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1.
An experimental and kinetic modeling study of the autoignition of 3-methylheptane, a compound representative of the high molecular weight lightly branched alkanes found in large quantities in conventional and synthetic aviation kerosene and diesel fuels, is reported. Shock tube and rapid compression machine ignition delay time measurements are reported over a wide range of conditions of relevance to combustion engine applications: temperatures from 678 to 1356 K; pressures of 6.5, 10, 20, and 50 atm; and equivalence ratios of 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0. The wide range of temperatures examined provides observation of autoignition in three reactivity regimes, including the negative temperature coefficient (NTC) regime characteristic of paraffinic fuels. Comparisons made between the current ignition delay measurements for 3-methylheptane and previous results for n-octane and 2-methylheptane quantifies the influence of a single methyl substitution and its location on the reactivity of alkanes. It is found that the three C8 alkane isomers have indistinguishable high-temperature ignition delay but their ignition delay times deviate in the NTC and low-temperature regimes in correlation with their research octane numbers. The experimental results are compared with the predictions of a proposed kinetic model that includes both high- and low-temperature oxidation chemistry. The model mechanistically explains the differences in reactivity for n-octane, 2-methylheptane, and 3-methylheptane in the NTC through the influence of the methyl substitution on the rates of isomerization reactions in the low-temperature chain branching pathway, that ultimately leads to ketohydroperoxide species, and the competition between low-temperature chain branching and the formation of cyclic ethers, in a chain propagating pathway.  相似文献   

2.
A detailed chemical kinetic model for oxidation of CH3CHO at intermediate to high temperature and elevated pressure has been developed and evaluated by comparing predictions to novel high-pressure flow reactor experiments as well as shock tube ignition delay measurements and jet-stirred reactor data from literature. The flow reactor experiments were conducted with a slightly lean CH3CHO/O2 mixture highly diluted in N2 at 600–900 K and pressures of 25 and 100 bar. At the highest pressure, the oxidation of CH3CHO was in the NTC regime, controlled to a large extent by the thermal stability and reactions of peroxide species such as HO2, CH3OO, and CH3C(O)OO. Model predictions were generally in good agreement with the experimental data, even though the predicted temperature for onset of reaction was overpredicted at 100 bar. This discrepancy was attributed mainly to uncertainties in the CH3C(O)OO reaction subset. Predictions of ignition delays in shock tubes and species profiles in JSR experiments were also satisfactory. At temperatures above the NTC regime, acetaldehyde ignition and oxidation is affected mainly by the competition between dissociation of CH3CHO and reaction with the radical pool, and by reactions in the methane subset.  相似文献   

3.
In order to unravel the reaction pathways relevant to anisole co-oxidation within a fuel blend, a detailed study of isooctane/anisole blends was performed with the ULille RCM. Ignition delays as well as mole fraction profiles were measured during a two-stage ignition delay using sampling and GC techniques. These results are used to validate a kinetic model developed from ab initio calculations for the most relevant rate constants which included H-atom abstraction reactions from anisole, and reactions on the potential energy surfaces of methoxyphenyl + O2 and anisyl + O2. Pressure dependent rate constants were computed for the methoxyphenyl + O2 and anisyl + O2 reactive systems using master equation code analysis. The new kinetic model shows good agreement with the experimental data. Dual brute-force sensitivity analysis was performed, on both first- and second-stages of ignition, allowing the identification of the most important reactions in the prediction of both ignition delays. It was observed that while pure anisole does not show NTC behavior, a 60/40 isooctane/anisole blend displays such behavior, as well as two-stage ignition. This suggests anisole addition may not be as beneficial to knock resistance as expected from its high octane number. The kinetic modeling results demonstrate the importance of H-abstraction reactions both from the methoxy group and from the aryl ring in ortho-position and the addition of the resultant radicals to O2, mostly leading to the formation of polar or non-aromatic products.  相似文献   

