4.7 Article

Measurement of the laminar burning velocity and kinetics study of the importance of the hydrogen recovery mechanism of ammonia/hydrogen/air premixed flames

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 236, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2021.111753

Keywords

Ammonia; Chemical kinetic; Hydrogen; Laminar burning velocity; Markstein length; Reaction mechanism

Funding

  1. Technical University of Munich(Technische Universitat Munchen)
  2. German Institute of Science and Technology Pte Ltd (GIST) - TUM Asia
  3. German Academic Exchange Service (Deutscher Akademischer Austauchdienst, DAAD) through the TUM Asia scholarship
  4. TUM Asia - DAAD Scholarship (Winter Semester 2018/2019)
  5. TUM Asia - DAAD Scholarship (Summer Semester 2019/2020)

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The study focuses on the chemical kinetics of NH3/H-2/air flames at rich conditions and elevated pressures, validating a new detailed kinetics mechanism that accurately predicts flame speed.
The application of ammonia (NH3) blended with hydrogen (H-2) as a fuel in combustion systems is a practical approach to decarbonise the energy sector, and the combustion of the fuel at rich conditions is relevant in emissions control through rich-lean combustion. However, the chemistry of rich NH3/H-2 flames at high pressure, and the interaction between NH3 and H-2 still need to be clarified. Therefore, the present study focuses on the chemical kinetics of NH3/H-2/air flames at rich conditions and elevated pressures. To validate chemical kinetics in the literature, the laminar burning velocity of NH3/H-2/Air premixed flames were measured at 0.1 and 0.5 MPa and equivalence ratios up to 1.8. The results show that the seven kinetics mechanisms studied could not satisfactorily predict the measurements at fuel-rich conditions and elevated pressure. The kinetics mechanism by Han et al. was optimized, leading to a new detailed kinetics, which can be reduced to 26 species and 119 reactions and satisfactorily predicts the present measurements and those in the literature. Analysis of the chemistry of NH3/H-2 flames using the new mechanism shows NH3 and H-2 kinetics are strongly coupled through a H-2 decomposition/recovery mechanism, here named H-2 recovery mechanism, which is important in modelling the burning velocity of the flame at fuel-rich conditions. The burned gas Markstein length was also extracted from the measured flame speed and its behaviour was studied using theoretical correlations. (C) 2021 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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