Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1731444 Energy 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Analysis of combustion of LPG in a domestic cooking stove with a two-layer porous radiant burner is given.•Results of both numerical and experimental analyses are reported.•Temperature distributions, thermal efficiency and CO emission are analyzed.•Thermal efficiency is high and CO emission is low.•Computed and measured results match well.

This paper deals with numerical and experimental analyses of combustion of LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) (48% n-butane, 25% iso-butane, 23% propane, 4% ethane by mole fraction) in a domestic cooking stove with a two-layer porous radiant burner. The combustion zone consists of SiC matrix with 90% porosity, and the preheating zone is made of 3.0 mm diameter alumina balls. In the numerical study, for the 1-D planar geometry of the burner, the gas and the solid-phase energy equations, continuity equation, species conservation equation and ideal gas equation are simultaneously solved using the finite volume method. The volumetric radiation term appearing in the solid-phase energy equation is also computed using the finite volume method. Numerical results of temperature distributions, flammability limits and pollutant emissions for various equivalence ratios and thermal loads are found to have reasonably a good agreement with the experimental data. Towards improving the thermal performance of the cooking stove, effects of SiC matrix thickness, preheater thickness, solid-phase conductivity and scattering albedo on CO emissions and radiative flux are studied. In addition, following guidelines of the World Health Organization, the most effective burner on the basis of the minimum CO emission and the maximum thermal efficiency is proposed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy (General)
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