3.2.2. Laminar Flow Equations
Laminar transport equations are not used for fire problems, but they are important for other classes of problems such as manufacturing. The low Mach number approximation is assumed (see Low Mach Number Equations).
3.2.2.1. Conservation of Mass
The mass conservation equation of a mixture of gases is given by
(3.25)
where is the mass average velocity of the mixture [6].
3.2.2.2. Conservation of Momentum
The conservation of momentum equations are given by
(3.26)
where the viscous stress tensor is
(3.27)
The pressure, , in the momentum equations deserves a special note as
this quantity can represent either the dynamic, i.e., the second term in the
Mach number expansion in the case of the low Mach number assumption, or the
static pressure in the case of formally compressibility. In either case, as
shown above the hydrostatic pressure gradient has been removed which
gives rise to the far-field density,
, in the buoyancy body force.
Optionally, we allow for the following sets of buoyancy models:
Boussinesq buoyancy approximation where the density difference is approximated as
(3.28)
Standard buoyant model in which case the pressure above does include the hydrostatic pressure and the buoyancy right-hand-side source term is,
(3.29)
A Boussinesq approximation for a binary mixture in which case the right-hand-side contribution is:
(3.30)
The user is referred to the Fuego user manual for exact line commands for each of these buoyancy options.
Note that zero pressure is almost always a convenient initial condition for a low Mach fluid flow. However, in cases without buoyancy, it can be anything, as the value only defines the additive constant for the pressure solve. However, one must ensure that the value matches for both initial and boundary condition specifications.
For buoyant flow, specifying zero pressure is convenient in tandem with the “differential” buoyancy option. This buoyancy term subtracts off the hydrostatic contribution such that the source term is written as
(3.31)
One can see that using this term along with a zero pressure initial condition allows one to avoid specifying initial and boundary conditions as the hydrostatic pressure, i.e., as a function of height.
3.2.2.3. Conservation of Energy
The conservation of energy equation in terms of enthalpy (including a source term due to radiation absorption and emission) is
(3.32)
(3.33)
where the energy diffusion flux vector is given by
(3.34)
and is the diffusion velocity of species
in the
direction.
This form of the energy equation is derived by starting with the energy equation and supplemental relationships of internal energy and total enthalpy provided in Asymptotic Expansion. The time term and convection term due to kinetic energy are expanded using the chain rule and simplified by enforcing the continuity equation. The remaining kinetic energy terms and gravitational force term are removed by dotting velocity with the momentum equation (to obtain the mechanical energy equation) and subtracting it from the energy equation. This procedure provides the full material derivative of pressure and the expanded viscous dissipation term.
The last two terms of (3.33) are only active when formal compressibility (in an acoustic sense) are important (see the Fuego user manual for the appropriate command lines to activate the low speed compressible and high speed compressible form in Fuego).
For a low Mach number flow, the time
derivative of the pressure appearing above is substituted by the
thermodynamic reference pressure, ,
that can only be nonzero in a closed volume with energy
addition or subtraction. However, the low Mach number approximation mandates
that the thermodynamic pressure is always spatially uniform.
The enthalpy of the mixture, , is a mass-average of the
component enthalpies,
, given by
(3.35)
The energy diffusion flux vector includes a scaled gradient of temperature whereas the independent field to be solved in (3.33) is enthalpy. The form of the gradient of temperature is derived by first taking the gradient of (3.35) and using the chain rule,
(3.36)
Given the thermodynamic definition of specific heat, the above equation is given by,
(3.37)
(3.38)
This equation is rearranged,
(3.39)
and substituted into the energy diffusion flux vector to obtain,
(3.40)
Commonly, the last two terms in the above equation can be canceled when a simple diffusion model is assumed (see Conservation of Species, (3.46)) in the limit where the ratio of thermal and mass diffusion is equal (unity Lewis number, or equivalently speaking the Prandtl number equals the Schmidt number, i.e.,
(3.41)
For completeness, the thermal diffusivity, Prandtl and Schmidt number are defined by,
(3.42)
(3.43)
and
(3.44)
3.2.2.4. Conservation of Species
The mass conservation equation for species in a mixture
of
gas phase species is
(3.45)
where is the mass generation rate of species
per unit
volume by homogeneous chemical reactions. We allow several approximations
for the diffusion velocity,
.
The simplest form is Fickian diffusion with the same value of mass diffusivity for all species,
(3.46)
This form is used for the Reynolds-averaged form of the equations for turbulent flow.
A more accurate approximation uses a mixture-averaged diffusion coefficient,
, for each species diffusion velocity,
(3.47)
However, the form above does not enforce the requirement that the sum over all
species diffusional fluxes is equal to zero. To achieve this, we decompose the
fluxes () into a modeled form and a correction to the modeled form in terms of the
diffusional velocities
(3.48)
where is defined by (3.47). To define
the correction velocity
we sum over all species and apply the
zero flux condition to get
(3.49)
which can be simplified to
(3.50)
3.2.2.5. Conservation of Momentum, Axisymmetric with Swirl
Axisymmetric flows, with or without swirl, are described by
two-dimensional equations in cylindrical coordinates.
All azimuthal derivatives are zero (i.e., ).
The axial coordinate
is
, the radial coordinate is
, and the azimuthal
coordinate is
. The radius is retained in the
equations and the purpose will become more clear in the
discussion of the discrete integral form.
The axial velocity is
, the radial velocity is
,
and the azimuthal velocity is
.
Axial-Momentum
(3.51)
Radial-Momentum
(3.52)
Azimuthal-Momentum
(3.53)
The viscous stress terms for the cylindrical equations are
(3.54)
(3.55)
(3.56)
(3.57)
(3.58)
(3.59)
The azimuthal equation can be simplified by relating
the swirl velocity to the angular velocity, .
The momentum equation, written in terms of the angular velocity,
is
(3.60)
The production term that is used in the turbulence model is
(3.61)
3.2.2.6. Laminar Flow Boundary Conditions
The laminar flow math models require boundary conditions for velocity, pressure, temperature and enthalpy variables, and mixture composition.
3.2.2.6.1. Inflow
There are three types of inflow boundary conditions. For velocity-specified inflow, Dirichlet conditions are applied to velocities in the momentum equations, temperature in the energy equation, and mass fractions in the species equations. The mass flow rate at the boundary is specified for the continuity equation. The pressure floats to a consistent value. Alternatively, a control volume balance is retained at the boundary nodes and the convection fluxes are specified.
For pressure-specified inflow, the outflow boundary condition is applied with the added condition that the flow must enter the domain normal to the mesh boundary. Transport equations are solved for the momentum, energy and species equations.
3.2.2.6.2. Outflow
The pressure is specified at integration points on the outflow boundary. The specified pressure is used in the surface integration procedure for approximation nodal gradients. The pressure gradients are used to construct an interpolation for the mass flow rate at the boundary. Transport equations are solved for the momentum, energy and species equations. Upwind extrapolation is used for the scalars if the flow is leaving the domain. The boundary values of velocity and specified far-field values of scalars are used if the flow is entering the domain.
3.2.2.6.3. Wall
It is assumed that there is no mass flow through the wall. The velocity is specified as a Dirichlet boundary condition in the momentum equations. The temperature is specified as a Dirichlet boundary condition in the energy if the wall is isothermal. We currently do not support heterogeneous chemical reactions at a surface, so there should be no boundary condition applied to the mass fractions.
3.2.2.6.4. Symmetry Plane
There is no mass flow rate through the symmetry plane and there is no transport of scalar variables. The normal stress (pressure and viscous) at the symmetry plane is applied in the momentum equations.