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Turbulent free shear layer mixing and combustion

Paul E. Dimotakis
- Vol. 1, pp 58-79
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TLDR
In this article, the dependence of turbulent free-shear-layer growth, mixing, and chemical reactions are discussed, with the aid of some direct consequences deducible from large-scale organization of the flow as well as from some recent models.
Abstract
: Some experimental data on turbulent free-shear-layer growth, mixing, and chemical reactions are reviewed. The dependence of these phenomena on such fluid and flow parameters as Reynolds number, Schmidt number, and Mach number are discussed, with the aid of some direct consequences deducible from the large-scale organization of the flow as well as from some recent models. The mixing of two or more fluids that are entrained into a turbulent region is an important process from both a scientific and an applications vantage point. Species can be transported by turbulence to produce a more uniform distribution than some initial mean profile. This process is sometimes also referred to as mixing, without regard to whether the transported species are mixed on a molecular scale or not. If the issue of mixing arises in the context of chemical reactions and combustion, however, we recognize that only fluid mixed on a molecular scale can contribute to chemical product formation and associated heat release. The discussion in this paper will be limited to molecular mixing.

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Citations
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