolved flow field due to the high grid resolution. Hence, this approach was used for the detailed analysis comparing RANS to LES, as for the latter the multi-zone approach was adopted for keeping the computational time within reasonable limits.
For n-dodecane, a 251-species and 1484-reactions chemical mechanism, developed by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and described in the supplementary material in [24], was used. The OME simulations were carried out with the Niu mechanism [30] consisting of 92 species and 389 reactions. For validation of the used mechanisms regarding ignition delay and laminar flame speeds using 0-D simulations, the reader is referred to the respective reference.
The approach in this current work is to compare our best effort simulations using each institution’s respective tool. As shown in this work, these LES and RANS methods have been extensively validated in previous works. Combined with the efforts to match chemical kinetic mechanisms and combustion models, the focus of this work is not only to compare RANS and LES results, but to identify the area of improvements for approaches by performing in-depth analysis grounded by the experimental measurements. The following subsections describe the differences in the modeling setup for the LES and RANS simulations.

2.4.1. LES Setup

The Lagrangian spray and LES turbulence models used in this work have been extensively validated for non-reacting [31] and reacting flow [24]. The parameters for different models are summarized in Table 4.
Both fixed-cell embedding and adaptive mesh refinement (AMR), with the smallest cell size of 62.5 μ m, were used to sufficiently resolve both spray and flame dynamics. The fixed-cell embedding region has the shape of 20 mm long cone, centered around the injector axis. Such a fine mesh region is required to adequately resolve both the spray dynamics upstream and the subsequent low-temperature flame downstream of the liquid length. In an attempt to resolve as much as possible the high-temperature flame region, AMR is activated on velocity and temperature gradients, which is most active in the edge flame region downstream of the lift-off length. At steady state, 50 million cells were used in some calculations.
In the fixed embedding region, especially around the flame core where the low-temperature chemistry is the most relevant, less than 20 % of the total kinetic energy has to be modeled. However, more than 20 % of the total kinetic energy has to be modeled in the high-temperature flame region, despite the aggressive AMR strategy. So the overall LES can be considered well resolved, where less than 20 % of the total kinetic energy has to be modeled [32]. The main purpose of the meshing strategy in these LES calculations is to alleviate some weakness associated with the well-stirred reactor model employed in this work. To the authors’ best knowledge, these LESs are the finest ones compared to other LESs of Spray A [33,34,35]. The above discussion provides confidence for the low- and high- temperature flame analysis presented in this work.

2.4.2. RANS Setup

The RANS simulations of this study were conducted on a fixed mesh with a base cell size of 1 mm. Three refinement steps in the near-nozzle area resulted in a minimum cell edge length of 125 μ m. Figure 2 visualizes the spray-box mesh with its refinement areas and a cell count of 966,000.
The mesh and the models for the liquid and gaseous phase for the RANS calculations were validated extensively in [17,18]. The validation included a grid independence study, which was conducted for non-reacting as well as reacting conditions. Using a temporal resolution of d t = 0.5 μ s, the utilized cell sizes for the RANS computations represent a higher spatial resolution than recommended by the modeling standards of the ECN, which propose a minimum cell size of 250 μ m [14]. This way the setup ensures that the liquid droplets evaporate within the highest resolution region of 125 μ m and that the subsequent ignition occurs within cells with a maximum edge length of 250 μ m. The chosen RANS turbulence model is the k- ζ -f model proposed in [36], which is the further development of the k- v 2 ¯ -f model derived by Durbin [37]. This k- v 2 ¯ -f model enhances the classic isotropic k- ϵ model [38] by introducing an additional transported variable, the wall-normal velocity scale ( v 2 ¯ ), which is sensitive to the wall-blocking effect and imposes the correct (anisotropic) kinematic boundary condition on the normal component of the turbulent intensity in near-wall regions of turbulent shear flows via an elliptic relaxation function (f). Hanjalić et al. proposed in [36] to solve not for the velocity scale but rather alternatively for the velocity scale ratio ( ζ = v 2 ¯ /k), thus delivering a numerically more robust and efficient model.
The constants for the KH-RT [26] spray breakup model within the RANS setup were set to B 0 = 0.61 and B 1 = 10 . Liquid spray evaporation is modeled with the method of Brenn et al. [39], which accounts for the multiple oxymethylene ether components of the OME fuel.
Table 4. Summary of simulation setup.
Table 4. Summary of simulation setup.
Liquid Spray ModelsRANSLES
Injection typeBlob [40]
Breakup (KH-RT [26]) B 0 = 0.61 , B 1 = 10 B 0 = 0.6 , B 1 = 7
Turbulent dispersionO’Rourke [41,42]
EvaporationBrenn et al. [39]        Frossling [42] including corrected distortion [31]
Drag LawSchiller-Naumann [43]      Liu et al. [44] with corrected distortion [31]
Gaseous phase modelsRANSLES
Maximum cell count966,000≈60 million
Minimum grid size125 μ m62.5 μ m
Turbulence modelingk- ζ -f model [36]One-equation Dynamic Structure LES model [45]

3. Results and Discussion

LES and RANS calculations adhere to the ECN modeling standards [14] to determine ignition delay and flame lift-off length. Ignition is calculated by identifying the time of the maximum gradient in temperature. The flame lift-off is set to be the axial location closest to the nozzle at which the OH mass fraction reaches 14% of its maximum in the computational domain. In the experiments, ignition and flame lift-off length are measured based on OH* chemiluminescence following a similar procedure to that described in [24]. To summarize, lift-off length is measured using the time-averaged quasi-steady chemiluminescence intensity field to obtain two lobes of high intensity at the top and bottom of the jet near the lift-off length. The ECN defines the lift-off length as the average axial distance between the injector and the first axial locations of the two lobes with an intensity greater than 50%, compared to the leveling-off value. The onset of ignition is measured as the first frame, where 10 pixels reach this same 50% threshold. Additionally, the pressure-based ignition delay was detected by the start of the rapid pressure rise caused by high-temperature ignition.
Figure 3 compares the results for LES, RANS, and experiments for high-temperature ignition delay (ID) and flame lift-off length (LOL) for both operating points. It can be seen that the simulations reproduce the experimental data well in general. However, the LES seems to overestimate the lift-off for n-dodecane in the case of 1200 K ambient temperature and slightly underestimate the lift-off length for OME for 900 K ambient temperature. Remarkably, LES and RANS predict an identical ignition delay for n-dodecane in the case of 900 K ambient temperature, namely 340 μ s, which is valuable for being able to compare the transition from the cool-flame to high-temperature combustion for both turbulence modeling approaches.
At first, the influence of the ambient temperature on the high-temperature flame morphology for both fuels will be discussed in Section 3.1. A detailed analysis of the spatial distribution of the measured and simulated hot-flame shapes for 900 K and 1200 K is presented.
Finally, the transient development of the cool flame with a focus on the different combustion stages for n-dodecane and OME is described in Section 3.2.

