首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Spatially resolved measurements of soot and gaseous precursors in ethylene counterflow diffusion flames up to 32 atm
Authors:Kevin Gleason  Francesco Carbone  Alessandro Gomez
Institution:1. Yale Center for Combustion Studies, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Yale University, 9 Hillhouse Avenue, New Haven, CT 06520-8286, USA;2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Connecticut, 191 Auditorium Road, Unit 3139, Storrs, CT 06269-3139, USA
Abstract:We investigate the effect of pressure on both flame structure and soot formation in nitrogen diluted counterflow diffusion flames of ethylene in the 8–32atm pressure range. Capillary-probe gas sampling is performed to resolve spatially the profiles of gaseous species up to three-ring aromatics by GC/MS analysis and multi-color pyrometry is used to quantify the soot volume fraction and dispersion exponent. Self-similarity of flames is preserved by keeping constant mixture fraction and strain rate, so that profiles of concentrations and temperature, normalized with respect to their peak values, are unaffected by changes in pressure, once the axial coordinate is nondimensionalized with respect to the pressure-dependent diffusion length scale. When conditions are chosen so that the overall soot loading is approximately constant and compatible with the diagnostics, it is found that both the soot volume fraction and the profiles of key aromatics in the high-temperature nucleation region are virtually invariant. For it to happen, a twofold increase in pressure must be compensated by a ~100 K decrease in peak flame temperature and, therefore, in the temperature across the soot forming region. The implication is that from the perspective of the chemical kinetics of soot formation these two actions counterbalance each other. As pressure increases (and temperature decreases) the peak production rate of the high-temperature soot mechanism decreases and, further downstream, towards the particle stagnation plane, a low-temperature soot mechanism sets in, yielding an increase in soot H/C content. This mechanism is enhanced as the pressure is raised, causing a higher overall soot volume production rate in the 16atm flame and, especially, in the 32atm one. The role of C4/C2 species in the formation of C6H6 increases with increasing pressure and dominates over the recombination of propargyl radical at sufficiently high pressures. A comprehensive database is established for soot models at high pressures of relevance to applications.
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
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