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1.
Detailed high-fidelity kinetic models of fuels are of great significance by providing guidance for the improvement of the combustion performance in engines and promising the reduction of design cycle of new concept combustors. However, the kinetic modeling works on Chinese RP-3 kerosene, the most widely used civil aviation fuel in China, are meager to date. In this study, a kinetic model, including a surrogate fuel and its combustion kinetic mechanism, were developed to describe the combustion of RP-3. Firstly, a surrogate comprised of components n-dodecane, 2,2,4,6,6-pentamethylheptane (PMH), n-butylcyclohexane and n-butylbenzene (22.82/31.30/19.19/26.69 mol%) was proposed based on the combustion property target matching method. These components are all within the typical molecular size (C10-C14) of jet fuels and thereby can potentially improve the ability of the surrogate in emulating the properties that depend on molecular size. Experiments were then carried out in a heated rapid compression machine and a heated shock tube to evaluate the performance of the surrogate in reproducing the combustion behavior of the target fuel over wide conditions. It is found that the surrogate can reproduce the autoignition characteristics of RP-3 very well. A chemical kinetic mechanism was developed to describe the oxidation of this surrogate. This mechanism was assembled using a published n-butylbenzene sub-mechanism and our previous sub-mechanisms for the other pure components, and was assessed against the present experimental data. The results showed that the simulations agreed well with the experimental data under the investigated conditions, demonstrating that the composition of the surrogate and its mechanism are appropriate to describe the combustion of RP-3. The first-stage ignition negative temperature coefficient behavior and the evolution of key radicals were investigated using the kinetic model.  相似文献   

2.
n-Dodecane is a promising surrogate fuel for diesel engine study because its physicochemical properties are similar to those of the practical diesel fuels. In the present study, a skeletal mechanism for n-dodecane with 105 species and 420 reactions was developed for spray combustion simulations. The reduction starts from the most recent detailed mechanism for n-alkanes consisting of 2755 species and 11,173 reactions developed by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. An algorithm combining direct relation graph with expert knowledge (DRGX) and sensitivity analysis was employed for the present skeletal reduction. The skeletal mechanism was first extensively validated in 0-D and 1-D combustion systems, including auto-ignition, jet stirred reactor (JSR), laminar premixed flame and counter flow diffusion flame. Then it was coupled with well-established spray models and further validated in 3-D turbulent spray combustion simulations under engine-like conditions. These simulations were compared with the recent experiments with n-dodecane as a surrogate for diesel fuels. It can be seen that combustion characteristics such as ignition delay and flame lift-off length were well captured by the skeletal mechanism, particularly under conditions with high ambient temperatures. Simulations also captured the transient flame development phenomenon fairly well. The results further show that ignition delay may not be the only factor controlling the stabilisation of the present flames since a good match in ignition delay does not necessarily result in improved flame lift-off length prediction.  相似文献   

3.
Experimental and kinetic modeling studies are carried out to characterize premixed combustion of jet fuels, their surrogates, and reference components in laminar nonuniform flows. In previous studies, it was established that the Aachen surrogate made up of 80 % n-decane and 20 % trimethylbenzene by weight, and surrogate C made up of 57 % n-dodecane, 21 % methylcyclohexane and 22 % o-xylene by weight, reproduce key aspects of combustion of jet fuels in laminar nonpremixed flows. Here, these surrogates and a jet fuel are tested in premixed, nonuniform flows. The counterflow configuration is employed, and critical conditions of extinction are measured. In addition, the reference components tested are n-heptane, n-decane, n-dodecane, methylcyclohexane, trimethylbenzene, and o-xylene. Measured critical conditions of extinction of the Aachen surrogate and surrogate C are compared with those for the jet fuel. In general the alkanes n-heptane, n-decane, and n-dodecane, and methylcyclohexane are found to be more reactive than the aromatics o-xylene and trimethylbenzene. Flame structure and critical conditions of extinction are predicted for the reference components and the surrogates using a semi-detailed kinetic model. The predicted values are compared with experimental data. Sensitivity analysis shows that the lower reactivity of the aromatic species arises from the formation of resonantly stabilized radicals. These radicals are found to have a scavenging effect. The present study on premixed flows together with previous studies on nonpremixed flows show that the Aachen surrogate and surrogate C reproduce many aspects of premixed and nonpremixed combustion of jet fuels.  相似文献   

