LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Experimental and numerical study of laminar flame speeds of CH4/NH3 mixtures under oxy-fuel combustion

Photo from wikipedia

Abstract The laminar flame speeds of CH4/NH3 mixtures during oxy-fuel combustion conditions were measured under variable NH3/CH4 ratios (0.1–0.2), O2 mole fractions (35%–40%), and CO2 mole fractions (45%–65%) in a… Click to show full abstract

Abstract The laminar flame speeds of CH4/NH3 mixtures during oxy-fuel combustion conditions were measured under variable NH3/CH4 ratios (0.1–0.2), O2 mole fractions (35%–40%), and CO2 mole fractions (45%–65%) in a counterflow flame configuration (set at atmospheric pressure and unburnt mixture temperature (Tu = 300 K)). These experimental results were compared to the numerical results obtained through three detailed chemical kinetic mechanisms: the Okafor, Mendiara and HUST (Huazhong University of Science and Technology) mechanisms. The comparisons showed that the results obtained through the HUST Mechanism were in good agreement with the experimental results. The experimental results showed that the laminar flame speeds increased linearly with decreasing CO2 or increasing O2 concentrations under the conditions considered, while the slopes were irrelevant for the equivalence ratio. Nevertheless, the effects of NH3 concentration depended on the equivalence ratio: the sensitivity and pathway analyses of NH3 oxidation revealed that, among the N-containing reactions in the fuel-lean region, NO oxidation and reduction (NO + HO2 = NO2+OH, NH2+NO = NNH + OH, NO2+H = NO + OH, and CH3+NO2 = CH3O + NO) had the largest impact on the laminar flame speeds. In stoichiometric region, the NO reduction pathway (NH2+NO = N2+H2O, NH2+NO = NNH + OH, NH + NO = N2O + H, and NH + NO = N2+OH) greatly contributed to flame propagation. In fuel-rich region, N + NO = N2+O and N + OH = NO + H had the biggest impact over laminar flame speeds.

Keywords: speeds ch4; ch4 nh3; flame speeds; laminar flame; flame

Journal Title: Energy
Year Published: 2019

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.