1. Introduction
In ventilation air–methane (VAM) abatement systems, methane is released from underground mines and subsequently transported into regenerative thermal oxidizer (RTO) devices where exothermic reactions take place [
1]. The heat energy liberated from reactions is stored in the ceramic material of RTO. In scenarios where an explosion of air–methane occurs inside the RTO, the flame and pressure waves propagate quickly towards the evasé, a discharge section of a gradually enlarging area. Secondary explosion might occur after the flame propagates to the exit of the evasé and meets the mixture of air–methane that is being vented from underground mines. If the flame propagates further, downstream explosions inside the underground mines might be induced.
To steer clear of the occurrence of these unexpected explosions, no physical connection between mine evasé and the VAM capture duct has been of great interest to the VAM abatement industry. From a technical point of view, direct coupling seems more practical and provides better control of the entire VAM abatement system. However, it also provides an easy path for the flame and pressure waves to propagate from the RTO to the mine evasé, and vice versa. In the no physical connection approach, the ample air gap between the evasé and the capture duct could stop the flame from traveling due to heat loss to the atmosphere. Therefore, it is vital to understand the behavior of the flame jump from the capture duct to the evasé to prevent and mitigate the occurrence of this category of accidental explosions in underground mines. However, relevant studies are scarce in the public domain, which leads to poor understanding of the scenarios where the flame and pressure waves propagate back towards the evasé.
Computer modeling has proved to be a powerful and promising alternative to physical measurements [
2,
3,
4,
5,
6], particularly when harsh site conditions are present and the resulting capital costs and hazardous risks escalate. A variety of combustion models are available for modeling the explosion of methane–air mixtures, such as the finite-rate kinetics model without a turbulence–chemistry interaction (TCI), the eddy dissipation model (EDM), and the eddy dissipation concept (EDC) model. Generally, the accuracy of the specified or calculated flame speed plays a pivotal role in determining the prediction accuracy of flame propagation. Specification of the flame speed is involved in some approaches (e.g., progress variable (c) based modeling [
7,
8]), which have to employ empirical factors in the source term, limiting their applicability and prediction accuracy. To tackle this challenge, Van Oijen and colleagues [
9,
10,
11] proposed the flamelet generated manifold (FGM) model and used the model to simulate the deflagration of methane–air mixtures. The authors [
9,
10,
11] tabulated the source terms for the unnormalized reaction progress variable using the detailed chemistry; in so doing, there is no need to specify the flame speed or calibrate the empirical constants.
In this study, we developed a partially premixed combustion model based on the FGM model to numerically investigate the propagation of methane–air combustion flame. The unsteady RANS (URANS) approach was deployed to simulate the transient pressure field along with flame propagation. Extreme cases with high methane concentrations (5–9.5%) accumulated in the RTO have been examined. The main objective is to understand the possibilities for the flame and pressure waves to propagate from the capture duct to the exit of the evasé and subsequently induce secondary explosions in underground mines.
3. Results and Discussion
Figure 2 shows the evolution of pressure and temperature fields around the ignition point immediately after ignition is initiated for the case with 7.5% methane in the RTO. For easy identification, the upper half of the tube shows the contour of temperature and the corresponding contour of pressure is shown in the lower half of the tube. Clearly, once ignited (
ms), the flame that is spherical laminar initiates propagation of pressure waves. In the preheat zone of the flame front, the temperature of combustion products rises up to 2070 K and heats the surrounding unburnt gases to ignite the subsequent reaction. The expansion of hot gases immediately induces the compression of unburnt gases resulting in a pressure rise of about
, matching the theoretical estimation by
[
17]. Local sudden changes in temperature and gas properties lead to subsequent alternate rarefaction and compression of unburnt gases, generating pressure waves. The energy liberated from methane combustion is transmitted mainly through the pressure waves. Moreover, reflections of waves from the surrounding walls, as seen from the increased magnitude of pressure waves, evidently intensifies the wave propagation speed. The local pressure magnitude keeps increasing as more energy is released from methane–air combustion. The strong pressure wave propagation can be readily identified, even at
ms with a small region of methane consumed.
