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Dive into the research topics where Evatt R. Hawkes is active.

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Featured researches published by Evatt R. Hawkes.


Computational Science & Discovery | 2009

Terascale direct numerical simulations of turbulent combustion using S3D

J.H. Chen; Alok N. Choudhary; B.R. de Supinski; M. DeVries; Evatt R. Hawkes; Scott Klasky; Wei-keng Liao; Kwan-Liu Ma; John M. Mellor-Crummey; N Podhorszki; Ramanan Sankaran; Sameer Shende; Chun Sang Yoo

Computational science is paramount to the understanding of underlying processes in internal combustion engines of the future that will utilize non-petroleum-based alternative fuels, including carbon-neutral biofuels, and burn in new combustion regimes that will attain high efficiency while minimizing emissions of particulates and nitrogen oxides. Next-generation engines will likely operate at higher pressures, with greater amounts of dilution and utilize alternative fuels that exhibit a wide range of chemical and physical properties. Therefore, there is a significant role for high-fidelity simulations, direct numerical simulations (DNS), specifically designed to capture key turbulence-chemistry interactions in these relatively uncharted combustion regimes, and in particular, that can discriminate the effects of differences in fuel properties. In DNS, all of the relevant turbulence and flame scales are resolved numerically using high-order accurate numerical algorithms. As a consequence terascale DNS are computationally intensive, require massive amounts of computing power and generate tens of terabytes of data. Recent results from terascale DNS of turbulent flames are presented here, illustrating its role in elucidating flame stabilization mechanisms in a lifted turbulent hydrogen/air jet flame in a hot air coflow, and the flame structure of a fuel-lean turbulent premixed jet flame. Computing at this scale requires close collaborations between computer and combustion scientists to provide optimized scaleable algorithms and software for terascale simulations, efficient collective parallel I/O, tools for volume visualization of multiscale, multivariate data and automating the combustion workflow. The enabling computer science, applied to combustion science, is also required in many other terascale physics and engineering simulations. In particular, performance monitoring is used to identify the performance of key kernels in the DNS code, S3D and especially memory intensive loops in the code. Through the careful application of loop transformations, data reuse in cache is exploited thereby reducing memory bandwidth needs, and hence, improving S3Ds nodal performance. To enhance collective parallel I/O in S3D, an MPI-I/O caching design is used to construct a two-stage write-behind method for improving the performance of write-only operations. The simulations generate tens of terabytes of data requiring analysis. Interactive exploration of the simulation data is enabled by multivariate time-varying volume visualization. The visualization highlights spatial and temporal correlations between multiple reactive scalar fields using an intuitive user interface based on parallel coordinates and time histogram. Finally, an automated combustion workflow is designed using Kepler to manage large-scale data movement, data morphing, and archival and to provide a graphical display of run-time diagnostics.


Proceedings of the Combustion Institute | 2000

A flame surface density approach to large-eddy simulation of premixed turbulent combustion

Evatt R. Hawkes; Rs Cant

The flame surface density approach to the modeling of premixed turbulent combustion is well established in the context of Reynolds-averaged simulations. For the future, it is necessary to consider large-eddy simulation (LES), which is likely to offer major advantages in terms of physical accuracy, particularly for unsteady combustion problems. LES relies on spatial filtering for the removal of unresolved phenomena whose characteristic length scales are smaller than the computational grid scale. Thus, there is a need for soundly based physical modeling at the subgrid scales. The aim of this paper is to explore the usefulness of the flame surface density concept as a basis for LES modeling of premixed turbulent combustion. A transport equation for the filtered flame surface density is presented, and models are proposed for unclosed terms. Comparison with Reynolds-averaged modeling is shown to reveal some interesting similarities and differences. These were exploited together with known physics and statistical results from experiment and from direct numerical stimulation in order to gain insight and refine the modeling. The model has been implemented in a combustion LES code together with standard models for scalar and momentum transport. Computational results were obtained for a simple three-dimensional flame propagation test problem, and the relative importance of contributing terms in the modeled equation for flame surface density was assessed. Straining and curvature are shown to have a major influence at both the resolved and subgrid levels.


