Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where A Andrea Donini is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by A Andrea Donini.


ASME Turbo Expo 2013: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition | 2013

Numerical Simulations of a Premixed Turbulent Confined Jet Flame Using the Flamelet Generated Manifold Approach With Heat Loss Inclusion

A Andrea Donini; Sm Martin; Rjm Rob Bastiaans; van Ja Jeroen Oijen; de Lph Philip Goey

In the present paper a computational analysis of a confined premixed turbulent methane/air jet flame is presented. In this scope, chemistry is reduced by the use of the Flamelet Generated Manifold (FGM) method [1, 2], and the fluid flow is modeled in a RANS context. In the FGM technique the reaction progress of the flame is generally described by a few control variables, for which a transport equation is solved during runtime. The flamelet system is computed in a pre-processing stage, and a manifold with all the information about combustion is stored in a tabulated form. In the present implementation the reaction evolution is described by the reaction progress variable, the heat loss is described by the enthalpy and the turbulence effect on the reaction is represented by the progress variable variance. The turbulence-chemistry interaction is considered through the use of a presumed pdf approach.A generic lab scale burner for high-velocity preheated jets is used for validation [3, 4]. It consists of a rectangular confinement, and an off-center positioning of the jet nozzle enables flame stabilization by recirculation of hot combustion products. The inlet speed is appropriately high, in order to be close to the blow out limit. Flame structures were visualized by OH* chemiluminescence imaging and planar laser-induced fluorescence of the OH radical. Laser Raman scattering was used to determine concentrations of the major species and the temperature. Velocity fields were measured with particle image velocimetry.The important effect of conductive heat loss to the walls is included in the FGM chemistry reduction method in a RANS context, in order to predict the evolution and description of a turbulent jet flame in high Reynolds number flow conditions. Comparisons of various mean fields (velocities, temperatures) with RANS results are shown. The use of FGM as a combustion model shows that combustion features at gas turbine conditions can be satisfactorily reproduced with a reasonable computational effort.Copyright


Flow Turbulence and Combustion | 2017

A 5-D implementation of FGM for the large eddy simulation of a stratified swirled flame with heat loss in a gas turbine combustor

A Andrea Donini; R.J.M. Bastiaans; J.A. van Oijen; L.P.H. de Goey

Numerical simulations are foreseen to provide a tremendous increase in gas-turbine burners efficiency in the near future. Modern developments in numerical schemes, turbulence models and the consistent increase of computing power allow Large Eddy Simulation (LES) to be applied to real cold flow industrial applications. However, the detailed simulation of the gas-turbine combustion process remains still prohibited because of its enormous computational cost. Several numerical models have been developed in order to reduce the costs of flame simulations for engineering applications. In this paper, the Flamelet-Generated Manifold (FGM) chemistry reduction technique is implemented and progressively extended for the inclusion of all the combustion features that are typically observed in stationary gas-turbine combustion. These consist of stratification effects, heat loss and turbulence. Three control variables are included for the chemistry representation: the reaction evolution is described by the reaction progress variable, the heat loss is described by the enthalpy and the stratification effect is expressed by the mixture fraction. The interaction between chemistry and turbulence is considered through a presumed beta-shaped probability density function (PDF) approach, which is considered for progress variable and mixture fraction, finally attaining a 5-D manifold. The application of FGM in combination with heat loss, fuel stratification and turbulence has never been studied in literature. To this aim, a highly turbulent and swirling flame in a gas turbine combustor is computed by means of the present 5-D FGM implementation coupled to an LES turbulence model, and the results are compared with experimental data. In general, the model gives a rather good agreement with experimental data. It is shown that the inclusion of heat loss strongly enhances the temperature predictions in the whole burner and leads to greatly improved NO predictions. The use of FGM as a combustion model shows that combustion features at gas turbine conditions can be satisfactorily reproduced with a reasonable computational effort. The implemented combustion model retains most of the physical accuracy of a detailed simulation while drastically reducing its computational time, paving the way for new developments of alternative fuel usage in a cleaner and more efficient combustion.


Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power-transactions of The Asme | 2015

Numerical Simulations of a Turbulent High-Pressure Premixed Cooled Jet Flame With the Flamelet Generated Manifolds Technique

A Andrea Donini; R.J.M. Bastiaans; Jeroen A. van Oijen; L. Philip H. de Goey

In the present paper, a computational analysis of a high pressure confined premixed turbulent methane/air jet flames with heat loss to the walls is presented. In this scope, chemistry is reduced by the use of the flamelet generated manifold (FGM) method and the fluid flow is modeled in an large eddy simulation (LES) and Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) context. The reaction evolution is described by the reaction progress variable, the heat loss is described by the enthalpy and the turbulence effect on the reaction is represented by the progress variable variance. A generic lab scale burner for methane high-pressure (5 bar) high-velocity (40?m/s at the inlet) preheated jet is adopted for the simulations, because of its gas-turbine relevant conditions. The use of FGM as a combustion model shows that combustion features at gas turbine conditions can be satisfactorily reproduced with a reasonable computational effort. Furthermore, the present analysis indicates that the physical and chemical processes controlling carbon monoxide (CO) emissions can be captured only by means of unsteady simulations.