The quantitative distribution of temperature, gas density, pressure, and axial velocity along the center line is illustrated in
Figure 3 for the case with 7.5% methane in the RTO at
ms. The hot gases temperature rises up to 2275 K and correspondingly due to thermal expansion, the hot gases density reduces abruptly. The generated pressure wave propagates towards the exit of evasé. The pressure wave magnitude damps inside the capture duct due to the energy loss through expansion and compression effects of gases along with the propagation of pressure waves. However, there are bounce backs of the pressure magnitudes at locations in between the capture duct inlet and the evasé exit due to reflections from the evasé. Moreover, reflections from the evasé walls lead to strong fluctuation of pressure inside the evasé, as indicated in
Figure 3. Likewise, in response to the cycles of rarefaction and compression of unburnt gases, the gas axial velocity also fluctuates with a damping magnitude inside the capture duct. After the inlet of the capture duct, a significant drop in axial velocity is observed due to the expansion of the flow (i.e., flowing into atmosphere). Moreover, corresponding to the reflections of pressure, disturbances in the velocity profile at locations in between the capture duct inlet and the evasé exit and also inside the evasé are observed.
The growth and propagation of flame after ignition inside the capture duct is shown in
Figure 4. At
ms, the laminar flame propagates uniformly outwards. The elliptical flame shape is formed due to the restrictions of tube walls. Subsequently, the statistically spherical flame transits into a statistically planar geometry after the flame front reaches the tube walls, and propagates towards the tube opening end. However, due to intrinsic instabilities (Darrieus–Landau instability and Rayleigh–Taylor instability) [
18,
19] the flame front rapidly evolves into a bullet shape (
ms). This profile transition has been considered as the main mechanism driving the flame’s acceleration [
20]. Furthermore, the flame front is thermodynamically coupled with the pressure wave front (i.e., the combustion heat energy is immediately transmitted to support the pressure wave propagation), leading to the sharp increase in the local maximum pressure. As a result, the flame propagation speed keeps increasing and propagates out of the capture duct as a jet towards the evasé.
Figure 5 shows the time series of temperature contour for the case with 5% methane in the RTO. The evolution of temperature profile is indicative of the process of flame jump from the capture duct to the evasé for this case. After the flame propagates out of the capture duct into the atmosphere, the flame expands and forms a shape of a mushroom that continues to propagate towards the evasé exit. The flame front reaches the evasé exit before
s. Meanwhile, due to the consumed methane and the heat loss to the atmosphere, the flame extinguishes at the tail of the mushroom and the temperature at the mushroom front drops. After
s, due to the low methane concentration vented from the evasé, the temperature keeps dropping and at
s, the flame extinguishes as indicated by the maximum temperature in the vicinity of the evasé that is less than 814 K, i.e., the auto-ignition temperature of methane [
16]. Eventually, at
s, the temperature in the region surrounding the evasé drops back to the ambient temperature. The results suggest that with 5% methane in the RTO and a distance of 29.4 m between the capture duct and the evasé, the flame cannot jump the gap to induce the secondary explosion in the evasé.
Time series of temperature contour for the case with 7.5% methane in the RTO is shown in
Figure 6. Similar to the case with 5% methane concentration, the flame propagates into the atmosphere with the mushroom shape before
s and due to heat loss, the flame extinguishes at the tail of the mushroom before
s. However, the temperature inside the evasé is higher compared to that in the case with 5% methane concentration. Subsequently, from
s, the region of high temperature (>2000 K) inside the evasé keeps expanding outwards, indicating that the secondary explosion occurs. At
s, a stable flame shape is formed releasing energy from the combustion to the surrounding. Correspondingly, the region of high temperature expands whilst the length of the flame does not change much. At
s, the hot region expands to the mouth of the capture duct. This result critically implies that with the distance of
m, the flame can reach the evasé and incur the secondary explosion if the methane concentration reaches
or above).