3.1. Influence of Ambient Temperature on Hot-Flame Morphology

To interpret the transient evolution of the low- and high-temperature flame in a compact manner, spatiotemporal plots in the form I x t = y m i n y m a x c C H 2 O ( x , y , t ) d y are shown in Figure 4, with c C H 2 O referencing either the measured PLIF intensity or the simulated CH 2 O molar concentration, x the axial location, and y the cross-stream radial coordinate. Additionally, OH* intensity and OH molar concentration are plotted into the contour, with the respective intensity and concentration present at the flame lift-off length. The OH species was chosen as a simulation reference to the OH* chemiluminescence experiments because the used OME reaction mechanism does not contain an excited OH* species. The OH* chemiluminescence experiments are line-of-sight OH*. For LES and RANS, the OH species mass fractions were first integrated in the normal direction to the visualized plane and then projected onto it. This ensures an accurate comparison.
The most significant difference between the fuels is the complete absence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) for OME, which form for n-dodecane separated in space and time from the detected formaldehyde for t a S O I 520 μ s and x > 30 mm in the case of a 900 K ambient temperature (Figure 4a). Hereby, the normalization of the measured intensity was rendered with the maximum value PLIF intensity before the onset of PAH formation. According to Sim et al. [22], several key PAH molecules are excited by the used 355 nm of the PLIF diagnostic. The main difference between turbulence modeling approaches is that the RANS calculations show a steady distribution of CH 2 O in time. The LES is characterized by the cyclic rise and fall of CH 2 O concentration as the injection progresses. It is also visible that these oscillations of the LES lead to the formation of CH 2 O far upstream compared to the RANS calculations for both fuels. The contours of the cool and hot flame in axial space and time are well represented by both simulations, with the LES showing a slightly better match, at least for the 900 K ambient temperature.
For all realizations, CH 2 O is formed after the first ignition stage and then accumulates to its maximum concentration before being consumed by the high-temperature flame. At 900 K ambient temperature, Figure 4a, CH 2 O forms well upstream of the lift-off length and shows a significantly high concentration of CH 2 O at the location of flame stabilization. This confirms for OME the previous findings for n-dodecane in [24] that CH 2 O promotes ignition and helps stabilize the high-temperature flame at the 900 K operating point.
In the case of 1200 K, Figure 4b, the spatial sequence of CH 2 O formation and consumption is more challenging to interpret. Experimentally, two factors are affecting the results. For n-dodecane, the formation of PAHs occurs from approximately t a S O I 160 μ s onwards, which is very soon after the initial formation of CH 2 O. Only a small temporal window separates the region of increased PAH yield with the measurement of actual CH 2 O intensity. This separation is even absent when considering the axial distance. Starting at x 13 mm downstream of the nozzle, PAHs form for n-dodecane. Secondly, the PLIF measurements can only detect signals downstream of the liquid length. The thresholds for the PLIF experiments were set up to a fixed number of 35 counts for all experiments except for the case of 1200 K ambient temperature (OP2) and using OME as fuel. In that case, only five frame counts were set as thresholds. As the liquid phase of OME penetrates further into the combustion chamber than n-dodecane, as shown in [17], part of the CH 2 O formation when using OME as fuel at the 1200 K operating point cannot be captured experimentally. For both fuels, the flame stabilization in Figure 4b occurs upstream of the maximum concentration of CH 2 O, which differs from the 900 K case. The periodic oscillations of CH 2 O formation and consumption are also present for the LES in the case of 1200 K ambient temperature.
After analyzing the global combustion behavior for both fuels and operating points, the spatial distribution of the high-temperature flame morphology will be discussed in detail. The results in Figure 5 and Figure 6 are line-of-sight with the LES and RANS results showing projected OH species mass fractions.
The comparison between the two fuels for OP1 (900 K) in Figure 5 demonstrates significant differences in the spatial distribution of the high-temperature reaction zone, already observed in [17,18]. For n-dodecane (Figure 5a), the highest intensity is measured and simulated in the shear layer of spray and ambient air, which are also the locations of the first ignition kernels. As the flame propagates downstream, the high-intensity region stretches with it along the length of the spray. For OME (Figure 5b), the kernel of the ignition is at the tip of the spray in the center of the symmetry plane. The fuel-rich center of the spray remains the high-intensity region for the entire high-temperature combustion. Both simulations differ from the experiments in that the simulated peak of the OH species concentration travels with the flame downstream of the lift-off length. The experimentally observed peak of the excited OH* radical maintains its position near the flame lift-off length. The overall contour is well represented by both simulations, with the LES being able to reproduce the high intensity in the spray center better than the RANS calculations.
The observation for the 1200 K operating point (OP2) in Figure 6 differs substantially from the 900 K case for OME. Now, the measured peak intensity location travels downstream in line with the simulation results instead of maintaining a high intensity near the lift-off length. Whereas the n-dodecane flame shape is similar to the 900 K case in forming high concentrations of OH*/OH in the shear boundary layer between spray and ambient air, the analysis for OME shows that only its tendency to form high OH*/OH concentrations in the spray center axis is also visible in the 1200 K case. The difference in the axial position of the peak intensity for OME when increasing the ambient temperature might be due to the decreased mixing time before high-temperature ignition. At 1200 K, the shortened ignition delay might cause fewer oxygen radicals to be present close to the flame lift-off length, which would generate a lower relative OH* concentration.
The simulations’ overall development and flame contour agree well with the experiments. The RANS calculations especially accurately replicate the radial and axial locations of the high intensity in the OH* chemiluminescence experiments.
The experiments and simulations were averaged in time using the identical time window once a stable lift-off length was established for a more meaningful comparison of the low- and high-temperature species distribution. To analyze the high-temperature zones, the experimentally recorded OH* line-of-sight data were deconvoluted using an inverse Radon transform to represent their distribution in the symmetry plane for the quasi-steady period. Table 5 shows the different averaging windows by fuel and operating point. In Figure 4, the quasi-steady period for the flame lift-off starting at approximately t a S O I > 500 μ s for each case indicates the timing for averaging the results for both fuels after establishing a stable flame lift-off.