4.
Simple surrogate formulations for gasoline are useful for modelling purposes and for comparing experimental results using a carefully designed fuel. Simple three-component surrogates based on primary reference fuels (PRF) and Toluene (TPRF) are frequently used to match the antiknock properties of actual gasoline fuels through the RON and MON. However, using PRF or TPRFs to test or to calibrate gasoline engines is still challenging, with the main difficulty being the capabilities of PRF fuels to match the physical properties of the road fuel such density, volatility (DVPE) and the distillation curve. To overcome such issues, an alternative to TPRF is presented in this work with a focus on premium fuel (RON98 EN228). This alternative consists of replacing some or all of isooctane by isopentane. In the event of total replacement, a three-component “THIP” (Toluene, Heptane, IsoPentane) surrogate fuel is produced. The physical and combustion properties of isopentane makes it easier to create surrogates that can match the DVPE, RON, MON and distillation characteristics of a real fuel. Furthermore, the use of isopentane allows the definition of a wider range of surrogate fuel compositions that can replicate the RON and MON of a given fuel. Surrogate formulations were developed at Shell Global Solutions that matched the RON, MON and selected physical properties of a reference premium gasoline (RPG). A Rapid Compression Machine (RCM) in PCFC was used to demonstrate that those surrogates can reproduce the essential autoignition characteristics of the selected RPG. Two mechanisms were used to predict RCM data and showed reasonable agreement, opening some perspective for further investigations. Finally, an engine test performed at Ferrari test facilities demonstrated that simple surrogates containing isopentane can be used to closely match the knock-limited combustion phasing of an RPG. In this paper, it is demonstrated such surrogates have advantages compared to TPRFs in being able to match the properties of a real fuel and that the surrogate approach is consistent with RCM data and engine results.  相似文献   

5.
Experimental and numerical studies are carried out to construct reliable surrogates that can reproduce aspects of combustion of JP-8 and Jet-A. Surrogate fuels are defined as mixtures of few hydrocarbon compounds with combustion characteristics similar to those of commercial fuels. The combustion characteristics considered here are extinction and autoignition in laminar non premixed flows. The “reference” fuels used as components for the surrogates of jet fuels are n-decane, n-dodecane, methylcyclohexane, toluene, and o-xylene. Three surrogates are constructed by mixing these components in proportions to their chemical types found in jet fuels. Experiments are conducted in the counterflow system. The fuels tested are the components of the surrogates, the surrogates, and the jet fuels. A fuel stream made up of a mixture of fuel vapors and nitrogen is injected into a mixing layer from one duct of a counterflow burner. Air is injected from the other duct into the same mixing layer. The strain rate at extinction is measured as a function of the mass fraction of fuel in the fuel stream. The temperature of the air at autoignition is measured as a function of the strain rate at a fixed value of the mass fraction of fuel in the fuel stream. The measured values of the critical conditions of extinction and autoignition for the surrogates show that they are slightly more reactive than the jet fuels. Numerical calculations are carried out using a semi-detailed chemical-kinetic mechanism. The calculated values of the critical conditions of extinction and autoignition for the reference fuels and for the surrogates are found to agree well with experimental data. Sensitivity analysis is used to highlight key elementary reactions that influence the critical conditions of autoignition of an alkane fuel and an aromatic fuel.  相似文献   

