首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
This article investigates the effect of steam on the ignition of single particles of solid fuels in a drop tube furnace under air and simulated oxy-fuel conditions. Three solid fuels, all in the size range 125–150 µm, were used in this study; specifically, a low rank sub-bituminous Colombian coal, a low-rank/high-ash sub-bituminous Brazilian coal and a charcoal residue from black acacia. For each solid fuel, particles were burned at a constant drop tube furnace wall temperature of 1475?K, in six different mixtures of O2/N2/CO2/H2O, which allowed simulating dry and wet conventional and oxy-fuel combustion conditions. A high-speed camera was used to record the ignition process and the collected images were treated to characterize the ignition mode (either gas-phase or surface mode) and to calculate the ignition delay times. The Colombian coal particles ignite predominately in the gas-phase for all test conditions, but under simulated oxy-fuel conditions there is a decrease in the occurrence of this ignition mode; the charcoal particles experience surface ignition regardless of the test condition; and the Brazilian coal particles ignite predominately in the gas-phase when combustion occurs in mixtures of O2/N2/H2O, but under simulated oxy-fuel conditions the ignition occurs predominantly on the surface. The ignition delay times for particles that ignited in the gas-phase are smaller than those that ignited on the surface, and generally the simulated oxy-fuel conditions retard the onset of both gas-phase and surface ignition. The addition of steam decreases the gas-phase and surface ignition delay times of the particles of both coals under simulated oxy-fuel conditions, but has a small impact on the gas-phase ignition delay times when the combustion occurs in mixtures of O2/N2/H2O. The steam gasification reaction is likely to be responsible for the steam effect on the ignition delay times through the production of highly flammable species that promote the onset of ignition.  相似文献   

2.
In this work, oblique detonation of n-heptane/air mixture in high-speed wedge flows is simulated by solving the reactive Euler equations with a two-dimensional (2D) configuration. This is a first attempt to model complicated hydrocarbon fuel oblique detonation waves (ODWs) with a detailed chemistry (44 species and 112 reactions). Effects of freestream equivalence ratios and velocities are considered, and the abrupt and smooth transition from oblique shock to detonation are predicted. Ignition limit, ODW characteristics, and predictability of the transition mode are discussed. Firstly, homogeneous constant-volume ignition calculations are performed for both fuel-lean and stoichiometric mixtures. The results show that the ignition delay generally increases with the wedge angle. However, a negative wedge angle dependence is observed, due to the negative temperature coefficient effects. The wedge angle range for successful ignition of n-heptane/air mixtures decreases when the wedge length is reduced. From two-dimensional simulations of stationary ODWs, the initiation length generally decreases with the freestream equivalence ratio, but the transition length exhibits weakly non-monotonic dependence. Smooth ODW typically occurs for lean conditions (equivalence ratio < 0.4). The interactions between shock/compression waves and chemical reaction inside the induction zone are also studied with the chemical explosive mode analysis. Moreover, the predictability of the shock-to-detonation transition mode is explored through quantifying the relation between ignition delay and chemical excitation time. It is demonstrated that the ignition delay (the elapsed time of the heat release rate, HRR, reaches the maximum) increases, but the excitation time (the time duration from the instant of 5% maximum HRR to that of the maximum) decreases with the freestream equivalence ratio for the three studied oncoming flow velocities. Smaller excitation time corresponds to stronger pressure waves from the ignition location behind the oblique shock. When the ratio of excitation time to ignition delay is high (e.g., > 0.5 for n-C7H16, > 0.3 for C2H2 and > 0.2 for H2, based on the existing data compilation in this work), smooth transition is more likely to occur.  相似文献   

3.
Appropriate algorithmic tools are employed for the analysis of the explosive modes developing during the autoignition of homogeneous mixtures. The ability of these tools to provide significant physical understanding is demonstrated in the case of the homogeneous ignition of a stoichiometric H2/air mixture, modelled by two different chemical kinetics mechanisms. It is shown that the ignition process evolves in two stages. The first stage is characterised by the development of two explosive timescales (one fast and one slow), that lead the system away from equilibrium. As the end of the first stage is approached, the two explosive timescales converge, they merge and then they disappear. In the second stage only dissipative timescales develop, which drive the system all the way to equilibrium. It is shown that throughout the first stage the fast explosive timescale is generated by chain reactions. The slow explosive timescale is initially generated by an initiation reaction that produces the radicals required for the start-up of the fast mode, while later on it is generated by reactions that are responsible for the heat released. These findings are validated with sensitivity analysis results for the ignition delay time and are employed in order to clarify the discrepancies in the solution provided by the two different chemical kinetics mechanisms considered.  相似文献   

4.
Spontaneous ignition of single n-heptane droplets in a constant volume filled with air is numerically simulated with the spherical symmetry. The volume is closed against mass, species, and energy transfer. The numerical model is fully transient. It continues calculation even after the droplet has completely vaporized, and therefore can predict pre-vaporized ignition. Initial pressure and initial air temperature are fixed at 3 MPa and 773 K, respectively. The droplet is initially at room temperature, and its diameter is between 1 and 100 μm. When the overall equivalence ratio is fixed to be sufficiently large, there exists no ignition limit in terms of initial droplet diameter d0, and the ignition delay takes a minimum value at certain d0. In such a case, transition from the heterogeneous ignition to the homogeneous ignition with decreasing d0 is observed. When d0 is fixed to be so small that the ignition would not occur in an infinite volume of air, the ignition delay takes a minimum value at certain , which is less than unity. Two-stage ignition behavior is investigated with this model. Ignition delay of a cool flame has the dependence on d0 that is similar to that of ignition delay of a hot flame when is unity. When is almost zero, the ignition limit for cool flame in terms of d0 is not identified unlike that for hot flame.  相似文献   

5.
Alkyl aromatics are an important chemical class in gasoline, jet and diesel fuels. In the present work, an n-propylbenzene and n-heptane mixture is studied as a possible surrogate for large alkyl benzenes contained in diesel fuels. To evaluate it as a surrogate, ignition delay times have been measured in a heated high pressure shock tube (HPST) for a mixture of 57% n-propylbenzene/43% n-heptane in air (≈21% O2, ≈79% N2) at equivalence ratios of 0.29, 0.49, 0.98 and 1.95 and compressed pressures of 1, 10 and 30 atm over a temperature range of 1000–1600 K. The effects of reflected-shock pressure and equivalence ratio on ignition delay time were determined and common trends highlighted. A combined n-propylbenzene and n-heptane reaction mechanism was assembled and simulations of the shock tube experiments were carried out. The simulation results showed very good agreement with the experimental data for ignition delay times. Sensitivity and reaction pathway analyses have been performed to reveal the important reactions responsible for fuel oxidation under the shock tube conditions studied. It was found that at 1000 K, the main consumption pathways for n-propylbenzene are abstraction reactions on the alkyl chain, with particular selectivity to the allylic site. In comparison at 1500 K, the unimolecular decomposition of the fuel is the main consumption pathway.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of NO and NO2 produced by using a plasma jet (PJ) of a N2/O2 mixture on ignition of hydrogen, methane, and ethylene in a supersonic airflow were experimentally and numerically investigated. Numerical analysis of ignition delay time showed that the addition of a small amount of NO or NO2 drastically reduced ignition delay times of hydrogen and hydrocarbon fuels at a relatively low initial temperature. In particular, NO and NO2 were more effective than O radicals for ignition of a CH4/air mixture at 1200 K or lower. These ignition enhancement effects were examined by including the low temperature chemistry. Ignition tests by a N2/O2 PJ in a supersonic flow (M = 1.7) for using hydrogen, methane, and ethylene injected downstream of the PJ were conducted. The results showed that the ignitability of the N2/O2 PJ is affected by the composition of the feedstock and that pure O2 is not the optimum condition for downstream fuel injection. This result of ignition tests with downstream fuel injection demonstrated a significant difference in ignition characteristics of the PJ from the ignition tests with upstream fuel injection.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of blending ratio on mixtures of an alcohol-to-jet (ATJ) fuel and a conventional petroleum-derived fuel on first stage ignition and overall ignition delay are examined at engine-relevant ambient conditions. Experiments are conducted in a high-temperature pressure vessel that maintains a small flow of dry air at the desired temperature (825 K and 900 K) and pressure (6 MPa and 9 MPa) for fuel injections from a custom single-hole, axially-oriented injector, representing medium (7.5 mg) and high (10 mg) engine loading. Formaldehyde, imaged using planar laser-induced fluorescence, is measured at discrete time steps throughout the first and second stage ignition process and is used as a marker of unburned short-chain hydrocarbons formed after the initial breakdown of the fuel. The formaldehyde images are used to calculate the first stage ignition delay for each ambient and fuel loading condition. Chemiluminescence imaging of excited hydroxyl radical at 75 kHz is used to determine the overall ignition delay. At all conditions, increased volume fraction of ATJ resulted in longer, but non-linearly increasing, overall ignition delay. Across all of the blends, first stage ignition delay accounted for about 15% of the increase in overall ignition delay compared to the military's aviation kerosene, F-24, which is Jet A with additives, while extended first stage ignition duration accounted for 85% of the increase. It is observed that blends consisting of 0–60% by volume of the low cetane number ATJ fuel produced nearly identical first stage ignition delays. These results will inform the development of ignition models that can capture the non-linear effects of fuel blending on ignition processes.  相似文献   

