4.7 Article

Computational and experimental study of the effects of adding dimethyl ether and ethanol to nonpremixed ethylene/air flames

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 156, Issue 6, Pages 1289-1302

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2009.01.020

Keywords

Ethylene flames; Dimethyl ether; Ethanol; Oxygenated hydrocarbons; Benzene; Axisymmetric laminar flames

Funding

  1. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys
  2. Directorate For Engineering [0756303] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Two sets of axisymmetric laminar coflow flames, each consisting of ethylene/air nonpremixed flames with various amounts (Up to 10%) of either dimethyl ether (CH3-O-CH3) or ethanol (CH3-CH2-OH) added to the fuel stream, have been examined both computationally and experimentally. Computationally, the local rectangular refinement method, which incorporates Newton's method, is used to solve the fully coupled nonlinear conservation equations on solution-adaptive grids for each flame in two spatial dimensions. The numerical model includes C-6 chemical kinetic mechanisms with up to 59 species, detailed transport, and an optically thin radiation submodel. Experimentally, thermocouples are used to measure gas temperatures, and mass spectrometry is used to determine concentrations of over 35 species along the flame centerline. Computational results are examined throughout each flame, and validation of the model Occurs through comparison with centerline measurements. Very good agreement is observed for temperature, major species, and several minor species. As the level of additive is increased, temperatures, some major species (CO2, C2H2), flame lengths, and residence times are essentially unchanged. However, peak centerline concentrations of benzene (C6H6) increase, and this increase is largest when dimethyl ether is the additive. Computational and experimental results support the hypothesis that the dominant pathway to C6H6 formation begins with the oxygenates decomposing into methyl radical (CH3), which combines with C-2 species to form propargyl (C3H3), Which reacts with itself to form C6H6 (C) 2009 The combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All Rights reserved.

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