As all contour plots were normalized by their respective maximum value for a better comparison between RANS and LES, the maximum simulated values for the concentrations of C H 2 O and OH in the injector symmetry plane are listed in Table 6.
The influence of the ambient temperature on the time-averaged results for both fuels will be discussed in the following.
Figure 7 delivers a comprehensive comparison between simulations and experiments, n-dodecane and OME, as well as low- and high-temperature combustion for OP1 at 900 K ambient temperature. The contour plots show mean and normalized values, which were temporally averaged according to Table 5. At the top, Figure 7a displays the mean contour of the low-temperature steady-state combustion characterized by the distribution of formaldehyde in the spray symmetry plane. As indicated in the figure, the PLIF intensity for n-dodecane was only evaluated until an axial position of 30 mm downstream of the nozzle. Increased formation of PAHs was only detected for distances further downstream than that for 900 K ambient temperature, as seen in Figure 4a.
The peak in PLIF intensity and simulated CH 2 O concentration can be located at approximately 20 mm in the center of the spray for both fuels. OME tends to concentrate its CH 2 O formation a few millimeters further downstream. For the simulations, the zone of high-temperature combustion is shown with magenta iso-lines indicating a temperature of 1600 K, which, according to Idicheria and Pickett [46], serves as the best reference for marking the threshold of the destruction of CH 2 O and the regime of high-temperature (OH*) reactions. This observation is confirmed when analyzing Figure 7a, and later on in Figure 13 within Section 3.2, as for both fuels no significant amount of CH 2 O enters the high-temperature zone. Additionally, fuel-rich regions in Figure 7 satisfying the criterion of ϕ = 2 are shown with white iso-lines. Hereby, the equivalence ratio ( ϕ ) is defined as a passive scalar independent of the reaction state. For oxygenated fuels, such as OME, this definition has to be adapted by the chemically bound oxygen within the fuel structure following the conclusions of Mueller [47]. The existence of chemically bound oxygen causes the traditional definition of the equivalence ratio ( ϕ ) to incorrectly calculate the distance of a reactant mixture from its stoichiometric condition. Hence, the appropriate passive scalar mixing parameter for oxygenated fuels is the oxygen equivalence ratio ( ϕ Ω ).
The differences between the two fuels are apparent when comparing the simulations. n-Dodecane fuel-rich zones penetrate the high-temperature regions for RANS and LES. For OME, the peak CH 2 O concentration forms a distinct frontier separating the fuel-rich zone from the high-temperature flame. The clear spatial separation of the cool flame (CH 2 O formation) and high-temperature (OH) reactions for OME at 900 K ambient temperature was also observed by simultaneous PLIF planar measurements of CH 2 O and OH in [20] for an older generation of the Spray A injector.
When observing the high-temperature combustion, Figure 7b, the center region into which the n-dodecane-rich mixture ( ϕ = 2 ) penetrates is characterized by low OH* intensity for the experiment and even lower OH concentration for the simulations. The lean OME spray, with its separated cool and hot flame, shows a very different flame morphology in the spray center plane. In the experiments especially, the OH* intensity peaks only a few millimeters downstream of the lift-off length and remains elevated at the spray axis. Neither simulation can fully reproduce the stark contrast to n-dodecane in the high-temperature flame morphology. Notably, the simulations do not show the high-intensity blob shortly after the flame lift-off. The LES seems to be more capable in that regard, as it yields a higher OH concentration along the spray axis compared to RANS calculations.
It must be pointed out that differences are expected when comparing simulated OH concentration to measured OH* chemiluminescence intensity. Maes et al. [48] investigated the flame structure differences of excited OH* chemiluminescence and ground state OH PLIF. The flame structure differed depending on the measurement technique, with OH* found further upstream than OH and the latter extending to a greater radial distance from the spray centerline. It was concluded that OH is more stable and in partial equilibrium with the water vapor produced during combustion. OH*, on the other hand, is instead a reaction zone product for which spontaneous emission rates determine the lifetime.
These observations explain the discrepancies between experiment and simulations, seen in Figure 7b, to some extent, but not sufficiently. The differences between simulations and experiments concerning the high-temperature flame shape seem significantly greater for OME than for n-dodecane. Even the computationally expensive LES calculations cannot fully capture the flame morphology of OME reliably for the presented ambient conditions of 900 K.
The interpretation of the differences between simulations and experiments and between n-dodecane and OME slightly changes when studying the time-averaged contour maps with 1200 K ambient temperature in Figure 8. As seen with the transient OH*/OH plots for OME in Figure 6b, the time-averaged experimental results at 1200 K in Figure 8b show an entirely different OH* distribution compared to its 900 K counterpart. The peak intensity is close to the flame lift-off length and the spray tip. The spray center axis displays an elevated OH* concentration. Still, high levels are also seen a few millimeters away from the centerline in what appears to be the boundary shear layer of OME fuel spray and ambient air. Interestingly, n-dodecane also shows some differences at 1200 K in its high-temperature flame shape. The peak of its mean distribution is now further upstream along the shear boundary of spray and air and not near the lift-off length as seen in Figure 7b at 900 K ambient temperature. The 1200 K simulations match the experiments more accurately than in the 900 K case, especially for OME.
The results for the mean cool-flame shape are displayed in Figure 8a. As is indicated in the I x t plots of Figure 4b, the PLIF measurements for n-dodecane are impaired by the presence of PAHs, which are entirely absent for OME. The soot cutoff axial position shown in Figure 8a virtually denies an adequate assessment of the time-averaged cool-flame distribution for n-dodecane. When comparing RANS and LES at 1200 K for n-dodecane, it is noticeable that the LES predicts an CH 2 O distribution that penetrates further into the combustion chamber compared to RANS, which also pushes the high-temperature zone (magenta iso-line) further downstream. The same observation is made for OME. Here, because of the absence of PAH concentration, it is discernable that the RANS calculation delivers results closer to predicting the measurements.
