4.6 Article

Experimental and kinetic modeling study of sooting atmospheric-pressure cyclohexane flame

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMBUSTION INSTITUTE
Volume 32, Issue -, Pages 585-591

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.proci.2008.06.170

Keywords

Chemical kinetics; Modeling; Cyclohexane; Hexane; Soot

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Experimental data and modelling results of the main products and intermediates from a fuel-rich sooting premixed cyclohexane flame were presented in this work. Model predictions well agree with experimental data both in sooting and non-sooting flames. Major and minor species are properly predicted, together with the soot yield. The initial benzene peak was demonstrated to be due to the fast dehydrogenation reactions of the cycloalkane, which gives rise to cyclohexene and cyclohexadiene both via molecular and radical pathways. Once formed cyclohexadiene quickly forms benzene whereas in the postflame zone, benzene comes from the recombination and addition reactions of small radicals, with C3H3 + C3H3 playing the most important role in these conditions. An earlier soot inception was detected in the cyclohexane flame with respect to a n-hexane flame and this feature is not reproduced by the model that foresees soot formation significant only in the second part of the flame. The model insensitivity of soot to the reactant hydrocarbon was also observed comparing the predictions of three flames of cyclohexanc, 1-hexene and n-hexane with the same temperature profile. A sensitivity analysis revealed that soot primarily conics from the HACA mechanism for the three flames, acetylene being the key species in the nucleation. Experimental data oil soot inception seem to indicate the importance of the early formation of benzene, that depends on the fuel Structure. It is thus important to further investigate the role of benzene and aromatics in order to explain this discrepancy. (c) 2009 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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