Critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model and variable stretch/turbulence function

© 2016 Elsevier Ltd. A critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model including the model's assumptions and sub-models is presented in this article. First, the effect of an incorrect discharge sub-model is studied and it is concluded that the choice of discharge sub-model is crucial be...

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Main Authors: Hernandez, F., Abdel-jawad, M., Hao, Hong
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2016
Online Access:http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/LP130100919
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5967
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author Hernandez, F.
Abdel-jawad, M.
Hao, Hong
author_facet Hernandez, F.
Abdel-jawad, M.
Hao, Hong
author_sort Hernandez, F.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. A critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model including the model's assumptions and sub-models is presented in this article. First, the effect of an incorrect discharge sub-model is studied and it is concluded that the choice of discharge sub-model is crucial because it can substantially modify the turbulence/stretch function, the mass distributions and the flame position. Therefore, a discharge sub-model should only be chosen when the sub-model is in agreement with the flame position and the residual unburnt gas mass reaches a reasonable value. Second, the equivalent flame radius and the apparent flame velocity (computed internally by Molkov's model) are found to depend on three different effects: the free flameball expansion, the adiabatic compression/extension and the venting process. Third, the interpretation of the turbulence function should account for the effect of the propagation mode and the spatial variation of the local flame speed. Fourth, the jet effect model related to hinge panels can be improved; therefore, a new model is presented. Fifth, the universal correlation and the two-lumped-parameter model are studied. Despite the high correlation reported in previous publications, it is concluded that the two-lumped-model has significant limitations and should be improved if a variable stretch/turbulence function is utilized, which will require the utilization of "usual" discharge coefficients. Finally, it is shown that the inverse problem with a variable stretch/turbulence function and a reasonable discharge coefficient can be utilized to accurately backfit experimental data.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-59672023-02-02T03:24:11Z Critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model and variable stretch/turbulence function Hernandez, F. Abdel-jawad, M. Hao, Hong © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. A critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model including the model's assumptions and sub-models is presented in this article. First, the effect of an incorrect discharge sub-model is studied and it is concluded that the choice of discharge sub-model is crucial because it can substantially modify the turbulence/stretch function, the mass distributions and the flame position. Therefore, a discharge sub-model should only be chosen when the sub-model is in agreement with the flame position and the residual unburnt gas mass reaches a reasonable value. Second, the equivalent flame radius and the apparent flame velocity (computed internally by Molkov's model) are found to depend on three different effects: the free flameball expansion, the adiabatic compression/extension and the venting process. Third, the interpretation of the turbulence function should account for the effect of the propagation mode and the spatial variation of the local flame speed. Fourth, the jet effect model related to hinge panels can be improved; therefore, a new model is presented. Fifth, the universal correlation and the two-lumped-parameter model are studied. Despite the high correlation reported in previous publications, it is concluded that the two-lumped-model has significant limitations and should be improved if a variable stretch/turbulence function is utilized, which will require the utilization of "usual" discharge coefficients. Finally, it is shown that the inverse problem with a variable stretch/turbulence function and a reasonable discharge coefficient can be utilized to accurately backfit experimental data. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5967 10.1016/j.jlp.2016.05.019 http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/LP130100919 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Hernandez, F.
Abdel-jawad, M.
Hao, Hong
Critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model and variable stretch/turbulence function
title Critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model and variable stretch/turbulence function
title_full Critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model and variable stretch/turbulence function
title_fullStr Critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model and variable stretch/turbulence function
title_full_unstemmed Critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model and variable stretch/turbulence function
title_short Critical review of Molkov's phenomenological model and variable stretch/turbulence function
title_sort critical review of molkov's phenomenological model and variable stretch/turbulence function
url http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/LP130100919
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5967