The clear axial separation of the cool and hot OME spray flame is not present at 1200 K. Fuel-rich spray ( ϕ = 2 , white iso-lines) penetrates along the centerline and forms CH 2 O with the high-temperature zone already present in short radial distance to it. However, the fuel-rich spray enters the area of T 1600 K only very marginally, especially compared to n-dodecane.
For a more detailed analysis of the spatial high-temperature flame distribution, radial profiles are drawn at axial positions, starting a few millimeters downstream of the lift-off length, into the time-averaged contours. Figure 9 shows the normalized OH and OH* profiles for simulations and experiments at 900 K ambient temperature, respectively. The differences between n-dodecane and OME become visible once again, with OME not displaying any drop in its OH* intensity at the center of the spray.
The simulations are able to predict the peak intensity location for n-dodecane with good agreement to the experiments, with the LES showing a radially wider distribution of high OH concentration peaks stretching further away from the shear layer of fuel and ambient air. For n-dodecane, a reduction in the OH* intensity in the center is measured, which falls to approximately 20% of its peak intensity 24 mm downstream of the nozzle and several millimeters downstream of the lift-off length. The fact that the OH* profile does not entirely subside to zero in the center for the experiments with n-dodecane cannot be reproduced by either simulation.
This behavior is even more pronounced for OME, where the respective experimentally observed peak intensity is right in the center axis of the spray. The RANS simulations again show sharp concentration peaks roughly one millimeter closer to the center axis than the respective RANS n-dodecane calculation. The LES shows slightly more evenly distributed profiles, which have an elevated OH concentration in the center, albeit not enough to align with the experiments.
When considering the 1200 K operating point in Figure 10, it can be seen that for n-dodecane, the OH* intensity does not drop at all the further downstream the radial profiles are extracted (Figure 10a). It instead increases, which is reflected by the LES calculation. The peak intensity can be found at x = 40 mm, with both simulations predicting the radial position of the peak intensity correctly. The RANS calculation cannot replicate the increase in OH concentration and only shows a widening of the radial profiles. Both simulations cannot reproduce the level of OH* intensity in the spray center, similar to the 900 K ambient conditions.
The radial profiles for OME at 1200 K, Figure 10b, show a distinct difference from their 900 K counterparts. A few millimeters downstream of the lift-off length, the typical peak OH* intensity in the spray center axis is measured. However, further downstream at x = 20 mm, a drop in intensity in the spray center is visible, producing a similar radial profile shape compared to n-dodecane, with higher relative values for OH* intensity. At the flame tip, the intensity peaks again at the center, which the simulations can partly capture, showing elevated OH concentrations on the spray center axis at x = 45 mm downstream of the nozzle.
The following analysis aims at depicting the spatial transition of cool (CH 2 O) to hot flame OH*/OH for the two studied ambient temperatures and fuels with Figure 11, where the transition from cool- to high-temperature flame along the spray centerline is depicted for the time-averaged results of the measurements and simulations.
At 900 K, OME decreases its OH* intensity level faster than n-dodecane the greater the distance downstream of the lift-off length. This sharp drop in high-temperature reaction activity can also be noticed in Figure 11b. In contrast to n-dodecane, Figure 11a, the maximum OH* intensity for OME drops from approximately 90% to below 25% within only 5 mm along the centerline.
Another important aspect is the location of the first rise of OH* intensity compared to the location of maximum CH 2 O formation. For n-dodecane at 900 K, the measured peak OH* intensity in Figure 11a falls precisely within the space of elevated and peak CH 2 O PLIF intensity. The simulations capture the formation and conversion of CH 2 O in the center of the spray very well. However, the transition to OH is less accurate due to the already shown lack of simulated OH species concentration in the spray center.
In the case of OME fuel, a clear shift of the maximum OH* intensity further downstream relative to the maximum CH 2 O PLIF intensity is visible in Figure 11b. The peak of OH* intensity now occurs at an axial location of approximately 26 mm where all CH 2 O is already destroyed, leading to a clear separation of the cool flame and the zone of high-temperature combustion. The RANS calculations slightly overestimate the axial distance of maximum CH 2 O formation, which the LES predicted with higher accuracy. The underestimation of the OH reaction activity in the spray center is also responsible for the late rise in OH concentration in both simulations.
By increasing the combustion chamber temperature to 1200 K, the OH* chemiluminescence experiments show two peaks in intensity for both fuels, one close to the lift-off length and one further downstream. For n-dodecane, Figure 11c, the first peak of OH* intensity at approximately x = 9 mm occurs even before any CH 2 O PLIF signal is detected. The same observation is valid for OME in Figure 11d, with the maximum of OH* intensity appearing before the maximum of CH 2 O, and the second one at the end of the flame at approximately x = 42 mm. However, it must be noted that the PLIF measurements cannot detect any signal where liquid fuel is present. Hence, the axial location of CH 2 O maximum PLIF intensity cannot be determined with certainty for both fuels in 1200 K hot ambient temperature. For OME, though, the centerline profile strongly suggests that the maximum of CH 2 O intensity does not form upstream of the PLIF starting threshold of x = 8 mm. For n-dodecane, between soot cutoff and PLIF threshold, the first rise and onset of CH 2 O are very challenging to discern, with only a few millimeters of actual CH 2 O signal detectable.
The LES at 1200 K pushes its CH 2 O maximum further downstream compared to RANS, and there seems to be a smooth transition from consumed CH 2 O to forming of OH, especially for OME. The RANS calculation for OME in Figure 11d shows a slight increase in OH concentration at the exact location of the first axially measured OH* intensity peak. It also predicts a comparable, and higher in comparison to the 900 K case, level of OH concentration only slightly downstream of the second OH* intensity peak. The LES cannot replicate the changed hot-flame morphology for this case and shows a similar profile compared to 900 K ambient temperature.
In general, RANS and LES struggle to reproduce the high level of high-temperature reactions in the spray center close to the lift-off length of the flame for both fuels and ambient temperatures, especially for OME.

