4.7 Article

Chemical kinetic modeling of diethoxymethane oxidation: A carbon-neutral fuel

Journal

FUEL
Volume 291, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2021.120217

Keywords

Carbon neutral fuels; Diethoxymethane oxidation; Mechanism development; Chemical kinetics; Fuel reactivity

Funding

  1. Innovate UK (The Technology Strategy Board, TSB) [400176/149]
  2. Engineering AMP
  3. Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/P03117X/1]
  4. University of Birmingham [1871018]
  5. EPSRC [EP/P03117X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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A detailed chemical kinetic mechanism for the oxidation of diethoxymethane (DEM) has been developed and validated, showing a good agreement between experimental and computed results. DEM is found to be more reactive at low temperatures compared to n-heptane, without exhibiting negative temperature coefficient behavior. Due to inadequate temperature increases and active radical accumulation, DEM may not be an efficient chemical ignition source as compared to n-heptane.
Diethoxymethane (DEM) is a carbon-neutral fuel with high cetane number (57.3). A detailed chemical kinetic mechanism for DEM oxidation covering low and high temperature reactions is first developed in this work. The reaction scheme and rate rules of DEM sub-mechanism are determined by the analogy method to n-heptane. Aramco 3.0 mechanism is used as a base mechanism to consider C0-C4 fuels while dimethoxymethane mechanism is included to ensure the mechanism compatibility and rate rule consistency. Thermodynamic and transport properties of new species in DEM sub-mechanism are computed by the methods of group additivity and properties correlation. The mechanism is validated against ignition delay times and premixed laminar flame speed measured by shock tube, rapid compression machine and spherical flame in combustion vessel. The verification covers a pressure range of 2-30 bar, an equivalence ratio range of 0.5-2.0, a temperature range of 540-1371 K. A satisfactory agreement between the experimental and computed results is observed, supporting the proposed reaction scheme and rate rules. Comparison of the ignition delay times between DEM and n-heptane indicates: (i) DEM is more reactive at low temperature (500-670 K) than n-heptane which favors low temperature combustion mode. (ii) DEM ignition delay times demonstrate monotonous temperature dependence at the full temperature regime but it is relatively independent of temperature at intermediate temperature (620-960 K). Therefore, a negative temperature coefficient (NTC) behavior is not observed in most conditions. (iii) DEM may not be an efficient chemical ignition source compared to n-heptane due to insufficient temperature increases and active radical accumulation.

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