Combustion and Flame | 2001

Implications of a flame surface density approach to large eddy simulation of premixed turbulent combustion

Evatt R. Hawkes; Rs Cant

Abstract Large eddy simulation (LES) is now widely regarded as an improvement on existing computational fluid dynamics (CFD) techniques in addressing classes of combustion problems where traditional CFD approaches have experienced some difficulty 1 , 2 , 3 . This is particularly true in situations where there is significant unsteadiness that is characterized by large-scale flow-flame interactions. The flame surface density (FSD) approach to the modeling of premixed turbulent combustion is well established in the context of Reynolds-averaged simulations, and has shown potential as a technique for LES [4] . In this paper, results are presented by using the flame surface density model of Hawkes and Cant [4] in a flame propagation test case that further demonstrates the feasibility of the approach. Firstly, the response of the model to variations in turbulence intensity is examined, and an assessment of the relative importance of the source terms in the balance equation for FSD is made. Secondly, it is shown how LES can exploit the effects of large-scale coherent structures in the prediction of FSD through an analysis of the resolved strain source term. Lastly, the model behavior under variations of the filter size is examined. It is an essential but difficult test for FSD models for LES that the results are independent of the filter size. It is shown that the FSD responds to variations in filter size as expected. An increase in filter size results in a decrease in resolved wrinkling, but an increase in sub-grid wrinkling. The net propagation rate of the turbulent flame is shown to be largely independent of the chosen filter size.


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2010

Turbulent flame–wall interaction: a direct numerical simulation study

Andrea Gruber; Ramanan Sankaran; Evatt R. Hawkes; J.H. Chen

A turbulent flame-wall interaction (FWI) configuration is studied using three-dimensional direct numerical simulation (DNS) and detailed chemical kinetics. The simulations are used to investigate the effects of the wall turbulent boundary layer (i) on the structure of a hydrogen-air premixed flame, (ii) on its near-wall propagation characteristics and (iii) on the spatial and temporal patterns of the convective wall heat flux. Results show that the local flame thickness and propagation speed vary between the core flow and the boundary layer, resulting in a regime change from flamelet near the channel centreline to a thickened flame at the wall. This finding has strong implications for the modelling of turbulent combustion using Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes or large-eddy simulation techniques. Moreover, the DNS results suggest that the near-wall coherent turbulent structures play an important role on the convective wall heat transfer by pushing the hot reactive zone towards the cold solid surface. At the wall, exothermic radical recombination reactions become important, and are responsible for approximately 70 % of the overall heat release rate at the wall. Spectral analysis of the convective wall heat flux provides an unambiguous picture of its spatial and temporal patterns, previously unobserved, that is directly related to the spatial and temporal characteristic scalings of the coherent near-wall turbulent structures.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2005

Direct numerical simulation of turbulent combustion: fundamental insights towards predictive models

Evatt R. Hawkes; Ramanan Sankaran; James C. Sutherland; Jacqueline H. Chen

The advancement of our basic understanding of turbulent combustion processes and the development of physics-based predictive tools for design and optimization of the next generation of combustion devices are strategic areas of research for the development of a secure, environmentally sound energy infrastructure. In direct numerical simulation (DNS) approaches, all scales of the reacting flow problem are resolved. However, because of the magnitude of this task, DNS of practical high Reynolds number turbulent hydrocarbon flames is out of reach of even terascale computing. For the foreseeable future, the approach to this complex multi-scale problem is to employ distinct but synergistic approaches to tackle smaller sub-ranges of the complete problem, which then require models for the small scale interactions. With full access to the spatially and temporally resolved fields, DNS can play a major role in the development of these models and in the development of fundamental understanding of the micro-physics of turbulence-chemistry interactions. Two examples, from simulations performed at terascale Office of Science computing facilities, are presented to illustrate the role of DNS in delivering new insights to advance the predictive capability of models. Results are presented from new three-dimensional DNS with detailed chemistry of turbulent non-premixed jet flames, revealing the differences between mixing of passive and reacting scalars, and determining an optimal lower dimensional representation of the full thermochemical state space.


Applied Optics | 2013

Feasibility of nanofluid-based optical filters

Robert A. Taylor; Todd P. Otanicar; Yasitha Herukerrupu; Fabienne Bremond; Gary Rosengarten; Evatt R. Hawkes; Xuchuan Jiang; Sylvain Coulombe

In this article we report recent modeling and design work indicating that mixtures of nanoparticles in liquids can be used as an alternative to conventional optical filters. The major motivation for creating liquid optical filters is that they can be pumped in and out of a system to meet transient needs in an application. To demonstrate the versatility of this new class of filters, we present the design of nanofluids for use as long-pass, short-pass, and bandpass optical filters using a simple Monte Carlo optimization procedure. With relatively simple mixtures, we achieve filters with <15% mean-squared deviation in transmittance from conventional filters. We also discuss the current commercial feasibility of nanofluid-based optical filters by including an estimation of todays off-the-shelf cost of the materials. While the limited availability of quality commercial nanoparticles makes it hard to compete with conventional filters, new synthesis methods and economies of scale could enable nanofluid-based optical filters in the near future. As such, this study lays the groundwork for creating a new class of selective optical filters for a wide range of applications, namely communications, electronics, optical sensors, lighting, photography, medicine, and many more.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2006

