In
combustion
Combustion, or burning, is a high-temperature exothermic redox chemical reaction between a fuel (the reductant) and an oxidant, usually atmospheric oxygen, that produces oxidized, often gaseous products, in a mixture termed as smoke. Combustion ...
engineering and
explosion
An explosion is a rapid expansion in volume of a given amount of matter associated with an extreme outward release of energy, usually with the generation of high temperatures and release of high-pressure gases. Explosions may also be generated ...
studies, the Markstein number (named after
George H. Markstein who first proposed the notion in 1951) characterizes the effect of local heat release of a propagating
flame
A flame () is the visible, gaseous part of a fire. It is caused by a highly exothermic chemical reaction made in a thin zone. When flames are hot enough to have ionized gaseous components of sufficient density, they are then considered plasm ...
on variations in the surface topology along the flame and the associated local
flame front curvature. There are two
dimensionless
Dimensionless quantities, or quantities of dimension one, are quantities implicitly defined in a manner that prevents their aggregation into units of measurement. ISBN 978-92-822-2272-0. Typically expressed as ratios that align with another sy ...
Markstein numbers:
[Clavin, Paul, and Geoff Searby. Combustion Waves and Fronts in Flows: Flames, Shocks, Detonations, Ablation Fronts and Explosion of Stars. Cambridge University Press, 2016.] one is the curvature Markstein number and the other is the flow-strain Markstein number. They are defined as:
:
where
is the curvature Markstein length,
is the flow-strain Markstein length and
is the characteristic laminar flame thickness. The larger the Markstein length, the greater the effect of curvature on localised burning velocity.
George H. Markstein (1911—2011) showed that thermal diffusion stabilized the curved flame front and proposed a relation between the critical wavelength for stability of the flame front, called the Markstein length, and the thermal thickness of the flame. Phenomenological Markstein numbers with respect to the combustion products are obtained by means of the comparison between the measurements of the flame radii as a function of time and the results of the analytical integration of the linear relation between the flame speed and either flame stretch rate or flame curvature. The burning velocity is obtained at zero stretch, and the effect of the flame stretch acting upon it is expressed by a Markstein length. Because both flame curvature and aerodynamic strain contribute to the flame stretch rate, there is a Markstein number associated with each of these components.
Clavin–Williams formula
The Markstein number with respect to the unburnt gas mixture was derived by
Paul Clavin and
Forman A. Williams in 1982, using
activation energy asymptotics. The formula was extended to include temperature dependences on the thermal conductivities by
Paul Clavin and Pedro Luis Garcia Ybarra in 1983. The Clavin–Williams formula is given by
[Bechtold, J. K., & Matalon, M. (2001). The dependence of the Markstein length on stoichiometry. Combustion and flame, 127(1-2), 1906-1913.]
:
where
:
Here
The function
, in most cases, is simply given by
, where
, in which case, we have
:
In the constant transport coefficient assumption,
, in which case, we have
: