4.6 Article

Ramifications of including non-equilibrium effects for HCO in flame chemistry

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMBUSTION INSTITUTE
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 525-532

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.proci.2016.06.038

Keywords

Chemical kinetics; Prompt dissociation; CH2O; Combustion modeling; Laminar flame speed

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  2. Argonne-Sandia Consortium on High-Pressure Combustion Chemistry (ANL FWP) [59044]
  3. Brown University

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The formation and destruction pathways of the formyl radical (HCO) occupy a pivotal role in the con-version of fuel molecules (and their intermediates) to eventual products CO and CO2, and therefore, HCO has been a prescient indicator for heat release in combustion. In this work, we have characterized the impact of including non-equilibrium effects for HCO, i.e. prompt dissociation of HCO to H + CO, in simulations of laminar flame speeds for archetypal hydrocarbon and oxygenated molecules relevant to combustion. Prompt dissociation probabilities for HCO were systematically applied to all elementary reactions that included this radical (as either a product or reactant) in literature combustion kinetics models. Simulations with the prompt HCO dissociation corrected models predicted a 7-13% increase in laminar flame speeds at 1 atm for the fuels characterized here (CH4, n-C7H16, CH3OH, CH3OCH3) relative to the predictions using the original models. It is evident that simulations of other fuel-air flames at 1 atm will be similarly impacted, suggesting the indispensability of incorporating these non-equilibrium effects for predictive flame modeling. Simulations of higher pressure (10 atm) heptane-air flames predicted a more modest effect (<5%) of incorporating these non-equilibrium effects. Additionally, species profiles in low-pressure (0.03 atm) flames of CH2O and auto-ignition delay simulations (1.4 atm) for CH2O-O-2-Ar mixtures were also impacted to a noticeable extent. Lastly, it is also worth noting that prompt dissociations are a ubiquitous feature of all weakly-bound radicals; the kinetics of many of which (C2H3, C2H5, CH3O, CH2OH, etc.) are central to our current understanding of combustion chemistry. Theory/modeling studies are in progress to address the relevance of prompt dissociations in these weakly-bound radicals to combustion modeling. (C) 2016 by The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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