TY - JOUR
T1 - Detailed radiation modeling of two flames relevant to fire simulation using Photon Monte Carlo — Line by Line radiation model
AU - Paul, Chandan
AU - Roy, Somesh
AU - Sailer, Johannes
AU - Brännström, Fabian
AU - Ahmed, Mohamed Mohsen
AU - Trouvé, Arnaud
AU - Bordbar, Hadi
AU - Hostikka, Simo
AU - McDermott, Randall
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - This work reports benchmark data sets for radiative heat transfer in two distinct fire configurations obtained from the Measurement and Computation of Fire Phenomena (MaCFP) working group database. The cases include a 19.2 kW non-sooting turbulent methanol pool fire and a 15 kW sooting ethylene flame (referred to as the FM burner). The base configurations were simulated with large eddy simulation (LES) approaches using two different codes, namely FireFOAM and Fire Dynamics Simulator, respectively. Multiple frozen snapshots from these LES runs were radiatively evaluated using a photon Monte Carlo radiation solver and a line-by-line spectral model. The results were presented at three levels: Firstly, the radiative fields, including radiative emission, reabsorption, and heat flux contours, were shown. Secondly, the global radiative contributions from molecular gas species, soot, and wall boundaries were compared. Thirdly, a detailed spectral analysis of radiative fields for different components within five distinct spectral bands was presented. In the case of the non-sooting methanol pool fire, the radiative emission from CO2 predominates. However, for the radiation reaching the boundaries, both CO2 and H2O contribute almost equally. Conversely, for the sooty FM burner configuration, radiative emission from soot, CO2, and H2O all contribute similarly. In terms of radiation reaching the boundary, soot is the primary contributor in FM Burner. In the methanol pool fire, the pool surface receives a comparable contribution from CO2, H2O, and burner rim radiation, whereas, for the FM burner, the burner inlet surface primarily receives radiation from soot.
AB - This work reports benchmark data sets for radiative heat transfer in two distinct fire configurations obtained from the Measurement and Computation of Fire Phenomena (MaCFP) working group database. The cases include a 19.2 kW non-sooting turbulent methanol pool fire and a 15 kW sooting ethylene flame (referred to as the FM burner). The base configurations were simulated with large eddy simulation (LES) approaches using two different codes, namely FireFOAM and Fire Dynamics Simulator, respectively. Multiple frozen snapshots from these LES runs were radiatively evaluated using a photon Monte Carlo radiation solver and a line-by-line spectral model. The results were presented at three levels: Firstly, the radiative fields, including radiative emission, reabsorption, and heat flux contours, were shown. Secondly, the global radiative contributions from molecular gas species, soot, and wall boundaries were compared. Thirdly, a detailed spectral analysis of radiative fields for different components within five distinct spectral bands was presented. In the case of the non-sooting methanol pool fire, the radiative emission from CO2 predominates. However, for the radiation reaching the boundaries, both CO2 and H2O contribute almost equally. Conversely, for the sooty FM burner configuration, radiative emission from soot, CO2, and H2O all contribute similarly. In terms of radiation reaching the boundary, soot is the primary contributor in FM Burner. In the methanol pool fire, the pool surface receives a comparable contribution from CO2, H2O, and burner rim radiation, whereas, for the FM burner, the burner inlet surface primarily receives radiation from soot.
KW - Fire
KW - Line-by-Line
KW - MaCFP
KW - Photon Monte Carlo
KW - Radiation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85203549773
U2 - 10.1016/j.jqsrt.2024.109177
DO - 10.1016/j.jqsrt.2024.109177
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85203549773
SN - 0022-4073
VL - 329
JO - Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer
JF - Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer
M1 - 109177
ER -