4.
Though the combustion chemistry of dimethyl ether (DME) has been widely investigated over the past decades, there remains a dearth of ignition data that examines the low-temperature, low-pressure chemistry of DME. In this study, DME/‘air’ mixtures at various equivalence ratios from lean (0.5) to extremely rich (5.0) were ignited behind reflected shock waves at a fixed pressure (3.0 atm) over the temperature range 625–1200 K. The ignition behavior is different from that at high-pressures, with a repeatable ignition delay time fall-off feature observed experimentally in the temperature transition zone from the negative temperature coefficient (NTC) regime to the high-temperature regime. This could not be reproduced using available kinetic mechanisms as conventionally homogeneous ignition simulations. The fall-off behavior shows strong equivalence ratio dependence and disappears completely at an equivalence ratio of 5.0. A local ignition kernel postulate was implemented numerically to quantifiably examine the inhomogeneous premature ignition. At low temperature, no pre-ignition occurs in the mixture. A conspicuous discrepancy was observed between the measurements and constrained UV simulations at temperatures beyond the NTC regime. A third O2 addition reaction sub-set was incorporated into AramcoMech 3.0, together with related species thermochemistry calculated using the G3/G4/CBS-APNO compound method, to explore the low-temperature deviation. The new reaction class does not influence the model predictions in IDTs, but the updated thermochemistry does. Sensitivity analyses indicate that the decomposition of hydroperoxy-methylformate plays a critical role in improving the low-temperature oxidation mechanism of DME but unfortunately, the thermal rate coefficient has never been previously investigated. Further experimental and theoretical endeavors are required to attain holistic quantitative chemical kinetics based on our understanding of the low-temperature chemistry of DME.  相似文献   

5.
A comparative reactivity study of 1-alkene fuels from ethylene to 1-heptene has been performed using ignition delay time (IDT) measurements from both a high-pressure shock tube and a rapid compression machine, at an equivalence ratio of 1.0 in ‘air’, at a pressure of 30 atm in the temperature range of 600–1300 K. At low temperatures (< 950 K), the results show that 1-alkenes with longer carbon chains show higher fuel reactivity, with 1-pentene being the first fuel to show negative temperature coefficient (NTC) behavior followed by 1-hexene and 1-heptene. At high temperatures (> 950 K), the experimental results show that all of the fuels except propene show very similar fuel reactivity, with the IDTs of propene being approximately four times longer than for all of the other 1-alkenes. To analyze the experimental results, a chemistry mechanism has been developed using consistent rate constants for these alkenes. At 650 K, flux analyses show that hydroxyl radicals add to the double bond, followed by addition to molecular oxygen producing hydroxy?alkylperoxy radicals, which can proceed via the Waddington mechanism or alternate internal H-atom isomerizations in chain branching similar to those for alkanes. We have found that the major chain propagation reaction pathways that compete with chain branching pathyways mainly produce hydroxyl rather than hydroperoxyl radicals, which explains the less pronounced NTC behavior for larger 1-alkenes compared to their corresponding alkanes. At 1200 K, flux analyses show that the accumulation of hydroperoxyl radicals is important for the auto-ignition of 1-alkenes from propene to 1-heptene. The rate of production of hydroperoxyl radicals for 1-alkenes from 1-butene to 1-heptene is higher than that for propene, which is due to the longer carbon chain facilitating hydroperoxyl radical formation via more efficient reaction pathways. This is the major reason that propene presents lower fuel reactivity than the other 1-alkenes at high temperatures.  相似文献   

6.
One approach to enhancing the thermal efficiency of combustion systems is to burn fuels at ultra-lean conditions (equivalence ratio below 0.5). It has been recently reported that the auto-ignition of some hydrocarbon fuels, under specific temperature, pressure, and mixture conditions, releases heat in three distinctive stages. The three auto-ignition stages can be divided as a first low-temperature auto-ignition stage with conventional low temperature, and a high-temperature stage separated into two sub-stages. This study presents ignition delay time measurements of n-heptane and methyl-cyclohexane (MCH) mixtures in a flat piston rapid compression machine (RCM) under ultra-lean conditions. It provides experimental evidence of three-stage auto-ignition. This phenomenon of delayed high-temperature heat release is seldom reported in the literature and this is the first time to be reported for these types of fuels. The experiments cover two binary n-heptane/MCH mixtures of 15/85 and 70/30 by volume, pressures of 11 bar and 16 bar, temperature range of 700 to 900 K, and equivalence ratio of 0.4. The RCM optical access was utilized for high-speed chemiluminescence imaging. Detailed chemical kinetic simulations in a homogenous batch reactor with variable volume were conducted to further interrogate the three-stage auto-ignition phenomenon. Chemiluminescence shows that three-stage auto-ignition occurs in the adiabatically compressed end-gas, which indicates that this phenomenon is chemically-driven and is not induced by a thermal stratification in the RCM experiments. The model predicts the features of three-stage auto-ignition, which were experimentally observed at temperatures approximately below 750 K. As expected, significant discrepancies are observed in the ignition delays of experiment and simulation in the negative temperature coefficient (NTC) region. The simulation of the n-heptane/MCH 70/30 mixture shows better agreement with experiments in the Positive Temperature Coefficient (PTC) region compared to the 15/85 mixture.  相似文献   