8.
Recent optical engine studies have linked increases in NOx emissions from fatty acid methyl ester combustion to differences in the premixed autoignition zone of the diesel fuel jet. In this study, ignition of single, isolated liquid droplets in quiescent, high temperature air was considered as a means of gaining insight into the transient, partially premixed ignition conditions that exist in the autoignition zone of a fatty acid methyl ester fuel jet. Normal gravity and microgravity (10−4 m/s2) droplet ignition delay experiments were conducted by use of a variety of neat methyl esters and commercial soy methyl ester. Droplet ignition experiments were chosen because spherically symmetric droplet combustion represents the simplest two-phase, time-dependent chemically reacting flow system permitting a numerical solution with complex physical submodels. To create spherically symmetric conditions for direct comparison with a detailed numerical model, experiments were conducted in microgravity by use of a 1.1 s drop tower. In the experiments, droplets were grown and deployed onto 14 μm silicon carbide fibers and injected into a tube furnace containing atmospheric pressure air at temperatures up to 1300 K. The ignition event was characterized by measurement of UV emission from hydroxyl radical (OH*) chemiluminescence. The experimental results were compared against predictions from a time-dependent, spherically symmetric droplet combustion simulation with detailed gas phase chemical kinetics, spectrally resolved radiative heat transfer and multi-component transport. By use of a skeletal chemical kinetic mechanism (125 species, 713 reactions), the computed ignition delay period for methyl decanoate (C11H22O2) showed excellent agreement with experimental results at furnace temperatures greater than 1200 K.  相似文献   

9.
The ignition delay times for mixtures of isopropyl nitrate (IPN) with air and argon are measured in a rapid-injection reactor at a pressure of 1 atm and in a shock tube at 2–3 atm. It is shown that the ignition delay time τ of mixtures in which heat is largely released due to oxidation by the oxygen contained in the IPN molecule is determined by the unimolecular decomposition of IPN over the entire temperature range covered (500–730 K). For mixtures in which heat is mainly produced by oxidation reactions involving air oxygen, the ignition delay time at high temperatures is controlled by secondary reactions of oxidation of the hydrocarbon moiety of the IPN molecule, leading to an increase in τ by more than an order of magnitude. Liquid IPN burns in a nitrogen atmosphere only at pressures above 40 atm, at a linear rate of ~4 mm/s. The measured flame temperatures are in close agreement with the respective values calculated using a thermodynamic code.  相似文献   

10.
Ethanol is known to be prone to pre-ignition in internal combustion engines under high-load conditions and its ignition shows large deviations from ideal, spatially, and temporally-homogeneous ignition in shock tubes at moderate temperatures (800–950 K). In this context, the ignition of stoichiometric ethanol/O2 mixtures with various levels of inert gas dilution was investigated in a high-pressure shock tube at ?20 bar between 800 and 1250 K. Ignition delay times were determined from spatially integral detection of chemiluminescence emission. Additionally, high-repetition-rate color imaging enabled the differentiation of the luminescence in time, space, and spectral range between various ignition modes. In the low-temperature range (800–860 K), different inhomogeneous ignition modes were identified. The addition of small amounts of helium into the undiluted fuel/air mixture was found to be efficient to mitigate pre-ignition, attributed to a variation in heat transfer and thus suppression of the build-up of local temperature inhomogeneities. The experiments in case of spatially homogeneous ignition show very good agreement with the predictions based on three detailed kinetics mechanisms (Zhang et al., CNF 190 (2018) 74, Frassoldati et al., CNF 159 (2012) 2295, and Zhou et al. CNF 197 (2018) 423), inhomogeneities, however, resulted in a shortening of the ignition delay times up to a factor of 2.6.  相似文献   