3.2. Cool-Flame Evolution

Tagliante et al. identified in [24] several distinct stages for the combustion of n-dodecane using the same injector at 900 K ambient temperature to characterize the transition from cool flame to high-temperature combustion. Figure 12 displays the different ignition stages using the spatially averaged but transient profiles of planar formaldehyde (CH 2 O) and line-of-sight OH*/OH for n-dodecane (Figure 12a) and OME (Figure 12b) at 900 K ambient temperature. Because of the rapidness of the combustion process, the PLIF signal axial thresholds and early formation of PAHs in case of 1200 K, see Figure 4b, the cool-flame transient development and subsequent combustion stages will be discussed in detail for the 900 K case only.
In general, seven stages can be distinguished in Figure 12: (1) first stage of ignition, (2) cool flame (low-temperature) propagation, (3) maximum CH 2 O, (4) CH 2 O consumption, (5) second stage ignition, (6) turbulent high-temperature flame propagation, and (7) quasi-steady combustion. Depending on the fuel characteristics and ambient conditions, these stages occur at different time intervals, which may overlap. For n-dodecane in Figure 12a, it is indicated that stages are quite distinct from each other when considering that the ignition delay, signaling the combustion stage (5), of the simulations is I D D O D , R A N S , L E S = 340 μ s and that of the experiments ranges from I D D O D , E X P = 331 368 μ s.
For OME in Figure 12b, the analysis is more complex, as the measured ignition delay time ranges from I D O M E , E X P = 309 340 μ s. The LESs predict an ID of I D O M E , L E S = 270 μ s, whereas the RANS calculations pinpoint the largest temperature gradient at I D O M E , R A N S = 327 μ s. It is therefore challenging to differentiate between the stages (3), (4), and (5) for OME in simulations and experiments, as the second stage ignition, i.e., ignition delay, occurs almost simultaneously with the maximum yield of CH 2 O and its subsequent consumption. OME tends to pass through the initial stages of combustion earlier than n-dodecane, with both simulations somewhat overpredicting the delay of the first ignition stage for both fuels. The LES shows a steeper accumulation curve of CH 2 O compared to RANS, which is more pronounced for OME. The consumption of CH 2 O (stage 4) in the case of n-dodecane is quite similar for LES and RANS and only shifted compared to the measurements. For OME, this combustion stage deviates significantly for LES and RANS, leading to a difference in ignition delay prediction of more than 50 μ s. The consumption of the CH 2 O concentration after its maximum was reached is more rapid for the LES and seems too fast compared to the experiment.
The quasi-steady combustion for n-dodecane is characterized by increased measured PLIF intensity after t a S O I > 520 μ s. This uptake is due to the formation of PAHs.
The spatial distribution of the temporal development of the cool flame and the onset of the high-temperature reactions, referring to the combustion stages shown in Figure 12, are depicted in Figure 13 for the 900 K ambient temperature (OP1). The planar contour plots show the PLIF intensity for the experiment and molar concentration for the simulations. The intensity and concentration were normalized to accurately compare each time step. For the simulations, the fuel-rich ( ϕ = 2 ) and high-temperature reaction ( T = 1600 K) zones are again outlined in white and magenta iso-lines, respectively.
In Figure 13a, n-dodecane is simulated by the RANS and LES methods to penetrate with a fuel-rich spray into the high-temperature zone. The first low-temperature ignition kernels (first stage) can be seen at the shear layer of the fuel spray with ambient air, which differs from the experiments, where the initial CH 2 O formation appears in the spray center. The simulations correctly predict the location of maximum CH 2 O (third stage) in the spray center. The first spots of high-temperature ignition (fifth stage) for n-dodecane are simulated at the spray tip but again in the shear layer between fuel spray and ambient air. At t a S O I = 600 μ s, during the quasi-steady combustion, it is noticeable that the PLIF experiments start to show elevated concentrations of PAHs at the spray tip precisely at the locations where the RANS and LES methods predict the fuel-rich mixture to enter the high-temperature region. In contrast, Figure 13b visualizes the absence of any fuel-rich spray entering the simulated spray region with T > 1600 K for OME. The simulations predict a clear spatial separation of the cool flame (CH 2 O formation) and high-temperature (OH) reactions for every time step, as was already observed for the time-averaged plots in Figure 7a.
The first ignition stage appears more accurate for OME simulations, with CH 2 O forming closer to the spray center axis. The LES represents both fuels’ cool-flame propagation (second stage) well. Both simulations can capture the position of maximum CH 2 O. In contrast to n-dodecane, high-temperature ignition locations for OME are spotted at the spray tip instead of at the shear layer between the spray and ambient air.
In general, the locations of CH 2 O formation are well captured by LES and RANS calculations, with the experimental intensity and simulated concentration for both fuels peaking at approximately 20 mm downstream of the nozzle.
The last aspect of the present study concerns the initial cool-flame propagation of accumulated CH 2 O mass within the mixing space, as well as its periodic formation and destruction during the quasi-steady combustion. Figure 14 and Figure 15 show the simulated CH 2 O and OH mass binned by equivalence ratios ( ϕ ) from 0 to 10 for n-dodecane and OME, respectively, for both turbulence models, with a bin size of 0.05. The symbols show the average mass of CH 2 O (left y-axis) and OH (right y-axis) in each bin, color-coded by temperature. The shaded areas represent the standard deviations, with CH 2 O in blue and OH in red. The top plots focus on the cool-flame formation and consumption before high-temperature ignition for each fuel and simulation model. The bottom plots show CH 2 O and OH during quasi-steady combustion.
Tagliante et al. [24] demonstrated an initial cool-flame wave, identified by CH 2 O and defined in [49], for n-dodecane and LES, as well as its periodic formation/consumption during the quasi-steady phase. This study also calculated this process and it is shown in Figure 14b. The comparison between LES and RANS for n-dodecane and 900 K is particularly interesting as both simulations predict the exact same high-temperature ignition delay of 340 μ s; see Figure 3a. The RANS calculations with n-dodecane in Figure 14a also visualize a cool-flame wave, albeit at leaner mixtures and slightly lower temperatures. At 240 μ s CH 2 O peaks at ϕ = 4.3 and OH at ϕ = 5 for the LES. For this time step, the RANS model, on the other hand, simulates a peak CH 2 O concentration for ϕ = 2.6 . Corresponding to the trend for the LES, the maximum OH accumulated mass is found for a slightly richer mixture at ϕ = 2.8 . 40 μ s later in the injection process, the LES predicts that the cool flame propagated to leaner mixtures peaking at ϕ = 7 and starts being consumed at ϕ = 2 . At this point in time, the RANS model simulates the CH 2 O mass to peak already at ϕ = 4 . The high-temperature consumption forming OH shows two maxima at ϕ = 4.4 and ϕ = 2.8 , with the leaner value being the mixing region of increased OH production, ultimately peaking at stoichiometry. The entire process of the initial cool-flame propagation is limited in temperature for the LES by T 1400 K and for RANS by T 1200 K.
Within the LES framework, the quasi-steady combustion period for n-dodecane is characterized by the cyclic formation and consumption of CH 2 O, as shown at the bottom in Figure 14b. According to [24], this process is most likely caused by gas pressure oscillations generated by the low-temperature combustion. The oscillation frequency qualitatively matched the resonance frequency of the combustion chamber (5.7 kHz) because the length of LES mesh matched the length of the pre-burn chamber. The LES can capture these fluctuations affecting the CH 2 O distribution at the jet center, potentially because of its well-resolved turbulent mixing field, which is fine enough to resolve at least 80% of the turbulent kinetic energy. The RANS calculations, however, are not able to resolve these small-scale fluctuations. The turbulent mixing field is too smooth to reproduce the oscillations. No cyclic behavior in the formation and consumption of CH 2 O during quasi-steady combustion, at the bottom in Figure 14a, could be observed for the RANS computations.
For OME, both LES (Figure 15b) and also RANS (Figure 15a) depict the cool-flame propagation from lean to rich mixtures after the first stage of ignition. In this case, however, the propagation ends at mixtures with ϕ < 3 and for RANS even ϕ < 2.5 . LES and RANS show a similar initial process, only shifting to smaller equivalence ratio values by 0.3–0.5. Interestingly, the average temperature for each bin does not exceed 1000 K for both simulations during the cool-flame propagation and is, therefore, significantly cooler than its counterpart for n-dodecane.
Concerning the quasi-steady combustion, it is quite challenging to discern cyclic behavior for OME, even when analyzing LES calculations. The bottom plot in Figure 15b hints at a possible periodic behavior. However, the small range of equivalence ratios in which the entire combustion process occurs complicates the identification of cycles. The RANS calculations, again, show a complete absence of periodic behavior, as the averaging process of the simulations makes it impossible to capture the small-scale oscillations caused by the low-temperature flame forming and consuming CH 2 O and transmitted by acoustic pressure waves in the combustion chamber.

