4.7 Article

Effects of high pressure, high temperature and dilution on laminar burning velocities and Markstein lengths of iso-octane/air mixtures

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 159, Issue 11, Pages 3286-3299

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2012.06.008

Keywords

Iso-octane/air mixture; Nitrogen dilution; Oxygen enrichment; Laminar burning velocity; Markstein length

Funding

  1. European Union
  2. European Regional Development Fund
  3. ICAM-DAC project from the French National Research Agency (ANR), VTT program [ANR-10-VP17-0002]

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Spherically expanding flames are employed to measure flame velocities, from which are derived the corresponding laminar burning velocities at zero stretch rate. Iso-octane/air mixtures at initial temperatures between 323 and 473 K, and pressures between 1 and 10 bar, are studied over an extensive range of equivalence ratios, using a high-speed shadowgraph system. Effects of dilution are investigated with nitrogen and for several dilution percentages (from 5 to 25 vol% N-2). Over 270 experimental values have been obtained, providing an exhaustive data base for iso-octane/air combustion. Experimental results are in excellent agreement with recently published experimental data. An explicit correlation giving the laminar burning velocity from the initial pressure, the initial temperature, the dilution rate, and the equivalence ratio is finally proposed. Computed results using the two kinetic schemes and the Cantera code are compared to the present measurements. It is found that the mechanisms yield substantially higher values of laminar flame velocities than the present experimental results. Effects of oxygen enrichment are also investigated. A linear trend relating the percentage of oxygen in air and the unstretched laminar burning velocity is observed. Effects of high pressure, high temperature, and high dilution rate on Markstein lengths are also studied. As already done for the laminar burning velocity, an empirical correlation is proposed to describe the Markstein length for burned gases as a function of initial temperature and pressure, for equivalence ratios between 0.9 and 1.1, which has never been done before in the literature. (c) 2012 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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