6.
The demand for petroleum-derived gasoline in the transportation sector is on the rise. For better knowledge of gasoline combustion in practical combustion systems, this study presents experimental measurements and numerical prediction of autoignition temperatures and extinction limits of six FACE (fuels for advanced combustion engines) gasoline fuels in counterflow flames. Extinction limits were measured at atmospheric pressures while the experiments for autoignition temperatures were carried out at atmospheric and high pressures. For atmospheric pressure experiment, the fuel stream consists of the pre-vaporized fuel diluted with nitrogen, while a condensed fuel configuration is used for ignition experiment at higher chamber pressures. The oxidizer stream is pure air. Autoignition temperatures of the tested fuels are nearly the same at atmospheric pressure, while a huge difference is observed as the pressure is increased. Unlike the ignition temperatures at atmospheric pressures, minor difference exists in the extinction limits of the tested fuels. Simulations were carried out using a recently developed gasoline surrogate model. Both multi-component and n-heptane/isooctane mixtures were used as surrogates for the simulations. Overall, the n-heptane/isooctane surrogate mixtures are consistently more reactive as compared the multi-component surrogate mixtures. Transport weighted enthalpy and radical index analysis was used to explain the differences in extinction strain rates for the various fuels.  相似文献   

7.
The complex nature of multicomponent aviation fuels presents a daunting task for accurately simulating combustion behavior without incurring impractical computational costs. To reduce computation time, chemical fuel surrogates comprised of only a few species are used to emulate the combustion of complex pre-vaporized fuels. These surrogates are often unable to match the vaporization behavior and physical properties of the real fuel and fail to capture the effect of preferential vaporization on combustion behavior. Therefore, a computationally efficient, hybrid droplet vaporization-chemical surrogate approach has been developed which emulates both the physical and chemical properties of a multicomponent kerosene fuel. The droplet vaporization/physical portion of the hybrid uses the Coupled Algebraic–Direct Quadrature Method of Moments with delumping to accurately solve for the evolution of every discrete species in a vaporizing fuel droplet with the computational efficiency of a continuous thermodynamic model. The chemical surrogate portion of the hybrid is linked to the vaporization model using a functional group matching method, which creates an instantaneous surrogate composition to match the distribution of chemical functional groups (CH2, (CH2)n, CH3 and Benzyl-type) in the vaporization flux of the full fuel. The result is a hybrid method which can accurately and efficiently predict time-dependent, distillation-resolved combustion property targets of the vaporizing fuel and can be used to investigate the effects of preferential vaporization on combustion behavior.  相似文献   

8.
An alternative way to formulate transportation fuel surrogates using model predictions of gas-phase combustion targets is explored and compared to conventional approaches. Given a selection of individual fuel components, a multi-component chemical mechanism describing their oxidation kinetics, and a database of experimental measurements for key combustion quantities such as ignition delay times and laminar burning velocities, the optimal fractional amount of each fuel is determined as the one yielding the smallest error between experiments and model predictions. Using a previously studied three-component jet fuel surrogate containing n-dodecane, methyl-cyclohexane, and m-xylene as a case study, this article investigates in a systematic manner how the surrogate composition affects model predictions for ignition delay time and laminar burning velocities over a wide range of temperature, pressure and stoichiometry conditions, and compares the results to existing surrogate formulation techniques, providing new insights on how to define surrogates for simulation purposes. Finally, an optimisation algorithm is described to accelerate the identification of optimal surrogate compositions in this context.  相似文献   

9.
Spray, ignition and combustion characteristics of biodiesel fuels were investigated under a simulated diesel-engine condition (885 K, 4 MPa) in a constant volume combustion vessel. Two biodiesel fuels originated from palm oil and used cooking oil were used while JIS#2 used as the base fuel. Spray images were taken by a high speed video camera by using Mie-scattering method to measure liquid phase penetration and liquid length. An image intensifier combined with OH filter was used to obtain OH radical image near 313 nm. Ignition and combustion characteristics were studied by OH radical images. Biodiesel fuels give appreciably longer liquid lengths and shorter ignition delays. At low injection pressure (100 MPa), biodiesel fuels give shorter lift-off lengths than those of diesel. While at high injection pressure (200 MPa), the lift-off length of biodiesel fuel originated palm oil gives the shortest value and that of biodiesel from used cooking oil gives the longest one. Air entrainment upstream of lift-off length of three fuels was estimated and compared to soot formation distance. This study reveals that the viscosity and ignition quality of biodiesel fuel have great influences on jet flame structure and soot formation tendency.  相似文献   