4. Summary and Conclusions

This study focused on the influence of high ambient temperature on the cool- and hot-flame morphology, represented by CH 2 O and OH*/OH, for the synthetic e-fuel OME 3     5 compared to the diesel-like reference fuel n-dodecane. Besides the standard and well-documented ECN Spray A operating point of 900 K, the spray combustion of the two fuels in an ambient temperature of 1200 K was analyzed with PLIF CH 2 O and OH* chemiluminescence experiments, as well as RANS and LES calculations. In addition, the initial cool-flame wave and the periodic formation and consumption during the quasi-steady combustion regime were compared for the two fuels and turbulence modeling methods.
The following conclusions were drawn:
  • OME forms no visible PAHs or soot signature within the CH 2 O PLIF experiments at neither 900 K nor 1200 K. This contrasts with n-dodecane, which shows PAH formation at both temperatures. In the case of 1200 K and n-dodecane, the early onset of PAHs generation after high-temperature ignition and its proximity to the injector nozzle makes it very challenging to differentiate between actual CH 2 O signal detection and PAH interference.
  • At 900 K, OME shows a distinct separation between the fuel-rich ( ϕ = 2 ) spray, the cool-flame distribution signaled by CH 2 O, and the high-temperature region ( T 1600 K) of the spray. No fuel-rich spray enters the high-temperature zone, either for LES or RANS. At 1200 K, this clear axial separation does not exist. However, little fuel-rich spray enters the simulated zone with T 1600 K. For n-dodecane, the fuel-rich spray is simulated to penetrate the hot-flame region, and PAH formation is experimentally detected at identical locations.
  • The spatial cool-flame (CH 2 O) distribution and its temporal evolution are predicted by both turbulence modeling techniques with good agreement to the experiments.
  • The high-temperature flame distribution shows significant differences between fuels and ambient temperatures. At 900 K, the simulations fail to predict the high OH* intensity close to the lift-off length, especially for OME, where the signal intensity at the spray tip is only a fraction of its maximum close to the root of the flame. This picture changes significantly for 1200 K, where the peak intensity for OME travels along the spray tip and two distinct OH* maxima of intensity are detected, which is simulated by both LES and RANS with better agreement compared to the 900 K case.
    This difference in the axial location of the peak intensity for OME for an increased ambient temperature might be caused by the decreased mixing time before high-temperature ignition, with possibly fewer oxygen radicals present close to the flame lift-off length, generating a lower relative OH* concentration.
  • The LES calculations are better suited to reproduce the higher OH* intensity for OME in the spray centerline and its radial distribution close to the lift-off length. However, especially for the lower ambient temperature of 900 K, the discrepancies between experimental OH* and simulated OH species contours are significant. The deviations are less severe but still present for n-dodecane. This indicates a generic problem, which only intensifies for OME.
    An explanation might be that the studied reaction mechanism for OME developed by Niu et al. [30] does not contain an equivalent excited OH* species, which is assumed to be less stable with its lifetime limited by spontaneous emission rates and also appears to be present further upstream than the ground state OH species [48].
    Another possibility, which refers to the differences seen for OME and n-dodecane, is that the current OME mechanism incorrectly models the impact of the chemically bound oxygen, or its release via fuel decomposition, on the high-temperature reactivity in the fuel-rich center of the spray.
  • The overall high-temperature flame morphology at 1200 K is well captured by the RANS computations.
  • The cool-flame wave of CH 2 O formation within different mixing states for n-dodecane, previously shown in [24], was demonstrated for OME too. Both LES and RANS predict an increase in CH 2 O mass after the first stage of ignition, which materializes initially at small equivalence ratio values and then propagates to reach its peak at fuel-rich mixtures. The LES predicts this process within a wider range of equivalence ratios. The most significant differences regarding this analysis are shown between the two fuels, with OME barely exceeding values for equivalence ratios of ϕ > 2.5 and n-dodecane, especially for LES, showing accumulations of CH 2 O with ϕ > 10 . Also, the initial cool-flame wave occurs at lower temperatures for OME ( T 1000 K) compared to n-dodecane ( T 1400 K).
  • The periodic formation and consumption of formaldehyde described in [24] could not be reproduced with RANS calculations. In the case of LES with OME as fuel, oscillations for the formation and subsequent destruction of CH 2 O in the mixing space are visible but occur within a very narrow range of equivalence ratios.
Future work in the area of this study should focus on the development of numerical reaction mechanisms for OME, which contain excited OH* as well as ground state OH species, to be able to reference experiments that use either OH* chemiluminescence or OH PLIF.
In addition, the influence of chemically bound oxygen in oxygenated fuels on high-temperature reactions needs further investigation. Currently, fuel-rich regions, like the center of a spray jet, are the primary source of modeling errors when dealing with oxygenated fuels like OME. Identifying the origin of the error, be it incorrect fuel decomposition or inadequate reaction rates of specific reactions, will be the main challenge to improving CFD modeling quality for OME fuel.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, F.W.; methodology, F.W., T.M.N., F.T., L.M.P., J.M. and T.L.; software, F.W. and T.M.N.; validation, F.W., T.M.N. and J.M.; formal analysis, F.W.; investigation, F.W., T.M.N., F.T., K.W. and J.M.; data curation, F.W., T.M.N. and K.W.; writing—original draft preparation, F.W. and T.M.N.; writing—review and editing, T.L. and K.W.; visualization, F.W.; supervision, T.L., J.M. and L.M.P.; project administration, T.L.; funding acquisition, T.L. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The work at the TU Wien was funded by the Federal Ministry of Climate Action, Environment, Energy, Mobility, Innovation and Technology (BMK) through the Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG), grant number 874418. The research was carried out in the framework of the collective research networking program (CORNET) project “eSpray”. The experiments performed at Sandia Nat. Labs were supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Vehicle Technologies. Sandia is a multi-mission laboratory managed and operated by National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia, LLC., a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International, Inc., for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-NA000352.