ASME Turbo Expo 2014: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition | 2014

The Application of Flamelet-Generated Manifold in the Modeling of Stratified Premixed Cooled Flames

A Andrea Donini; R.J.M. Bastiaans; Jeroen A. van Oijen; L. Philip H. de Goey

CFD predictions of flame position, stability and emissions are essential in order to obtain optimized combustor designs in a cost efficient way. However, the numerical modeling of practical combustion systems is a very challenging task. As a matter of fact, the use of detailed reaction mechanisms is necessary for such reliable predictions. Unfortunately, the modeling of the full detail of practical combustion equipment is currently prohibited by the limitations in computing power, given the large number of species and reactions involved. The Flamelet-Generated Manifold (FGM) method reduces these computational costs by several orders of magnitude without loosing too much accuracy. Hereby FGM enables the application of reliable chemistry mechanisms in CFD simulations of combustion processes. In the present paper a computational analysis of partially premixed non-adiabatic flames is presented. In this scope, chemistry is reduced by the use of the FGM method. In the FGM technique the progress of the flame is generally described by a few control variables. For each control variable a transport equation is solved during run-time. The flamelet system is computed in a pre-processing stage, and a manifold with all the information about combustion is stored in a tabulated form. This research applies the FGM chemistry reduction method to describe partially premixed flames in combination with heat loss, which is a relevant condition for stationary gas turbine combustors. In order to take this into account, in the present implementation the reaction evolution is described by the reaction progress variable, the heat loss is described by the enthalpy and the local equivalence ratio effect on the reaction is represented by the mixture fraction. A series of test simulations is performed for a two dimensional geometry, characterized by a distinctive stratified methane/air inlet, and compared with detailed chemistry simulations. The results indicate that detailed simulations are reproduced in an excellent way with FGM.


11TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF NUMERICAL ANALYSIS AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS 2013: ICNAAM 2013 | 2013

High pressure jet flame numerical analysis of CO emissions by means of the flamelet generated manifolds technique

A Andrea Donini; Sm Martin; Rjm Rob Bastiaans; van Ja Jeroen Oijen; de Lph Philip Goey

In the present paper a computational analysis of a high pressure confined premixed turbulent methane/air jet flames is presented. In this scope, chemistry is reduced by the use of the Flamelet Generated Manifold method [1] and the fluid flow is modeled in an LES and RANS context. The reaction evolution is described by the reaction progress variable, the heat loss is described by the enthalpy and the turbulence effect on the reaction is represented by the progress variable variance. The interaction between chemistry and turbulence is considered through a presumed probability density function (PDF) approach. The use of FGM as a combustion model shows that combustion features at gas turbine conditions can be satisfactorily reproduced with a reasonable computational effort. Furthermore, the present analysis indicates that the physical and chemical processes controlling carbon monoxide (CO) emissions can be captured only by means of unsteady simulations.


PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NUMERICAL ANALYSIS AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS 2014 (ICNAAM-2014) | 2015

A five dimensional implementation of the flamelet generated manifolds technique for gas turbine application

A Andrea Donini; Rjm Rob Bastiaans; van Ja Jeroen Oijen; de Lph Philip Goey

In the present paper the Flamelet-Generated Manifold (FGM) chemistry reduction method is implemented and extended for the inclusion of all the features that are typically observed in stationary gas-turbine combustion. These consist of stratification effects, heat loss and turbulence. The latter is included by coupling FGM with the Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) model. Three control variables are included for the chemistry representation: the reaction evolution is described by the reaction progress variable, the heat loss is described by the enthalpy and the stratification effect is expressed by the mixture fraction. The interaction between chemistry and turbulence is considered through a presumed probability density function (PDF) approach, which is considered for progress variable and mixture fraction. This results in two extra control variables: progress variable variance and mixture fraction variance. The resulting manifold is five-dimensional, in which the dimensions are progress variable, enthalpy, mixture fraction, progress variable variance and mixture fraction variance. In addition, a highly turbulent and swirling flame in a gas turbine model combustor is computed, in order to test the 5-D FGM implementation. The use of FGM as a combustion model shows that combustion features at gas turbine conditions can be satisfactorily reproduced with a reasonable computational effort. The implemented combustion model retains most of the physical accuracy of a detailed simulation while drastically reducing its computational time, paving the way for new developments of alternative fuel usage in a cleaner and more efficient combustion.


