Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
11000310 | Combustion and Flame | 2018 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Soot formation characteristics of ethene, propene, and 1-butene, the most abundant unsaturated intermediates in thermal decomposition of paraffinic hydrocarbons, were investigated in laminar diffusion flames stabilized on a co-flow burner installed in a high-pressure combustion chamber with optical access. All three olefins were diluted with nitrogen to produce sooting but non-smoking diffusion flames at desired pressures. Pressure range was 1-2.5 bar with 1-butene, and 1-8 bar with propene and ethene. Upper pressure limits of 1-butene and propene were established by their respective vapour pressure characteristics. The spectral soot emission technique, in which radiation emitted by the soot within the flame was collected as line-of-sight intensity and spectrally resolved over the range 690-945Â nm, was used to measure radially-resolved temperature and soot volume fraction. The carbon mass flow rates of the three fuels were kept constant at 0.505Â mg/s to facilitate direct comparison among the fuels at elevated pressures. With the same dilution level, the sooting propensity increased from ethene to 1-butene as expected; however, the pressure sensitivity of propene and 1-butene differed significantly from that of ethene. Soot yields in both propene and 1-butene flames showed a much weaker dependence on pressure than the soot in ethene flames. In the decomposition of propene and 1-butene, allyl radical and 1,3-butadiene are known to form in critical quantities leading to formation of higher molecular growth species specifically six-membered ring aromatics, and presence of these simple aromatics is argued to play a role in lowering the pressure sensitivity of the soot in C3 and C4 olefin flames.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Elizabeth A. Griffin, Ãmer L. Gülder,