10.
Robust surrogate formulation for gasoline fuels is challenging, especially in mimicking auto-ignition behavior observed under advanced combustion strategies including boosted spark-ignition and advanced compression ignition. This work experimentally quantifies the auto-ignition behavior of bi- and multi-component surrogates formulated to represent a mid-octane (Anti-Knock Index 91.5), full boiling-range, research grade gasoline (Fuels for Advanced Combustion Engines, FACE-F). A twin-piston rapid compression machine is used to achieve temperature and pressure conditions representative of in-cylinder engine operation. Changes in low- and intermediate-temperature behavior, including first-stage and main ignition times, are quantified for the surrogates and compared to the gasoline. This study identifies significant discrepancies in the first-stage ignition behavior, the influence of pressure for the bi- to ternary blends, and highlights that better agreement is achieved with multi-component surrogates, particularly at lower temperature regimes. A recently-updated detailed kinetic model for gasoline surrogates is also used to simulate the measurements. Sensitivity analysis is employed to interpret the kinetic pathways responsible for reactivity trends in each gasoline surrogate.  相似文献   

11.
Knowledge of the autoignition characteristics of diesel fuels is of great importance for understanding the combustion performance in engines and developing surrogate fuels. Here ignition delays of China's stage 6 diesel, a commercial fuel, were measured in a heated rapid compression machine (RCM) under engine-relevant conditions. Gas-phase autoignition experiments were carried out at equivalence ratios ranging from 0.37 to 1.0, under compressed pressures of 10, 15, and 20?bar, and within a temperature range of 685–865?K. In all investigated conditions, negative temperature coefficient (NTC) behavior of the total ignition delays is observed. The autoignition of the diesel fuel exhibits pronounced two-stage characteristics with strong low-temperature reactivity. Experimental results indicate that the total ignition delays shorten with increasing compressed pressure, oxygen mole fraction and fuel mole fraction. The first-stage ignition delays are mainly controlled by compressed temperature and also affected by oxygen mole fraction and compressed pressure but show a very weak dependence on fuel mole fraction. Correlations describing the first-stage ignition delay and the total ignition delay were proposed to further clarify the ignition delay dependence on the multiple factors. Additionally, it is found that the newly measured ignition delays well coincide with and complement the diesel ignition data in the literature. A recently developed diesel mechanism was used to simulate the diesel autoignition on the RCM. The simulation results are found to agree well the experimental measurements over the whole temperature ranges. Species concentration analysis and brute force sensitivity analysis were also conducted to identify the crucial species and reactions controlling the autoignition of the diesel fuel.  相似文献   

12.
Shock tube ignition delay times were measured for DF-2 diesel/21% O2/argon mixtures at pressures from 2.3 to 8.0 atm, equivalence ratios from 0.3 to 1.35, and temperatures from 900 to 1300 K using a new experimental flow facility, an aerosol shock tube. The aerosol shock tube combines conventional shock tube methodology with aerosol loading of fuel-oxidizer mixtures. Significant efforts have been made to ensure that the aerosol mixtures were spatially uniform, that the incident shock wave was well-behaved, and that the post-shock conditions and mixture fractions were accurately determined. The nebulizer-generated, narrow, micron-sized aerosol size distribution permitted rapid evaporation of the fuel mixture and enabled separation of the diesel fuel evaporation and diffusion processes that occurred behind the incident shock wave from the chemical ignition processes that occurred behind the higher temperature and pressure reflected shock wave. This rapid evaporation technique enables the study of a wide range of low-vapor-pressure practical fuels and fuel surrogates without the complication of fuel cracking that can occur with heated experimental facilities. These diesel ignition delay measurements extend the temperature and pressure range of earlier flow reactor studies, provide evidence for NTC behavior in diesel fuel ignition delay times at lower temperatures, and provide an accurate data base for the development and comparison of kinetic mechanisms for diesel fuel and surrogate mixtures. Representative comparisons with several single-component diesel surrogate models are also given.  相似文献   