ASME Turbo Expo 2015: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition | 2015

The Implementation of Five-Dimensional FGM Combustion Model for the Simulation of a Gas Turbine Model Combustor

A Andrea Donini; R.J.M. Bastiaans; Jeroen A. van Oijen; L. Philip H. de Goey

Gas turbines are one of the most important energy conversion methods in the world today. This is because using gas turbines, large scale, high efficiency, low cost and low emission energy production is possible. For this type of engines, low pollutants emissions can be achieved by very lean premixed combustion systems. Numerical simulation is foreseen to provide a tremendous increase in gas turbine combustors design efficiency and quality over the next future. However, the numerical simulation of modern stationary gas-turbine combustion systems represents a very challenging task. Several numerical models have been developed in order to reduce the costs of flame simulations for engineering applications. In the present paper the Flamelet-Generated Manifold (FGM) chemistry reduction method is implemented and extended for the inclusion of all the features that are typically observed in stationary gas-turbine combustion. These consist of stratification effects, heat loss and turbulence. The latter is included by coupling FGM with the Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) model. Three control variables are included for the chemistry representation: the reaction evolution is described by the reaction progress variable, the heat loss is described by the enthalpy and the stratification effect is expressed by the mixture fraction. The interaction between chemistry and turbulence is considered through a presumed probability density function (PDF) approach, which is considered for progress variable and mixture fraction. This results in two extra control variables: progress variable variance and mixture fraction variance. The resulting manifold is therefore five-dimensional, in which the dimensions are progress variable, enthalpy, mixture fraction, progress variable variance and mixture fraction variance. A highly turbulent and swirling flame in a gas turbine model combustor is computed in order to test the 5-D FGM implementation. The use of FGM as a combustion model shows that combustion features at gas turbine conditions can be satisfactorily reproduced with a reasonable computational effort. The implemented combustion model retains most of the physical accuracy of a detailed simulation while drastically reducing its computational time, paving the way for new developments of alternative fuel usage in a cleaner and more efficient combustion.© 2015 ASME


Construction and Building Materials | 2011

A Priori Assessment of the Potential of Flamelet Generated Manifolds to Model Lean Turbulent Premixed Hydrogen Combustion

A Andrea Donini; R.J.M. Bastiaans; J.A. van Oijen; M.S. Day; L.P.H. de Goey

The numerical modeling of combustion systems is a very challenging task. The interaction of turbulence, chemical reactions and thermodynamics in reacting flows is of exceptional complexity. Computing power is too limited to solve practical problems in detail. This problem asks for special treatments in the modeling of flames.


10th ERCOFTAC Workshop on Direct and Large-Eddy Simulation (DLES10), 27-29 May 2015, Limassol, Cyprus | 2018

The implementation of 5-D FGM for LES of a gas turbine model combustor with heat loss

A Andrea Donini; R.J.M. Bastiaans; J.A. van Oijen; L.P.H. de Goey

The interest in numerical simulation of combusting flows for industrial applications has gained a wide growth in the past decade.


55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting | 2017

Large Eddy simulations of a premixed jet combustor using flamelet-generated manifolds : effects of heat loss and subgrid-scale models

Francisco Hernandez Perez; Bok Jik Lee; Im G Hong; A Alessio Fancello; A Andrea Donini; Jeroen A. van Oijen; Lph Philip de Goey

Large eddy simulations of a turbulent premixed jet flame in a confined chamber were conducted using the flamelet-generated manifold technique for chemistry tabulation. The configuration is characterized by an off-center nozzle having an inner diameter of 10 mm, supplying a lean methane-air mixture with an equivalence ratio of 0.71 and a mean velocity of 90 m/s, at 573 K and atmospheric pressure. Conductive heat loss is accounted for in the manifold via burner-stabilized flamelets and the subgrid-scale (SGS) turbulence-chemistry interaction is modeled via presumed probability density functions. Comparisons between numerical results and measured data show that a considerable improvement in the prediction of temperature is achieved when heat losses are included in the manifold, as compared to the adiabatic one. Additional improvement in the temperature predictions is obtained by incorporating radiative heat losses. Moreover, further enhancements in the LES predictions are achieved by employing SGS models based on transport equations, such as the SGS turbulence kinetic energy equation with dynamic coefficients. While the numerical results display good agreement up to a distance of 4 nozzle diameters downstream of the nozzle exit, the results become less satisfactory along the downstream, suggesting that further improvements in the modeling are required, among which a more accurate model for the SGS variance of progress variable can be relevant.

Collaboration


Dive into the A Andrea Donini's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R.J.M. Bastiaans

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

van Ja Jeroen Oijen

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rjm Rob Bastiaans

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

de Lph Philip Goey

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J.A. van Oijen

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

L.P.H. de Goey

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeroen A. van Oijen

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

L. Philip H. de Goey

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A Alessio Fancello

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bok Jik Lee

Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge