Ew. Grandmaison et al., THE STRONG-JET WEAK-JET PROBLEM AND AERODYNAMIC MODELING OF THE CGRI BURNER/, Combustion and flame, 114(3-4), 1998, pp. 381-396
In a combustion context (there are other possible applications), the p
roblem considered is of a strong air jet issuing normal to a furnace w
all (the burner wall) and a weak fuel jet (typically of natural gas) i
ssuing at an angle some distance away. The atmosphere surrounding the
jets is of slow-moving there taken as stagnant) combustion products, a
s is normal in a furnace. The jet port axes are coplanar and divergent
. The fuel jet is weak because of normal combustion stoichiometry whic
h dictates that the air flow be much greater than that of the fuel. Si
mple jet physics is applied to the problem. The fuel jet describes a c
urving trajectory and is eventually entrained by the air jet. The traj
ectories of both jets are predicted, as is the entrainment of ambient
fluid, up to the region of confluence. The trajectories agree well wit
h experimental measurements. The two-jet mixing zone which follows the
meeting of the jets and the succeeding final dilution zone which is d
ominated by continuing dilution with entrained furnace gases are descr
ibed. The work provides a foundation for the analysis of a new class o
f burners that inject fuel and air directly into the furnace chamber (
not into a burner quarl, tile, or ''combustion tunnel''), so both fuel
and air mix, by natural furnace aerodynamics, with substantial quanti
ties of furnace gases, partly cooled by furnace heat transfer, before
they meet and react. This results in remarkably low NOx emissions. (C)
1998 by The Combustion Institute.