13.
Fuel surrogates are mixtures of simple compounds that emulate the combustion characteristics of more complex fuels, with the primary objective to enable detailed combustion modeling of very complex real fuels. Current efforts in surrogate development aim at optimizing the compositions of pure hydrocarbons to emulate multiple combustion related properties. In doing so, weights are assigned when defining optimization problem to reflect the importance of each property. In this study, we report on the relative importance of species selection and their weights on the overall performance of the optimized surrogate. Using experimental data of a reference jet fuel as target, we designed a study using a surrogate optimizer that imposes orthogonal perturbations on the surrogate components and weights and analyzed their impact on the optimized surrogate mixtures. Results from 3600 cases show that perturbations of surrogate components, rather than weights, induce far greater variability in the optimized composition and target property agreement. While the Derived Cetane Number (DCN) agreement shows a greater variability from the weight perturbation, the main reason for such high sensitivity is due to the wide range of values for pure component DCN of the individual components, which is also a result of the surrogate component selection. Further, the results show that the selection of surrogate components nearly predefines the overall shape of the distillation curves regardless of the weight values. The current study quantitatively supports the idea that appropriate selection of surrogate components that capture the physical and chemical characteristics of actual constituents of target fuel will increase the possibility of successful surrogate formulation and will mitigate the impact from arbitrary weight assignment.  相似文献   

14.
An experimental and kinetic modeling study is carried out to characterize combustion of low molecular weight esters in nonpremixed, nonuniform flows. An improved understanding of the combustion characteristics of low molecular weight esters will provide insights on combustion of high molecular weight esters and biodiesel. The fuels tested are methyl butanoate, methyl crotonate, ethyl propionate, biodiesel, and diesel. Two types of configuration – the condensed fuel configuration and the prevaporized fuel configuration – are employed. The condensed fuel configuration is particularly useful for studies on those liquid fuels that have high boiling points, for example biodiesel and diesel, where prevaporization, without thermal breakdown of the fuel, is difficult to achieve. In the condensed fuel configuration, an oxidizer, made up of a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen, flows over the vaporizing surface of a pool of liquid fuel. A stagnation-point boundary layer flow is established over the surface of the liquid pool. The flame is stabilized in the boundary layer. In the prevaporized fuel configuration, the flame is established in the mixing layer formed between two streams. One stream is a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen and the other is a mixture of prevaporized fuel and nitrogen. Critical conditions of extinction and ignition are measured. The results show that the critical conditions of extinction of diesel and biodiesel are nearly the same. Experimental data show that in general flames burning the esters are more difficult to extinguish in comparison to those for biodiesel. At the same value of a characteristic flow time, the ignition temperature for biodiesel is lower than that for diesel. The ignition temperatures for biodiesel are lower than those for the methyl esters tested here. Critical conditions of extinction and ignition for methyl butanoate were calculated using a detailed chemical kinetic mechanism. The results agreed well with the experimental data. The asymptotic structure of a methyl butanoate flame is found to be similar to that for many hydrocarbon flames. This will facilitate analytical modeling, of structures of ester flames, using rate-ratio asymptotic techniques, developed previously for hydrocarbon flames.  相似文献   

15.
With the aim of utilizing JP-8 fuel for small scale portable power generation systems, catalytic combustion of JP-8 is studied. The surface ignition, extinction and autothermal combustion of JP-8, of a six-component surrogate fuel mixture, and the individual components of the surrogate fuel over a Pt/γ-Al2O3 catalyst are experimentally investigated in a packed bed flow reactor. The surrogate mixture exhibits similar ignition–extinction behavior and autothermal temperatures compared to JP-8 suggesting the possibility of using this surrogate mixture for detailed kinetics of catalytic combustion of JP-8. It is shown that JP-8 ignites at low temperatures in the presence of catalyst. Upon ignition, catalytic combustion of JP-8 and the surrogate mixture is self-sustained and robust combustion is observed under fuel lean as well as fuel rich conditions. It is shown that the ignition temperature of the hydrocarbon fuels increases with increasing equivalence ratio. Extinction is observed under fuel lean conditions, whereas sustained combustion was also observed for fuel rich conditions. The effect of dilution in the air flow on the catalytic ignition and autothermal temperatures of the fuel mixture is also investigated by adding helium to the air stream while keeping the flow rate and the equivalence ratio constant. The autothermal temperature decreases linearly as the amount of dilution in the flow is increased, whereas the ignition temperature shows no dependence on the dilution level under the range of our conditions, showing that ignition is dependent only on the type and relative concentration of the active species.  相似文献   

16.
One of the major concerns in combustion engines is the sensitivity of engine performance to fuel properties. Recent works have shown that even slight differences in fuel properties can cause significant changes in performance and emission of an engine. In order to design the combustion engines with multi-fuel flexibilities, the precise assessment of fuel sensitivity on liquid jet atomization process is a prerequisite since the resulting fuel/air mixture is critical to the subsequent combustion process. The present study is focusing on the effect of physical fuel properties, mostly viscosity difference, on the breakup process of the liquid jet injected into still air. Two different jet fuels, CAT-A2 and CAT-C3, are considered here as surrogates for a fossil-based fuel and a bio-derived high-viscosity alternative fuel. The simulations are performed using the volume-of-fluid (VoF) interface tracking method coupled to Lagrangian particle method in order to capture the breakup instabilities of jets and the resulting droplets. The investigations take the actual geometry of the injector into account to resolve the unsteady flow phenomena inside the nozzle that impact the turbulence transition and atomization. The simulation results are compared to the experimental measurement using X-ray radiography. Both simulation and X-ray measurements consistently describe the effects of different fuels on the fundamental properties of atomization including the breakup length, transverse liquid volume fraction and the droplet sauter-mean-diameter. The application of a Detailed Numerical Simulation approach complemented by unique X-ray diagnostics is novel and providing new understanding and research directions in engine spray dynamics.  相似文献   

17.
Experimental and numerical studies are carried out to construct surrogates that can reproduce selected aspects of combustion of gasoline in non premixed flows. Experiments are carried out employing the counterflow configuration. Critical conditions of extinction and autoignition are measured. The fuels tested are n-heptane, iso-octane, methylcyclohexane, toluene, three surrogates made up of these components, called surrogate A, surrogate B, and surrogate C, two commercial gasoline with octane numbers (ON) of 87 and 91, and two mixtures of the primary reference fuels, n-heptane and iso-octane, called PRF 87 and PRF 91. The combustion characteristics of the commercial gasolines, ON 87 and ON 91, are found to be nearly the same. Surrogate A and surrogate C are found to reproduce critical conditions of extinction and autoignition of gasoline: surrogate C is slightly better than surrogate A. Numerical calculations are carried out using a semi-detailed chemical-kinetic mechanism. The calculated values of the critical conditions of extinction and autoignition of the components of the surrogates agree well with experimental data. The octane numbers of the mixtures PRF 87 and PRF 91 are the same as those for the gasoline tested here. Experimental and numerical studies show that the critical conditions of extinction and autoignition for these fuels are not the same as those for gasoline. This confirms the need to include at least aromatic compounds in the surrogate mixtures. The present study shows that the semi-detailed chemical-kinetic mechanism developed here is able to predict key aspects of combustion of gasoline in non premixed flows, although further kinetic work is needed to improve the combustion chemistry of aromatic species, in particular toluene.  相似文献   

