4.7 Article

Effects of controlled non-equilibrium excitation on H2/O2/He ignition using a hybrid repetitive nanosecond and DC discharge

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 206, Issue -, Pages 522-535

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2019.05.027

Keywords

Controlled non-equilibrium excitation; Ignition enhancement; Kinetic modeling; Uncertainty analysis; Hybrid nanosecond and DC discharge

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21676024]
  2. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [3182029]
  3. DOE-NEIL research grant [DE-FE0026825]
  4. Exxon Mobil research grant

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The present work reports on the effects of controlled non-equilibrium excitation of reactant molecules on low temperature H-2/O-2/He ignition by numerically modeling a hybrid repetitive nanosecond (NSD) and DC discharge at atmospheric pressure. At first, a detailed plasma-combustion kinetic model of H-2/O-2/He, including non-equilibrium excitation, is developed and validated by experimental data of a repetitively-pulsed nanosecond discharge. Then, the effects of ignition enhancement by NSD and a hybrid NSD/DC discharge, with controlled electron energy distribution for selective non-equilibrium excitation of vibrationally excited H-2(v) and O-2(v) as well as electronically excited O-2(a(1)Delta(g)) and O(D-1), are compared. The results show that H-2(v1) contributes significantly to the H production and OH consumption in the hybrid plasma discharge. Moreover, O-2(a(1)Delta(g)) and O-2(v1-4) also contribute to the production O and OH. Uncertainty analysis of H-2(v) and O-2(a(1)Delta(g)) elementary reactions on ignition delay time is conducted by using several different kinetic models. The comparison of ignition delay time using different plasma kinetic models indicates the selection of accurate rate constants involving excited species is important for plasma assisted ignition modeling. The results of hybrid discharge assisted H-2/O-2 ignition show that the optimized ignition enhancement is achieved when both excited species and radicals are produced efficiently at an appropriate DC electric field strength. The present modeling provides useful insight into the plasma-combustion model development and the development of controlled plasma discharge to achieve efficient ignition with optimized non-equilibrium excitation of reactants. (C) 2019 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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