11.
To examine the pyrophoric characteristics of Mg powder, we generated ultra-fine Mg particles (average particle diameter: about 0.3 μm) without an original oxide coat in an Ar stream. The ignition of the powder was measured by using the impinging O2/N2 mixture streams over a wide range of the experimental parameters: pressure, oxygen concentration and velocity of the streams. The Mg powder was found to ignite even at room temperature. The spontaneous ignition temperatures in the range of 278  324 K were insensitive to all the experimental parameters. The ignition delay time had a tendency to decrease with increasing experimental parameters.The ignition process of the Mg powder was found to be controlled by the surface reaction rate without an oxide coat. We proposed a new ignition hypothesis considering a critical oxide thickness on the Mg powder particles at the transition temperature from protective to non-protective nature: that is, the ignition of the Mg powder occurs when the powder temperature rises above the transition temperature before surface reactions form a protective oxide coat with the critical thickness on the individual particle surfaces. According to this hypothesis, an ignition model of Mg powder cluster was developed, and the relation between the spontaneous critical ignition temperature and the ultra-fine powder size, depending on the critical thickness of the protective oxide coat, was clarified. The critical oxide thickness was estimated.  相似文献   

12.
Knock is one of the main obstacles to improving the thermal efficiency of spark-ignition internal combustion engines. Although knock has been widely studied and accepted as a result of end-gas auto-ignition, the fundamentals regarding auto-ignition behaviors are still not fully revealed. In this study, the ignition behaviors of primary reference fuels were investigated in an optical rapid compression machine equipped with a quartz combustion chamber allowing for visualizing the combustion process from the lateral view. By combining both the lateral view and the top view photography, ignition behaviors under vortex-existing conditions with a creviced piston and vortex-minimized conditions with a flat piston were comprehensively analyzed to reveal the impact of the vortex on the ignition behaviors of PRF fuels. The influence of fuel reactivity was also investigated. The results showed that mild ignition was prevalent under large Da* numbers. The occurrence of mild ignition was closely related to the ignition delay time of the mixture, and the critical ignition delay time was not fixed but decreased with increasing initial temperature. The propensity of mild ignition could be boosted under vortex-existing conditions due to the increasing hotspot formation probability. Vortices were demonstrated to be capable of mitigating knock intensity via 1) the buffer effect of surrounding burned regions on the shock waves generated from surrounded unburnt pockets; 2) a larger burned mass fraction at the instant of the final ignition under vortex-existing conditions. The results also showed that strong ignition was more likely to occur under vortex-minimized conditions. Besides, higher fuel reactivity also could increase the probability of strong ignition occurrence. Compared with the creviced piston, the use of the flat piston could shift the ignition regime towards regions with higher Ret and lower Dat in the Dat-Ret diagram, where the strong ignition is less pronounced.  相似文献   

13.
Direct numerical simulations were conducted to investigate the effect of two parameters, density ratio and laminar flame speed, on the conditions of the onset of local extinction and blow-off of lean premixed flames, stabilized on a meso-scale bluff-body in hydrogen-air and syngas–air mixtures. A total of six simulation cases were considered as isolated comparison of the two parametric effects of the fluid dynamic instability and flame time scale. For all cases under study, the general flame development towards the blow-off limit showed a sequence of five distinct modes, with possible cyclic patterns among the different modes for a range of velocity conditions. The onset of local extinction was observed during the asymmetric vortex shedding and vortex street mode. As the density ratio is decreased, the flow inunder reviewstability is promoted through the increased sinuous mode, and such behavior was properly scaled by the Strouhal number. Although the blow-off velocity is altered by the fluid dynamic effects, the condition for the onset of local extinction and blow-off was mainly dictated by the competition between flow residence time associated with the lateral flame motion and ignition delay of the local mixtures. Time scale analysis supported the validity of the findings across all the cases investigated.  相似文献   