To further confirm the above finding, the scenario with the stoichiometric concentration (i.e., 9.5%) of methane is simulated. The time series of temperature contour for this case (9.5%) is shown in
Figure 7. At the stoichiometric condition, the secondary explosion occurs violently inside the evasé even before
s when the flame ejected from the capture duct is approaching the evasé. Though the flame at the tail of the mushroom still extinguishes due heat loss, the secondary explosion generates strong backflow carrying methane into the capture duct. Due to the high temperature remaining in the capture duct resulted from the first explosion, the tertiary explosion occurs in regions surrounding the mouth of the capture duct at
s, generating flame propagating against the flame from the secondary explosion. As a result, the space in between the capture duct and the evasé is filled with flame. As methane does not have sufficient time to be completely combusted and is subsequently carried to the region close to the mouth of the capture duct, the tertiary explosion generates flame of even higher temperature. However, as more methane is combusted in regions close to the capture duct mouth, the region of relatively high temperature expands towards the evasé. It should be noted that the tertiary explosion observed in the simulation of this study is for a capture duct length of 30 m, for other capture duct lengths, the occurrence of the tertiary explosion in terms of time and intensity might be different, or it might not occur at all. However, this is out of the interest of the present study. The above results critically confirm that with a distance of
m in between the capture duct and evasé, once explosion occurs inside the capture duct with a methane concentration of ≥7.5%, the flame propagates into the evasé and induces the secondary explosion.
Figure 8 illustrates the quantitative evolution of temperature profile along the centerline for different methane concentrations in the RTO, i.e., 5% (a), 7.5% (b), and 9.5% (c). Distinctly different evolution patterns are observed for these three methane concentrations. Specifically, for the low methane concentration of 5%,
Figure 8a, the temperature in the region surrounding the evasé monotonically decreases, indicating the flame extinguishes in this case. For the case with 7.5% methane,
Figure 8b, the high temperature (i.e., the flame front generated from the explosion in the capture duct) firstly shifts towards the evasé and induces the secondary explosion inside the evasé that generates a secondary flame propagating outwardly towards the capture duct. After
s, a statistically stable flame is formed with an almost constant length and the heated region by the secondary flame expands. For the case with the stoichiometric condition (i.e., 9.5% methane,
Figure 8c), the secondary explosion occurs before
s, the flame propagates backwardly to the capture duct and the burnt gases inside the flame drops due to heat loss to the surroundings, whereas the temperature at the flame front keeps increasing till
s when the tertiary explosion occurs. From
s, the temperature of the hot region generated from the tertiary explosion remains constant around
with the length increasing towards the evasé.
4. Conclusions
In this study, the flame jump from the capture duct to the evasé was simulated with an air gap of m and different methane concentrations accumulated in the RTO (5–9.5%) representing the extreme flammable conditions of methane.
Once the methane was ignited (in RTO), the spherical laminar flame initiated strong propagation of pressure waves. The rapid reaction process along with sudden changes in local temperature and gas properties led to the alternate cycles of rarefaction and compression of unburnt gases, i.e., the formation of pressure waves. Reflections from the confined tube were observed. The pressure wave magnitude damped inside the capture duct due to energy loss through rarefaction and compression effects. Reflections from the evasé led to bounce-backs of the pressure magnitude at locations in the air gap. Moreover, reflections from the evasé walls caused strong fluctuations of pressure inside the evasé.
After ignition, the laminar flame propagated uniformly outwards. After the flame front reached the tube walls, the statistically spherical flame front geometry transited into a statistically planar geometry and propagated towards the evasé. Due to intrinsic instabilities the planar flame front rapidly changed into a bullet shape.
For the case with 5% methane, the flame that propagated out of the capture duct extinguished at s. At s, the temperature around the evasé dropped back to the ambient temperature. For the case of 7.5% methane, secondary explosion was incurred at s and at s, a statistically stable flame was formed heating the regions towards the capture duct mouth. With 9.5% methane, the secondary explosion occurred even before the flame reached the evasé. The violent secondary explosion generated strong backflow carrying unburnt fuel backwards and incurred the tertiary explosion at the capture duct mouth. Distinctly different evolution patterns of temperature profiles along the centerline were observed for these three methane concentrations.
The results critically confirm that with an air gap of m between the capture duct and evasé, once explosion occurs inside the RTO where the methane concentration reached 7.5% or above, the flame could incur secondary explosion inside the evasé, which, in turn, could cause explosions in the downstream underground mines.