Chapman-Jouguet deflagrations and their transition to detonation
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We study experimentally fast flames and their transition to detonation in mixtures of methane, ethane, ethylene, acetylene, and propane mixtures with oxygen. Following the interaction of a detonation wave with a column of cylinders of varying blockage ratio, the experiments demonstrate that the fast flames established are Chapman-Jouguet deflagrations, in excellent agreement with the self-similar model of Radulescu et al. (2015). The experiments indicate that these Chapman-Jouguet deflagrations dynamically restructure and amplify into fewer stronger modes until the eventual transition to detonation. The transition length to a self-sustained detonation was found to correlate very well with the mixtures' sensitivity to temperature fluctuations, reflected by the $\chi$ parameter introduced by Radulescu, which is the product of the non-dimensional activation energy $E_a/RT$ and the ratio of chemical induction to reaction time $t_i/t_r$. Correlation of the measured DDT lengths determined that the relevant characteristic time scale from chemical kinetics controlling DDT is the energy release or excitation time $t_r$. Correlations with the cell size also capture the dependence of the DDT length on $\chi$ for fixed blockage ratios.
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