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 ...
, Michelson–Sivashinsky equation describes the evolution of a premixed flame front, subjected to the
Darrieus–Landau instability
The Darrieus–Landau instability, or density fingering, refers to an instability of chemical fronts propagating into a denser medium, named after Georges Jean Marie Darrieus and Lev Landau. It is a key Combustion instability#Classification of comb ...
, in the small heat release approximation. The equation was derived by
Gregory Sivashinsky in 1977,
who along the Daniel M. Michelson, presented the numerical solutions of the equation in the same year. Let the planar flame front, in a uitable frame of reference be on the
-plane, then the evolution of this planar front is described by the amplitude function
(where
) describing the deviation from the planar shape. The Michelson–Sivashinsky equation, reads as
:
where
is a constant. Incorporating also the
Rayleigh–Taylor instability
The Rayleigh–Taylor instability, or RT instability (after Lord Rayleigh and G. I. Taylor), is an instability of an Interface (chemistry), interface between two fluids of different densities which occurs when the lighter fluid is pushing the hea ...
of the flame, one obtains the Rakib–Sivashinsky equation (named after Z. Rakib and
Gregory Sivashinsky),
:
where
denotes the spatial average of
, which is a time-dependent function and
is another constant.
N-pole solution
The equations, in the absence of gravity, admits an explicit solution, which is called as the N-pole solution since the equation admits a pole decomposition,as shown by Olivier Thual,
Uriel Frisch
Uriel Frisch (born in Agen, in France, on December 10, 1940) is a French mathematical physicist known for his work on fluid dynamics and turbulence.
Biography
From 1959 to 1963 Frisch was a student at the École Normale Supérieure. Early in his ...
and
Michel Hénon in 1988.
[Thual, O., U. Frisch, and M. Henon. "Application of pole decomposition to an equation governing the dynamics of wrinkled flame fronts." In Dynamics of curved fronts , pp. 489-498. Academic Press, 1988.] Consider the 1d equation
:
where
is the Fourier transform of
. This has a solution of the form
:
where
(which appear in complex conjugate pairs) are poles in the complex plane. In the case periodic solution with periodicity
, the it is sufficient to consider poles whose real parts lie between the interval
and
. In this case, we have
:
These poles are interesting because in physical space, they correspond to locations of the cusps forming in the flame front.
Dold–Joulin equation
In 1995,
John W. Dold and
Guy Joulin
Guy Joulin is a French scientist at Aix-Marseille University who works in the field of combustion.
Biography
Guy Joulin obtained his PhD degree from University of Poitiers in 1979 under the supervision of Paul Clavin.
Joulin is the re ...
generalised the Michelson–Sivashinsky equation by introducing the second-order time derivative, which is consistent with the quadratic nature of the dispersion relation for the
Darrieus–Landau instability
The Darrieus–Landau instability, or density fingering, refers to an instability of chemical fronts propagating into a denser medium, named after Georges Jean Marie Darrieus and Lev Landau. It is a key Combustion instability#Classification of comb ...
. The Dold–Joulin equation is given by
:
where
corresponds to the non-local integral operator.
Joulin–Cambray equation
In 1992,
Guy Joulin
Guy Joulin is a French scientist at Aix-Marseille University who works in the field of combustion.
Biography
Guy Joulin obtained his PhD degree from University of Poitiers in 1979 under the supervision of Paul Clavin.
Joulin is the re ...
and Pierre Cambray extended the Michelson–Sivashinsky equation to include higher-order correction terms, following by an earlier incorrect attempt to derive such an equation by
Gregory Sivashinsky and
Paul Clavin.
[Sivashinsky, G. I., & Clavin, P. (1987). On the nonlinear theory of hydrodynamic instability in flames. Journal de Physique, 48(2), 193-198.] The Joulin–Cambray equation, in dimensional form, reads as
:
See also
*
Kuramoto–Sivashinsky equation
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Michelson-Sivashinsky equation
Differential equations
*
Fluid dynamics
*
Combustion
1977 in science