14.
The combustion of stoichiometric Ethyl-hexyl-nitrate (EHN)-doped n-heptane/oxygen/argon and (EHN)-doped n-heptane/air mixtures, respectively, was investigated in a low-pressure burner with a molecular-beam mass spectrometer and ignition delay-time (τign) measurements were performed in a high-pressure shock tube. The experiments with the low-pressure flame were used for the determination of the flame structure including concentration profiles of reactants, products and important intermediates in the flame. The shock tube experiments provided τign for a temperature range of 690 K ? T ? 1275 K at a pressure of 40 ± 2 bar for stoichiometric and lean mixtures under engine relevant conditions. A chemical mechanism for n-heptane/EHN mixtures was developed from an automatically generated mechanism for n-heptane by manually adding reactions to describe the influence of EHN. This mechanism was validated against the shock-tube data for various temperatures, levels of EHN-doping and equivalence ratios by homogeneous reactor calculations.The ignition delay times predicted by the model agree well with the shock tube results for a large range of temperatures, equivalence ratios and EHN concentrations. The influence of EHN onto ignition delay was largest in the low-temperature regime (770-1000 K).Numerical analysis suggests that the prevalent reason for the ignition-enhancing effect of EHN is the formation of highly reactive heptyl radicals by thermal decomposition of EHN. Due to this comparatively simple and generic mechanism, EHN is expected to have a similar ignition-enhancing effect also for other hydrocarbon fuels.  相似文献   

15.
The values of the ignition delay time of cyclopropane–oxygen–argon (cyclo-C3H6–O2–Ar) mixtures of different compositions (φ = 0.333, 1, and 3) behind reflected shock waves at temperatures of 1200–1640 K and a pressure of (0.55 ± 0.05) MPa are measured. A kinetic mechanism of cyclopropane ignition using the known rate constants for the most important elementary reactions is developed. The mechanism closely describes both our own and published experimental data on the delay time of ignition of cyclopropane in shock waves over wide ranges of temperature (1200–2100 K), pressure (0.1–0.55 MPa), cyclopropane concentrations (0.05–11 vol %), and oxygen concentrations (0.25–21 vol %). It is shown that, with increasing fraction of diluent gas in the mixture, the dependence of the ignition delay time on the fuel-to-oxidizer equivalence ratio changes.  相似文献   

16.
The ignition behavior of n-dodecane micro-pilot spray in a lean-premixed methane/air charge was investigated in an optically accessible Rapid Compression-Expansion Machine at dual-fuel engine-like pressure/temperature conditions. The pilot fuel was admitted using a coaxial single-hole 100?µm injector mounted on the cylinder periphery. Optical diagnostics include combined high-speed CH2O-PLIF (10?kHz) and Schlieren (80?kHz) imaging for detection of the first-stage ignition, and simultaneous high-speed OH* chemiluminescence (40?kHz) imaging for high-temperature ignition. The aim of this study is to enhance the fundamental understanding of the interaction of methane with the auto-ignition process of short pilot-fuel injections. Addition of methane into the air charge considerably prolongs ignition delay of the pilot spray with an increasing effect at lower temperatures and with higher methane/air equivalence ratios. The temporal separation of the first CH2O detection and high-temperature ignition was found almost constant regardless of methane content. This was interpreted as methane mostly deferring the cool-flame reactivity. In order to understand the underlying mechanisms of this interaction, experimental investigations were complemented with 1D-flamelet simulations using detailed chemistry, confirming the chemical influence of methane deferring the reactivity in the pilot-fuel lean mixtures. This shifts the onset of first-stage reactivity towards the fuel-richer conditions. Consequently, the onset of the turbulent cool-flame is delayed, leading to an overall increased high-temperature ignition delay. Overall, the study reveals a complex interplay between entrainment, low T and high T chemistry and micro-mixing for dual-fuel auto-ignition processes for which the governing processes were identified.  相似文献   

