scholarly journals Flame Temperature of Laminar Premixed Flame with Wrinkling Flame Surface.

2001 ◽  
Vol 67 (664) ◽  
pp. 3189-3195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeshi YOKOMORI ◽  
Masahiko MIZOMOTO
2013 ◽  
Vol 444-445 ◽  
pp. 1574-1578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hua Hua Xiao ◽  
Zhan Li Mao ◽  
Wei Guang An ◽  
Qing Song Wang ◽  
Jin Hua Sun

A numerical study of premixed propane/air flame propagation in a closed duct is presented. A dynamically thickened flame (TF) method is applied to model the premixed combustion. The reaction of propane in air is taken into account using a single-step global Arrhenius kinetics. It is shown that the premixed flame undergoes four stages of dynamics in the propagation. The formation of tulip flame phenomenon is observed. The pressure during the combustion process grows exponentially at the finger-shape flame stage and then slows down until the formation of tulip shape. After tulip formation the pressure increases quickly again with the increase of the flame surface area. The vortex motion behind the flame front advects the flame into tulip shape. The study indicates that the TF model is quite reliable for the investigation of premixed propane/air flame propagation.


2013 ◽  
Vol 750-752 ◽  
pp. 1734-1737
Author(s):  
Jun Xia Zhang ◽  
Bing Biao Yang

Many combustion processes seriously pollute the environment because of producing nitrogen oxides emission, which abstracts wide attention from researchers. How to reduce nitrogen oxides emission is important to protect the environment. At the present work, a reduction mechanism based on a detailed chemical reaction kinetics mechanism, Gri_Mech3.0 was adopted to analyze nitrogen oxides formation in a CH4/air laminar premixed and turbulent diffusion flames, a two dimensional turbulent diffusion flame was simulated with the EDC model. Parameters were obtained, including flame temperature, burning velocity and mass fraction of nitrogen oxides. The results of laminar premixed flame show that nitrogen oxides emission mainly comes from the thermal and prompt NO mechanisms. A large amount of free radicals O, H and OH produced by combustion processes provide reactants for the reactions of nitrogen oxides formation. Mole fraction of nitrogen oxides increases with the increasing of both flame temperature and chemical equivalence ratios. By contrast, there is a lower mass fraction of nitrogen oxides formation for the fuel-lean flame.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 (0) ◽  
pp. G0700305
Author(s):  
Ryo SHINYA ◽  
Kenta KONO ◽  
Takuro KOTO ◽  
Takuya IISHI ◽  
Shota TANAKA ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
M. Bianco ◽  
S. M. Camporeale ◽  
B. Fortunato

Evaporative cycles, such as Recuperated Water lnjected (RWI) cycle, Humid Air Turbine (HAT) cycle, Cascaded Humidified Advanced Turbine (CHAT) offer the attractive possibility to increase plant efficiency without the use of a steam turbine, necessary for gas-steam combined cycles, appearing, therefore, as an interesting solution for industrial power applications such as electric utilities and independent power producers. It is expected that water addition may contribute to reduce NOx emissions in premixed flame combustors. In order to analyse this solution, a lean-bum combustor, fed with an homogeneous mixture formed by methane and humid air, has been analysed through CFD simulations, in order to predict velocity field, temperatures and emissions. The study has been carried out under the hypothesis of a two-dimensional, axisymmetric combustion chamber assuming, as set of operation conditions, atmospheric pressure, inlet temperature of 650 K, fuel-air equivalence ratio of the methane-air mixture ranging from 0.5 to 0.7 and water-air mass ratio varying from 0% to 5%. In the simulation, the presence of turbulence in the flow has been taken into account using a RNG k-ε model, whilst the chemical behaviour of the system has been described by means of a five-step global reduced mechanism including the oxidation mechanism and the NOx formation mechanism. The analysis of the results shows that the moisture in the premixed flow reduces both NOx and CO emissions at constant equivalence ratio; moreover the lean blow-out limit is shifted toward higher equivalence ratio. The main effect of the water seems to be the increase of the specific heat the mixture which causes a reduction in flame temperature, slowing the chemical reactions responsible of NOx formation. The reasonable agreement has been found between the simulation results concerning NOx emissions and recent experimental results carried out on premixed flamed with humid air. A discussion is also provided about the adopted turbulence models and their influence on the emission results.


RSC Advances ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (43) ◽  
pp. 34272-34280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenhua Xie ◽  
Zhongqing Yang ◽  
Li Zhang ◽  
Chuncheng Liu

By means of numerical simulation, this paper presents the effects of non-catalytic surface reactions on flame temperature distribution and radical distribution within a 2D micro planar channel.


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