4.7 Article

Applying heat flux method to laminar burning velocity measurements of NH3/CH4/air at elevated pressures and kinetic modeling study

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 236, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2021.111788

Keywords

Ammonia; Methane; High pressure; Laminar burning velocity; Chemical kinetic mechanism

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This study focuses on the combustion of NH3 blended fuels under elevated pressure conditions and proposes a new kinetic mechanism (CEU-NH3-Mech-1.1) based on experimental results. The new mechanism shows good predictability for laminar flame speed, ignition delay time, and species concentration in ammonia oxidation at high temperatures. Additionally, the study reveals the variation of pressure exponent with ammonia content and its role in validating kinetic mechanisms.
Combustion of ammonia (NH3) blended fuels under elevated pressure conditions is critical for adopting this non-carbon fuel in the energy system for decarbonization. In the present work, laminar burning velocities of ammonia/methane(CH4)/air mixtures were measured using the heat-flux method at the pressure from 1 to 5 atm with the mixture equivalence ratios ranging from 0.6 to 1.6 and the mole fraction of NH3 ranging from 0 to 1.0. The relatively completed results obtained at elevated pressures were then used for validating and modifying the kinetic mechanisms (CEU-NH3-Mech 1.0) leading to a new version (CEU-NH3-Mech-1.1). Experimental results of NH3/H-2/air in the present work, NH3/H-2/CO/air mixtures measured on the same setup and reported in our previous works were also considered in the development of the kinetic mechanism. It was found that the CEU-NH3 -Mech-1.1 can predict well the laminar flame speed, ignition delay time and species concentration in the ammonia oxidation at high temperatures for both NH3/CH4/air and NH3/H-2/CO/air mixtures in a wide range of equivalence ratios and elevated pressures, including oxygen-enriched combustion conditions. The present experimental results also show that the value of pressure exponent (beta) varies with the mole fraction of ammonia and behaves differently for the mixtures of ammonia blending into CH4 and H-2 . The kinetic and sensitivity analyses show that the sensitive reactions for beta are weakly correlated to those for the laminar burning velocity, indicating that beta can also work as a potential parameter for validating kinetic mechanisms. Ammonia content in the NH3/CH4/air mixtures determines the pressure exponent variation at over-rich equivalence ratios and reaction pathway variation in the post-flame zone. This work also clarifies the utilization of ammonia containing fuels in rich-lean combustion strategies. (c) 2021 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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