The G-equation combustion model is based on the turbulent premixed combustion flamelet theory of Peters (2000) [69] . This theory addresses two regimes of practical interest:
The corrugated flamelet regime where the entire reactive-diffusive flame structure is assumed to be embedded within eddies of the size of the Kolmogorov length scale η; and
The thin reaction zone regime where the Kolmogorov eddies can penetrate into the chemically inert preheat zone of the reactive-diffusive flame structure, but cannot enter the inner layer where the chemical reactions occur.
For application of the G-equation model to IC engine applications, this theory was further developed by Tan et al. [94] and by Liang et al. [[51], [52]].
The G-equation model consists of a set of Favre-averaged level-set equations. This includes
the equations for the Favre mean, , and its variance,
, as well as a model equation for the turbulent/laminar flame surface area
ratio
. Application of the equation for the turbulent/laminar flame surface
area ratio results in an explicit expression for the turbulent flame speed
. Together with the Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations and the
turbulence modeling equations, these provide a complete set of equations to describe premixed
turbulent flame-front propagation. The equation set used in Ansys Forte is:
(7–15) |
(7–16) |
where denotes the tangential gradient operator;
is the fluid velocity;
is the velocity of the moving vertex;
and
are the average densities of the unburned and burned mixtures, respectively;
is the turbulent diffusivity;
is the Favre mean flame front curvature;
,
,
, and
are modeling constants (cf. ref. [69]);
and
are the Favre mean turbulent kinetic energy and its dissipation rate from the
RNG k-ε model;
is the turbulence intensity.