Data Availability Statement

The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors on request.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank TU Wien Bibliothek for financial support through its Open Access Funding Program. The authors gratefully acknowledge Convergent Science Inc. for their licensing and technical supports. The authors would like to thank Steven Luna for his support this research. The computational results presented in this study have been achieved using the Vienna Scientific Cluster (VSC) via the funded project No. 71485 and the computational resources sponsored by the Department of Energy’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy and located at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Abbreviations

AMRAdaptive Mesh Refinement
ASGAnalytik Service Gesellschaft
B 0 ,B 1 KH-RT breakup Model Parameters
ECNEngine Combustion Network
fElliptic Relaxation Function in k ζ f Turbulence Model
IDIgnition Delay
kTurbulent Kinetic Energy
KH-RTKelvin–Helmholtz–Rayleigh–Taylor Breakup Model
LESLarge-Eddy Simulations
LLNLLawrence Livermore National Laboratory
LOLLift-Off Length
OME/PODEPolyoxymethylene Dimethyl Ethers
OP1ECN Spray A standard reacting chamber conditions (900 K, 22.8 kg/m 3 , 15% O 2 )
OP2ECN Spray A high-temperature reacting chamber conditions (1200 K, 22.8 kg/m 3 ,
15% O 2 )
pPressure
PAHPolycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons
PLIFPlanar Laser-Induced Fluorescence
RANSReynolds Averaged Navier–Stokes Equations
SOCStart of Combustion
SOIStart of Injection
tTime
v 2 ¯ Velocity Scale (wall-normal)
xDistance
ϵ Turbulent Dissipation Rate
ζ Velocity Scales Ratio
ρ Density
ϕ Equivalence Ratio
ϕ Ω Oxygen Equivalence Ratio
Ω Oxygen Ratio