18.
本文通过在柴油中添加小比例二甲氧基甲烷(DMM)以及纳米氧化铝(Al2O3)颗粒研究一台小型农用柴油机的燃烧与排放特性。研究表明,随着柴油中DMM添加比例的增大,发动机燃烧特性参数如缸内压力、燃烧放热率及制动热效率得到明显地提升,着火延迟期以及CA50逐渐减小;排放方面HC和NOx增加,而CO和碳烟得到有效地抑制。燃油中同时添加DMM和纳米Al2O3颗粒后,发动机燃烧及排放方面得到了不同程度地优化。因此,将DMM与纳米颗粒的有机结合可为代用燃料在农用发动机中的推广应用提供新的思路。  相似文献   

19.
Fast and reliable high altitude re-ignition is a critical requirement for the development of alternative jet fuels (AJFs). To achieve stable combustion, a spark kernel needs to transit in a partially or fully extinguished flow to develop a flame front. Understanding the relight characteristics of the AJFs is complicated by the chaoticity of the turbulent flow and variations in the spark properties. The focus of this study is the prediction of such characteristics by high-fidelity simulations, with a specific focus on fuel composition effect on the ignition process. For this purpose, a previously developed computational framework is applied, which utilizes high-fidelity LES simulations, a hybrid tabulation approach for modeling forced ignition and detailed quantification of uncertainty resulting from initial and boundary conditions to predict ignition probability. The method is applied to two alternative fuels (named C1 and C5) and Jet-A fuel (named A2) under gaseous conditions. Results show that the mixing of kernel and fuel–air mixture is not affected by the ignition process, but chemistry effects strongly dominate ignition probability. In particular, C1 exhibits much lower ignition probability than the other two fuels, especially at lean operating conditions. More importantly, this behavior is contradictory to ignition delay experiments which predict longer delay times for C5 compared to C1. Comparisons with experiments show that the comprehensive modeling approach captures the ignition trends. Analysis of kernel trajectories in composition space shows that the variations are caused by the relative effects of kernel mixing, response to strain, and ignition properties of the fuel.  相似文献   

20.
Real biodiesel fuels are mixtures comprising many high molecular weight components, making it a challenge to predict their combustion chemistry with detailed kinetic models. Our group previously proposed a functional-group approach (FGMech) to model the combustion chemistry of real gasoline and jet fuels; this approach has now been extended to model real biodiesel combustion and mixtures with petroleum fuels. As in our previous work, a decoupling philosophy is adopted for construction of the model. A lumped reaction mechanism describes the (oxidative) pyrolysis of fuels, while a detailed base chemistry model represents the oxidation of key pyrolysis intermediates. However, due to the presence of the ester group, several oxygenated species are identified as additional primary products and incorporated into the lumped reaction steps. In addition to the lumped reactions initiated by unimolecular decomposition and H-atom abstraction reactions, a lumped H-atom addition-elimination reaction is also incorporated as a new reaction class to account for the presence of double bonds. Stoichiometric parameters are obtained based on a multiple linear regression (MLR) model, which establishes relationships between the fuel's functional group distributions and the stoichiometric parameters of the lumped reactions. Global rate constants are developed from consistent rate rules obtained from pure fuels. New pyrolysis experimental data for methyl pentanoate/methyl nonanoate and methyl heptanoate/n-heptane mixtures (50%/50% in mol) are obtained in a jet-stirred reactor at atmospheric pressure. In general, kinetic models developed using the FGMech approach can reasonably reproduce all the validation targets obtained in this work, as well as those in the literature, confirming that functional-group-modeling is a promising approach to simulate combustion behavior of diesel/biodiesel surrogate fuels and real biodiesels.  相似文献   

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