Direct numerical simulations of turbulent lean premixed combustion

Ramanan Sankaran; Evatt R. Hawkes; Jacqueline H. Chen; Tianfeng Lu; Chung K. Law

In recent years, due to the advent of high-performance computers and advanced numerical algorithms, direct numerical simulation (DNS) of combustion has emerged as a valuable computational research tool, in concert with experimentation. The role of DNS in delivering new Scientific insight into turbulent combustion is illustrated using results from a recent 3D turbulent premixed flame simulation. To understand the influence of turbulence on the flame structure, a 3D fully-resolved DNS of a spatially-developing lean methane-air turbulent Bunsen flame was performed in the thin reaction zones regime. A reduced chemical model for methane-air chemistry consisting of 13 resolved species, 4 quasi-steady state species and 73 elementary reactions was developed specifically for the current simulation. The data is analyzed to study possible influences of turbulence on the flame thickness. The results show that the average flame thickness increases, in qualitative agreement with several experimental results.


Computing in Science and Engineering | 2007

Visualizing Multivariate Volume Data from Turbulent Combustion Simulations

Hiroshi Akiba; Kwan-Liu Ma; Jacqueline H. Chen; Evatt R. Hawkes

To understand dynamic mechanisms, scientists need intuitive and convenient ways to validate known relationships and reveal hidden ones among multiple variables


IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics | 2011

Feature-Based Statistical Analysis of Combustion Simulation Data

Janine C. Bennett; Vaidyanathan Krishnamoorthy; Shusen Liu; Ray W. Grout; Evatt R. Hawkes; Jacqueline H. Chen; Jason F. Shepherd; Valerio Pascucci; Peer-Timo Bremer

We present a new framework for feature-based statistical analysis of large-scale scientific data and demonstrate its effectiveness by analyzing features from Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS) of turbulent combustion. Turbulent flows are ubiquitous and account for transport and mixing processes in combustion, astrophysics, fusion, and climate modeling among other disciplines. They are also characterized by coherent structure or organized motion, i.e. nonlocal entities whose geometrical features can directly impact molecular mixing and reactive processes. While traditional multi-point statistics provide correlative information, they lack nonlocal structural information, and hence, fail to provide mechanistic causality information between organized fluid motion and mixing and reactive processes. Hence, it is of great interest to capture and track flow features and their statistics together with their correlation with relevant scalar quantities, e.g. temperature or species concentrations. In our approach we encode the set of all possible flow features by pre-computing merge trees augmented with attributes, such as statistical moments of various scalar fields, e.g. temperature, as well as length-scales computed via spectral analysis. The computation is performed in an efficient streaming manner in a pre-processing step and results in a collection of meta-data that is orders of magnitude smaller than the original simulation data. This meta-data is sufficient to support a fully flexible and interactive analysis of the features, allowing for arbitrary thresholds, providing per-feature statistics, and creating various global diagnostics such as Cumulative Density Functions (CDFs), histograms, or time-series. We combine the analysis with a rendering of the features in a linked-view browser that enables scientists to interactively explore, visualize, and analyze the equivalent of one terabyte of simulation data. We highlight the utility of this new framework for combustion science; however, it is applicable to many other science domains.


Journal of Computational Physics | 2011

An algorithm for LES of premixed compressible flows using the Conditional Moment Closure model

Ben Thornber; R.W. Bilger; Assaad R. Masri; Evatt R. Hawkes

A novel numerical method has been developed to couple a recent high order accurate fully compressible upwind method with the Conditional Moment Closure combustion model. The governing equations, turbulence modelling and numerical methods are presented in full. The new numerical method is validated against Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) data for a lean premixed methane slot burner. Although the modelling approaches are based on non-premixed flames and hence not expected to be valid for a wide range of premixed flames, the predicted flame is just 10% longer than that in the DNS and excellent agreement of mean mass fractions, conditional mass fractions and temperature is demonstrated. This new numerical method provides a very useful framework for future application of CMC to premixed as well as non-premixed combustion.

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Jacqueline H. Chen

Sandia National Laboratories

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Sanghoon Kook

University of New South Wales

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Mohsen Talei

University of Melbourne

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Ramanan Sankaran

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Haiou Wang

University of New South Wales

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Qing N. Chan

University of New South Wales

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Robert A. Taylor

University of New South Wales

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Hemanth Kolla

Sandia National Laboratories

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Michele Bolla

University of New South Wales

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