Extinction of lean near-limit methane/air flames at elevated pressures under normal- and reduced-gravity


Autoria(s): Zhang H; Fan R; 王双峰; Tian XQ; Xu K; 万士昕; Egolfopoulos FN
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

perimentally at evaluated pressures and under normal- and micro-gravity conditions utilizing the 3.5 s drop tower of the National Microgravity Laboratory of China. The results showed that under micro-gravity conditions the natural convection is minimized and the flames become more planar and symmetric compared to normal gravity. In both normal- and micro-gravity experiments and for a given strain rate and fuel concentration, the flame luminosity was found to enhance as the pressure increases. On the other hand, at a given pressure, the flame luminosity was determined to weaken as the strain rate decreases. At a given strain rate, the fuel concentration at extinction was found to vary non-monotonically with pressure, namely it first increases and subsequently decreases with pressure. The limit fuel concentration peaks around 3 and 4 atm under normal- and micro-gravity, respectively. The extinction limits measured at micro-gravity were in good agreement with predictions obtained through detailed numerical simulations but they are notably lower compared to the data obtained under normal gravity. The simulations confirmed the non-monotonic variation of flammability limits with pressure, in agreement with previous studies. Sensitivity analysis showed that for pressures between one and 5 atm, the near-limit flame response is dominated by the competition between the main branching, H + O2 ? OH + O, and the pressure sensitive termination, H+O2+M? HO2 + M, reaction. However, for pressures greater than 5 atm it was determined that the HO2 kinetics result in further chain branching in a way that is analogous to the third explosion limit of H2/O2 mixtures. 2010 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://dspace.imech.ac.cn/handle/311007/43309

http://www.irgrid.ac.cn/handle/1471x/124691

Idioma(s)

英语

Fonte

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute.2011,33(1):1171–1178

Palavras-Chave #Flame extinction #Flammability limits #Premixed flames #Micro-gravity
Tipo

期刊论文