Computational Model of Forward and Opposed Smoldering Combustion with Improved Chemical Kinetics
Date
12/2005Author
Rein, Guillermo
Metadata
Abstract
A computational study has been carried out to investigate
smoldering ignition and propagation in polyurethane foam. The onedimensional,
transient, governing equations for smoldering combustion
in a porous fuel are solved accounting for improved solid-phase chemical
kinetics. A systematic methodology for the determination of solid-phase
kinetics suitable for numerical models has been developed and applied to
the simulation of smoldering combustion. This methodology consists in
the correlation of a mathematical representation of a reaction mechanism
with data from previous thermogravimetric experiments. Geneticalgorithm
and trail-and-error techniques are used as the optimization
procedures. The corresponding kinetic parameters for two different
mechanisms of polyurethane foam smoldering kinetics are quantified: a
previously proposed 3-step mechanism and a new 5-step mechanism. These kinetic mechanisms are used to model one-dimensionalsmoldering combustion, numerically solving for the solid-phase and gasphase
conservation equations in microgravity with a forced flow of
oxidizer gas. The results from previously conducted microgravity
experiments with flexible polyurethane foam are used for calibration and
testing of the model predictive capabilities. Both forward and opposed
smoldering configurations are examined. The model describes well both
opposed and forward propagation. Specifically, the model predicts the
reaction-front thermal and species structure, the onset of smoldering
ignition, and the propagation rate. The model results reproduce the most
important features of the smolder process and represent a significant
step forward in smoldering combustion modeling.