Flameless combustion of wood: charring and heat release characteristics

2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 30-41
Author(s):  
E. Yu. Kruglov ◽  
R. M. Aseeva

Introduction. The article presents the results of a research on the two stages of thermal decomposition of timber. The first stage of thermal decomposition is flame combustion, which is followed by a transition to flameless combustion due to the formation of a char layer on the surface of wood. The flameless process is accompanied not only by heterogeneous combustion, but, at least, three reactions: pyrolysis, thermal oxidative destruction of wood and oxidation of resulting coke.Goals and objectives. The goal is to identify the criteria of charring and heat release under the influence of an external radiative heat flux on samples of coniferous and deciduous species of wood using a standard flowthrough calorimeter with a focus on flameless combustion. Methods. A standard OSU flow-through calorimeter, produced by Atlas (USA), was used to identify heat release characteristics under the influence of external radiative heat fluxes that had the density of 20, 35 and 52 kW/m2. The lower limit of heat, released in the complete combustion of samples, that had a char layer, was identified using bomb calorimeter C-5000.Results. The co-authors analyzed the charring process and characteristics of heat release using samples of wood species that were 10 and 25 cm thick. Wood samples were exposed to combustion under the influence of an external radiative heat flux that had the density of 20, 35 and 52 kW/m2 subsequent to the results of tests, conducted using the OSU calorimeter. The co-authors evaluated the charring velocity and the coke layer thickness for the cases of flame and flameless combustion; efficient combustion heat release and the combustion completeness coefficient, as well as the sample shrinkage. The co-authors demonstrated that a transition from flame combustion to heterogeneous combustion occurs upon completion of the quasi-neutral burning of wood samples, which corresponds to the final point of heat release velocity curves and marks a transition from the behaviour of a thermally thick material to that of a thermally thin material.Conclusion. The obtained experimental data allow to forecast a change in the physical and heat engineering properties, characteristics of heat release in the processes of flame and flameless combustion of different wood species with account taken of the char layer formed on its surface under the influence of various heat fluxes.

2011 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroyuki Sunahara ◽  
Takahiro Ishihara ◽  
Ken Matsuyama ◽  
Shin’ichi Sugahara ◽  
Masahiro Morita

2010 ◽  
Vol 75 (658) ◽  
pp. 1009-1017
Author(s):  
Hiroyuki SUNAHARA ◽  
Takahiro ISHIHARA ◽  
Ken MATSUYAMA ◽  
Shin'ichi SUGAHARA ◽  
Masahiro MORITA

Author(s):  
T. E. Magin ◽  
L. Caillault ◽  
A. Bourdon ◽  
C. O. Laux

2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Proulx ◽  
Daniel R. Rousse ◽  
Rodolphe Vaillon ◽  
Jean-François Sacadura

Abstract This article presents selected results of a study comparing two procedures for the treatment of collimated irradiation impinging on one boundary of a participating one-dimensional plane-parallel medium. These procedures are implemented in a CVFEM used to calculate the radiative heat flux and source. Both isotropically and anisotropically scattering media are considered. The results presented show that both procedures provide results in good agreement with those obtained using a Monte Carlo method, when the collimated beam impinges normally.


Author(s):  
Thomas Vega ◽  
Rachel A. Wasson ◽  
Brian Y. Lattimer ◽  
Thomas E. Diller

Author(s):  
David L. Damm ◽  
Andrei G. Fedorov

Thermo-mechanical failure of components in planar-type solid oxide fuel cells (SOFCs) depends strongly on the local temperature gradients at the interfaces of different materials. Therefore, it is of paramount importance to accurately predict the temperature fields within the stack, especially near the interfaces. Because of elevated operating temperatures (of the order of 1000 K or even higher), radiation heat transfer could become a dominant mode of heat transfer in the SOFCs. In this study, we extend our recent work on radiative effects in solid oxide fuel cells (Journal of Power Sources, Vol. 124, No. 2, pp. 453–458) by accounting for the spectral dependence of the radiative properties of the electrolyte material. The measurements of spectral radiative properties of the polycrystalline yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) electrolyte we performed indicate that an optically thin approximation can be used for treatment of radiative heat transfer. To this end, the Schuster-Schwartzchild two-flux approximation is used to solve the radiative transfer equation (RTE) for the spectral radiative heat flux, which is then integrated over the entire spectrum using an N-band approximation to obtain the total heat flux due to thermal radiation. The divergence of the total radiative heat flux is then incorporated as a heat sink into a 3-D thermo-fluid model of a SOFC through the user-defined function utility in the commercial FLUENT CFD software. The results of sample calculations are reported and compared against the baseline cases when no radiation effects are included and when the spectrally gray approximation is used for treatment of radiative heat transfer.


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