2 research outputs found

    Numerical simulation of bi-component fuel droplet evaporation using Level Set method

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    Fuel droplets consisting of multiple components are known to exhibit complex evaporation behaviour. The Eulerian framework employed in Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) which treats the droplets as a continuum, is effective for simulating the complex evaporation behaviour of such multicomponent droplets. In this study, the evaporation of binary-component or bi-component fuel droplets (which consist of two chemical species) in air, is simulated using the Eulerian framework with an extended evaporation model and its validity is examined. Spatio-temporal evolution of the gas-liquid interface is captured using the Level Set method, and a Ghost Fluid method is incorporated to consider the jump conditions at the interface. The computed evaporation speed of a fuel droplet consisting of a mixture of n-heptane and n-decane is compared with that of a previous experiment. Results show that n-heptane evaporates preferentially and the total evaporation speed is in an overall good agreement with that in the experiment. This confirms that the numerical framework used in the present simulation is capable of capturing the evaporation phenomenon of a bi-component fuel droplet. Additionally, several parametric simulations with different initial compositions (i.e., mass ratio of the constituent chemical species) of the bi-component fuel droplet and different initial ambient temperatures are performed, to investigate their influences on the evaporation characteristics of bi-component fuel droplet. The applicability of the proposed extended evaporation model and the numerical framework under these various simulation conditions are verified
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