4.6 Article

Experimental and modeling study of laminar burning velocities and nitric oxide formation in premixed ethylene/air flames

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMBUSTION INSTITUTE
Volume 38, Issue 1, Pages 395-404

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.proci.2020.06.062

Keywords

Laminar burning velocity; Nitric oxide; Heat flux method; LIF; Detailed kinetic mechanism

Funding

  1. Swedish Energy Agency through the center for Combustion Science and Technology [KC-CECOST 22538-4]

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Experimental data on adiabatic laminar burning velocities and post-flame NO concentrations for C2H4/air flames were obtained and compared with literature data. The results are crucial for the development and optimization of kinetic models for fuels.
Adiabatic laminar burning velocities and post-flame NO concentrations for flat, non-stretched, premixed C 2 H 4 /air flames were experimentally determined with a heat flux burner of improved design, over equivalence ratios ranging from 0.7 to 2, at atmospheric pressure and initial temperature of 298 K. Recognizing that C 2 H 4 is a main intermediate in high-temperature oxidation pathways of heavy hydrocarbons, these data are essential for the development, validation and optimization of kinetic models for any fuel. The present measurements were then compared with the data available in the literature obtained with different techniques under the same experimental conditions. Regarding burning velocity measurements, the comparison showed considerable scatter among existing stretch-corrected data, which corroborate the necessity for the present adiabatic, non-stretched results. Regarding NO concentrations, an excellent agreement was observed between the present in situ, non-intrusive laser-induced fluorescence measurements and the only dataset available in the literature, determined by the phenol disulfonic acid method. A comparison of experimental and computational results using two contemporary comprehensive, detailed chemical kinetic mechanisms, along with one from the authors presented in this work, was also conducted and discussed. Discrepancies between experiments and model predictions and among models themselves were observed under rich conditions. Notwithstanding, the present updated model showed overall good performances in reproducing both laminar burning velocities and nitric oxide concentrations. Further numerical analyses were performed to identify the main causes of the observed differences. The results showed that the description of the relative importance of reactions involving vinyl and hydrogen cyanide consumption pathways, due to remaining uncertainties, lead to the different model behaviors. (c) 2020 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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