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Figure 1. Rates of injection for n-dodecane and OME for Spray A3 injector according to [28].
Figure 1. Rates of injection for n-dodecane and OME for Spray A3 injector according to [28].
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Figure 2. Mesh with refinements in symmetry plane for RANS calculations. The terms Ref 1 to Ref 3 visualize the mesh refinements with Ref 1, Ref 2 and Ref 3 denominating cells with an edge length of 500 μ m, 250 μ m and 125 μ m respectively.
Figure 2. Mesh with refinements in symmetry plane for RANS calculations. The terms Ref 1 to Ref 3 visualize the mesh refinements with Ref 1, Ref 2 and Ref 3 denominating cells with an edge length of 500 μ m, 250 μ m and 125 μ m respectively.
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Figure 3. Simulated versus experimental ignition delay and lift-off length. OH* describes experimental data based on OH* chemiluminescence and p denotes pressure-based determination of the ignition delay.
Figure 3. Simulated versus experimental ignition delay and lift-off length. OH* describes experimental data based on OH* chemiluminescence and p denotes pressure-based determination of the ignition delay.
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Figure 4. Ensemble-averaged I x t plot of CH 2 O PLIF intensity (experiment) and molar concentration (simulations) in a slice cutting through the injector center. The magenta iso-lines indicate the line-of-sight OH* and simulated projected OH molar concentration at the flame lift-off length.
Figure 4. Ensemble-averaged I x t plot of CH 2 O PLIF intensity (experiment) and molar concentration (simulations) in a slice cutting through the injector center. The magenta iso-lines indicate the line-of-sight OH* and simulated projected OH molar concentration at the flame lift-off length.
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Figure 5. Time evolution of projected OH species mass fraction distribution for simulations and line-of-sight OH* chemiluminescence intensity for experiments at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1).
Figure 5. Time evolution of projected OH species mass fraction distribution for simulations and line-of-sight OH* chemiluminescence intensity for experiments at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1).
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Figure 6. Time evolution of projected OH species mass fraction distribution for simulations and line-of-sight OH* chemiluminescence intensity for experiments at 1200 K ambient temperature (OP2).
Figure 6. Time evolution of projected OH species mass fraction distribution for simulations and line-of-sight OH* chemiluminescence intensity for experiments at 1200 K ambient temperature (OP2).
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Figure 7. Time-averaged planar distribution of simulated OH (bottom) and CH 2 O (top) concentration and experimental intensity for ambient conditions of 900 K and 15% oxygen content (OP1) in the spray symmetry plane.
Figure 7. Time-averaged planar distribution of simulated OH (bottom) and CH 2 O (top) concentration and experimental intensity for ambient conditions of 900 K and 15% oxygen content (OP1) in the spray symmetry plane.
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Figure 8. Time-averaged distribution of simulated OH (bottom) and CH 2 O (top) concentration and experimental intensity for ambient conditions of 1200 K and 15 % oxygen content (OP2).
Figure 8. Time-averaged distribution of simulated OH (bottom) and CH 2 O (top) concentration and experimental intensity for ambient conditions of 1200 K and 15 % oxygen content (OP2).
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Figure 9. OH radial profiles for time-averaged contours at different axial positions at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1).
Figure 9. OH radial profiles for time-averaged contours at different axial positions at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1).
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Figure 10. OH radial profiles for time-averaged contours at different axial positions at 1200 K ambient temperature (OP2).
Figure 10. OH radial profiles for time-averaged contours at different axial positions at 1200 K ambient temperature (OP2).
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Figure 11. CH 2 O and OH profiles at the center axis of spray for time-averaged contours.
Figure 11. CH 2 O and OH profiles at the center axis of spray for time-averaged contours.
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Figure 12. Time- resolved and spatially averaged evolution of planar CH 2 O and line-of-sight OH/OH* profiles with indicated combustion stages at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1).
Figure 12. Time- resolved and spatially averaged evolution of planar CH 2 O and line-of-sight OH/OH* profiles with indicated combustion stages at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1).
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Figure 13. Time evolution of CH 2 O concentration distribution for simulations and PLIF intensity for experiments in the symmetry plane at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1). The high-temperature zones with T > 1600 K are indicated with magenta iso-lines. Fuel-rich regions ( ϕ = 2 ) are shown with white iso-lines.
Figure 13. Time evolution of CH 2 O concentration distribution for simulations and PLIF intensity for experiments in the symmetry plane at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1). The high-temperature zones with T > 1600 K are indicated with magenta iso-lines. Fuel-rich regions ( ϕ = 2 ) are shown with white iso-lines.
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Figure 14. CH 2 O and OH mass binned by equivalence ratio from 0 to 10 for n-dodecane fuel at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1) with a bin size of 0.05. The symbols show the average mass of CH 2 O (left y-axis) and OH (right y-axis) in each bin sample, colored with its average temperature.
Figure 14. CH 2 O and OH mass binned by equivalence ratio from 0 to 10 for n-dodecane fuel at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1) with a bin size of 0.05. The symbols show the average mass of CH 2 O (left y-axis) and OH (right y-axis) in each bin sample, colored with its average temperature.
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Figure 15. CH 2 O and OH mass binned by equivalence ratio from 0 to 10 for OME fuel at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1) with a bin size of 0.05. The symbols show the average mass of CH 2 O (left y-axis) and OH (right y-axis) in each bin sample, colored with its average temperature.
Figure 15. CH 2 O and OH mass binned by equivalence ratio from 0 to 10 for OME fuel at 900 K ambient temperature (OP1) with a bin size of 0.05. The symbols show the average mass of CH 2 O (left y-axis) and OH (right y-axis) in each bin sample, colored with its average temperature.
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Table 1. OME fuel mix.
Table 1. OME fuel mix.
MoleculeContent [wt%]
OME 1 0.01
OME 2 <0.01
OME 3 57.90
OME 4 28.87
OME 5 10.07
OME 6 1.91
Table 2. Fuel properties for n-dodecane and OME.
Table 2. Fuel properties for n-dodecane and OME.
PropertyUnitn-DodecaneOME
Densitykg/m 3 (T = 15 °C)751.201057.10
Viscositymm 2 /s (T = 40 °C)1.441.08
Cetane number                -7468.6
Lubricity μ m 563320
Flash point°C8365
Lower heating valueMJ/kg44.2019.26
Initial boiling point°C214.00144.40
Final boiling point°C218242.4
Total contaminationsmg/kg-<1
Carbon content% [m/m]8443
Hydrogen content% [m/m]168.53
Oxygen content% [m/m]046.4
(A/F) s t at 21% of O 2 -14.92:15.89:1
(A/F) s t at 15% of O 2 -20.72:18.18:1
Heat of Vaporization (T = 90 °C)kJ/mol62.80 *52.23 *
* Taken from internal AVL FIRE database.
Table 3. Operating points.
Table 3. Operating points.
NameT CC [K]p CC [bar] ρ CC [kg/m 3 ]T inj [K]p inj [bar]t inj [ms]O 2 -Content [vol.%]
OP19006122.836315001.515
OP212007822.836315001.515
Table 5. Averaging periods for different experimental techniques and fuels.
Table 5. Averaging periods for different experimental techniques and fuels.
ExperimentTemperature [K]DOD Averaging Window [ms]OME Averaging Window [ms]
OH* Chemiluminescence9000.8–1.60.6–1.5
12000.8–1.50.6–1.6
CH 2 O PLIF9000.8–1.60.6–1.5
12000.8–1.50.6–1.6
Table 6. Maximum simulated concentrations in symmetry plane.
Table 6. Maximum simulated concentrations in symmetry plane.
SimulationTemperature [K]Max. CH 2 O Concentration [mol/L]Max. OH Concentration [mol/L]
RANS-DOD900 1.37 × 10 2 2.05 × 10 3
RANS-OME 1.72 × 10 2 1.65 × 10 3
LES-DOD 2.18 × 10 2 8.29 × 10 4
LES-OME 2.56 × 10 2 9.90 × 10 4
RANS-DOD1200 2.53 × 10 2 2.62 × 10 3
RANS-OME 3.29 × 10 2 2.51 × 10 3
LES-DOD 2.09 × 10 2 1.36 × 10 3
LES-OME 3.04 × 10 2 2.34 × 10 3
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Wiesmann, F.; Nguyen, T.M.; Manin, J.; Pickett, L.M.; Wan, K.; Tagliante, F.; Lauer, T. LES and RANS Spray Combustion Analysis of OME3-5 and n-Dodecane. Energies 2024, 17, 2265. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17102265

AMA Style

Wiesmann F, Nguyen TM, Manin J, Pickett LM, Wan K, Tagliante F, Lauer T. LES and RANS Spray Combustion Analysis of OME3-5 and n-Dodecane. Energies. 2024; 17(10):2265. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17102265

Chicago/Turabian Style

Wiesmann, Frederik, Tuan M. Nguyen, Julien Manin, Lyle M. Pickett, Kevin Wan, Fabien Tagliante, and Thomas Lauer. 2024. "LES and RANS Spray Combustion Analysis of OME3-5 and n-Dodecane" Energies 17, no. 10: 2265. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17102265

APA Style

Wiesmann, F., Nguyen, T. M., Manin, J., Pickett, L. M., Wan, K., Tagliante, F., & Lauer, T. (2024). LES and RANS Spray Combustion Analysis of OME3-5 and n-Dodecane. Energies, 17(10), 2265. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17102265

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