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In combustion, Clarke–Riley diffusion flame is a diffusion flame that develops inside a naturally convected boundary layer on a hot fuel surface with quiescent oxidizer environment, first studied and experimentally verified by John Frederick Clarke and Norman Riley in 1976.[1] This problem is an extension of Emmons problem.[2]
See also

Emmons problem
Liñán's diffusion flame theory

References

Clarke, J. F., & Riley, N. (1976). Free convection and the burning of a horizontal fuel surface. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 74(3), 415-431.
Bray, K. N. C.; Riley, N. (2014). "John Frederick Clarke 1 May 1927 – 11 June 2013". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 60: 87–106. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2014.0012.

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