7.
Naphthenes are chemical species that are always present in liquid hydrocarbon fuels and their pyrolysis and oxidation can play an important role in real liquid fuel combustion. In spite of its practical relevance, the chemical kinetics of naphthene pyrolysis and oxidation is not yet thoroughly investigated and there is not a general agreement on the role and rate of several elementary reactions involved. In this paper, the kinetics of the pyrolysis and oxidation of a simple naphthene, namely cyclo-hexane, has been investigated through detailed kinetic modeling. Ab initio calculations were performed to estimate the kinetic parameters of some primary reactions following the oxygen attack to the cyclo-hexane radical. In fact, due to the complex behavior induced by the ring structure of cyclo-hexane, such data were difficult to determine through thermo-chemical methods. Density functional theory (B3LYP/6-31g(d, p)) was adopted to determine structure and vibrational frequencies of transition states and reaction intermediates, while energies were evaluated using the G2MP2 approach. The kinetic parameters of the investigated primary reactions were then introduced in a general detailed kinetic model consisting of elementary reactions whose kinetic constants were taken from the literature. The so obtained kinetic model was used to simulate ignition delay times and species concentrations measured in various experiments reported in the literature. The agreement between experimental data and theoretical predictions shows the validity of the chosen approach and supports the correctness of the proposed kinetic model.  相似文献   

8.
针对二甲醚(DME)低温低压数据缺乏和反应机理认识不统一问题,利用高压激波管进行点火延迟期测量实验,实验工况完整覆盖负温度系数(NTC:Negative Temperature Coefficient)区域。使用Aramco Mech 3.0机理对实验结果进行了数值仿真,发现与实验数据相比存在两个差异较大的典型区域:NTC高温拐点前温度区和NTC低温拐点后温度区。本文通过计算流体力学(CFD:Computational Fluid Dynamics)仿真分析,说明了热点的出现可以引起第一个区域内的差异。并且本文对DME低温反应进行动力学分析,认为第二个区域内的差异源自于机理本身。考虑用三次加氧反应优化DME机理,发现该路径对DME低温化学机理的改善贡献不大。但本文中的实验数据和DME的动力学分析为进一步优化DME低温燃烧反应动力学机理提供了思路和方向。  相似文献   

9.
Ignition delay times of cyclohexane-oxygen-argon and cyclopentane-oxygen-argon mixtures have been measured in a shock tube, the onset of ignition being detected by OH radical emission. Mixtures contained 0.5 or 1% of hydrocarbon for values of the equivalence ratio ranging from 0.5 to 2. Reflected shock waves allowed temperatures from 1230 to 1840 K and pressures from 7.3 to 9.5 atm to be obtained. These measurements have shown that cyclopentane is much less reactive than cyclohexane, as for a given temperature the observed autoignition delay times were about 10 times higher for the C5 compound than for the C6. Detailed mechanisms for the combustion of cyclohexane and cyclopentane have been proposed to reproduce these results. The elementary steps included in the kinetic models of the oxidation of cyclanes are close to those proposed to describe the oxidation of non cyclic alkanes and alkenes. Consequently, it has been possible to obtain these models by using an improved version of the EXGAS software, a computer package for the automatic generation of detailed kinetic models for the gas-phase combustion of alkanes and alkenes. Nevertheless, the modeling of the oxidation of cyclanes requires new types of generic reactions to be considered, and especially to define new correlations for the estimation of the rate constants. Quantum chemical calculations have been used to improve the estimation of some sensitive rate constants in the case of cyclopentane. The main reaction pathways have been derived from flow rate and sensitivity analysis.  相似文献   

10.
Cyclic ethers are important intermediates in the oxidation of hydrocarbons and biofuels. Studying the oxidation and pyrolysis of cyclic ethers will help in improving our understanding of this functional group and provide consistency to the base mechanism where they play an important role. In this aspect, propylene oxide has been investigated in this study by obtaining ignition delay time measurements in the rapid compression machine and shock tube. The experiments were performed in a range of pressures varying from 10 to 40 bar at different equivalence ratios (0.5–2.0) and dilution percentages. Additionally, speciation measurements in the shock tube at pyrolysis conditions have been performed at a pressure of 40 bar to explore the isomerization pathways. A detailed kinetic mechanism was developed to describe both the oxidation and pyrolysis chemistry of propylene oxide. The mechanism is not only able to predict the data obtained from this study but also reproduces the data from the literature in a consistent trend. For a better understanding of the oxidation and pyrolysis chemistry of propylene oxide, the kinetic analyses were performed using the developed mechanism to comprehend the important reaction pathways and sensitive reactions. At the investigated regime, the consumption of propylene oxide through its isomerization channels is the critical pathway that controls the reactivity of the fuel.  相似文献   

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