Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
240985 Proceedings of the Combustion Institute 2005 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

An experimental and numerical study was carried out on the effects of combustible solid particles on the extinction of atmospheric, strained, laminar premixed methane/air, and propane/air flames in normal- and micro-gravity. The study was conducted in the opposed-jet configuration in which single flames were stabilized either below or above the gas stagnation plane by counter-flowing a reacting mixture against ambient-temperature air. Spherical 50-μm glassy-carbon and 32-μm Lycopodium particles were injected from either the mixture or the air sides, and the flame extinction states were experimentally determined. The results provided insight into the effects of fuel type, gas-phase composition, strain rate, gravity, as well as particle type, number density, and injection orientation. The combustible particles could have a negative or positive effect on the gas-phase reactivity, depending on the prevailing strain rate and the orientation of injection. The effect of combustible particles on flame extinction was found to reverse when the orientation of the particle seeding is reversed. Experiments and simulations revealed that particle reactions that are not possible in upstream seeding become possible in downstream seeding due to differences in particle residence times and prevailing temperature fields. The effects of gravity on the particle–gas interactions were identified and explained. Gravity could notably modify the chemical response of reacting particles, which, in turn, affects the extinction behavior of the gas phase.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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