17.
In this work, the effects of feedstock water leaching on ignition and PM1.0 emission during biomass combustion were studied, for the first time, in a Hencken flat-flame burner reactor (HFFBR). A high-speed video camera and high-resolution electrical low-pressure impactor were respectively employed to diagnose ignition and PM1.0 along the height of the burner. The mineral composition of PM10+ was measured as a function of height to demonstrate the potassium release during the early stage of biomass combustion. The results show that water leaching does not change the functional group of the biomass (straw), but increases the BET surface area and pore volume. Water leaching removes 90% of the potassium and all the chlorine, reducing the same amount of PM1.0 emission. The effect of water leaching on ignition delay observed in the flat-flame burner reactor agrees with the delay of biomass-devolatilization in TGA. Profiles of mineral composition in the PM10+ with height shows that a large amount of the potassium is released before biomass ignition. This indicates that, at realistic heating rates, the catalytic promotion of water-soluble minerals on biomass ignition is primarily through promoting devolatilization. The ignition delay of biomass particles caused by water leaching is more significant at lower temperature, e.g., ignition is delayed from 20 to 24?ms at 1000?°C, and from 9.2 to 10.2?ms at 1300?°C.  相似文献   

18.
Numerical computations and a series of experiments were conducted in microgravity to study the ignition characteristics of a thin polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) sheet (thicknesses of 0.2 and 0.4 mm) using a CO2 laser as an external radiant source. Two separate ignition events were observed, including ignition over the irradiated surface (frontside ignition), and ignition, after some delay, over the backside surface (backside ignition). The backside ignition was achieved in two different modes. In the first mode, after the laser was turned off, the flame shrank and stabilized closer to the fuel surface. This allowed the flame to travel from the frontside to the backside through the small, open hole generated by the laser’s vaporization of PMMA. In the second mode, backside ignition was achieved during the laser irradiation. The numerical calculation simulating this second process predicts fresh oxygen supply flows from the backside gas phase to the frontside gas phase through the open hole, which mixes with accumulated hot MMA fuel vapor which is ignited as a second flame in the frontside gas phase above the hole. Then, the flame initiated from the second ignition travels through the hole to ignite the accumulated flammable mixture in the backside gas phase near the hole, attaining backside ignition. The first backside ignition mode was observed in 21% oxygen and the second backside ignition mode in 35%. The duration of the laser irradiation appears to have important effects on the onset of backside ignition. For example, in 21% oxygen, the backside ignition was attained after a 3 s laser duration but was not observed after a 6 s laser duration (within the available test time of 10 s). Longer laser duration might prevent two-sided ignition in low oxygen concentrations.  相似文献   

19.
The reactivity of six kerosene based control fuels, specifically formulated for cetane number variation, are investigated by measuring ignition delay time in a heated rapid compression machine. Cetane numbers vary from 30 to 55 (increment of 5) while holding other properties relatively constant by adjusting chemical group composition. Main cetane variation was controlled through the distribution of normal alkanes and isoalkanes, which was fine-tuned using additives. Other fuel properties such as density, viscosity, H/C ratio, etc. were balanced using cyclic compounds and aromatics. Fuels were tested in the RCM at compressed pressures of Pc=?10 and 20?bar, equivalence ratios of ??=?0.25, 0.5 and 1.0, in the low to intermediate temperature range (620?K?≤?Tc?≤?730?K). Relations between cetane number and ignition delay time have been evaluated at multiple test conditions, and further analysis on multistage ignition has been conducted. Ignition delay times of fuels with higher cetane numbers are shorter at these temperatures for most conditions. First stage ignition delay time measurements have been observed to be relatively insensitive to Pc, ?, and fuel type, while deviations in overall ignition delay times are mainly attributed to second stage ignition delay time, impacted by variations in the first stage temperature. Control fuels of this type offer an opportunity to be used in practical experiments to determine the impact of cetane number on combustion dynamics.  相似文献   

20.
The delay time of ignition of a composite propellant based on ammonium perchlorate by a CO2-laser is measured at various pressures and radiant flux densities. The characteristics of the propellant at the moment of ignition are calculated. The obtained rate constants of the reactions in the propellant are compared to the respective rate constants of the reactions in the c-phase occurring during the combustion of the composite propellant.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号