Revelation may lead to cleaner-burning fuels
/n
November 17, 2020
Lightning struck a bourbon warehouse, setting fire to a cache of 800,000 gallons of liquor in the Bardstown countryside of Kentucky in 2003. Some of it spilled into a nearby creek, spawning a massive fire tornado.
/nAerial video of the tornado inspired scientists to investigate fire whirls -- tornadoes of fire -- as promising for oil spill remediation because the alcohol burned with relatively little soot.
/nThe U.S. National Science Foundation-funded researchers' fire whirl investigations led them to something that astonished them. The chaotic and dangerous fire whirl transformed into a tame and clean burning flame they call a "blue whirl."
/nOne of its discoverers is now on a science team using supercomputers allocated by the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment, XSEDE, to reveal the structure of the blue whirl, a new type of flame that consists of four separate flames. The scientists hope blue whirls can one day be used to burn fuels more cleanly.
/n"The main finding of this new computational study is that we now know the main structure of the blue whirl," said Elaine Oran of Texas A&M University. Oran is a co-discoverer of the blue whirl and a co-author of a study on its structure. "We know that it's a combination of many types of flames that come together and form into probably the most ideal configuration for burning."
/nA blue whirl is akin to a spinning blue flame that looks like a child's toy top. Oran says it has the same shape as the sorting hat from Harry Potter. Most of its burning is along a very bright blue rim that spins.
/n"This is a great example of basic research leading to an unanticipated and useful outcome," said John Daily, a program director in NSF's Directorate for Engineering.
Comments
Something to say?
Log in or Sign up for free