4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Ignition of hydrogen in unsteady nonpremixed flows

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMBUSTION INSTITUTE
Volume 30, Issue -, Pages 423-430

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.proci.2004.08.254

Keywords

transient; unsteady; strain; ignition; hydrogen

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The effects of unsteady strain on hydrogen (H-2) ignition in nonpremixed flows are investigated with both experimental measurements and numerical computations. A mixing layer is established in a counter-flow configuration with a fuel stream containing N-2-diluted H-2 (X-H2 = 0.08) flowing against heated air. A reproducible ignition process is initiated by introducing atomic oxygen into the mixing layer with a pulsed ArF excimer laser, which photodissociates heated O-2 from the oxidizer stream. The temporal evolution of OH during ignition is measured by planar laser-induced fluorescence. Following the induction phase, the measured OH mole fraction increases rapidly to a super-equilibrium value that is 60% greater than the OH mole fraction in a steady diffusion flame. The peak OH mole fraction occurs at approximately 6 ms after the excimer laser pulse. To study the OH time history under transient strain, the fuel stream is pulsed at a fixed time after the initiation of ignition. The response of the ignition kernel is extremely sensitive to the time delay of the flow transient. The unsteady strain can delay the ignition time or extinguish the kernel. Comparisons between computations and experiments are made for the evolution of OH during autoignition both for steady and unsteady strain. For both steady and unsteady strain, the transient one-dimensional counterflow computations show excellent agreement with the experiment in terms of predicting ignition delays and the rate of OH accumulation during the induction period. The computations also capture the super-equilibrium OH during the transition to the formation of a steady flame, although not to the degree observed experimentally. The computations are further used to understand the influence of unsteady strain on the kernel evolution. It is found that the degree of super-equilibrium OH is sensitive to strain transients applied close to the time of thermal runaway. (c) 2004 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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