Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4764387 | Combustion and Flame | 2017 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
The hetero-/homogeneous combustion of fuel-rich H2/O2/N2 mixtures (equivalence ratios Ï = 2.5-6.5) was investigated experimentally and numerically in a platinum-coated channel at pressures p = 1-14Â bar. One-dimensional Raman measurements of major gas-phase species concentrations over the catalyst boundary layer assessed the heterogeneous combustion processes, while planar laser induced fluorescence (LIF) of OH at pressures below â¼5Â bar and of hot-O2 at pressures above â¼5Â bar (wherein OH-LIF was not applicable) determined the onset of homogeneous ignition. Simulations were carried out using a 2-D code with detailed hetero-/homogeneous chemical reaction schemes and transport. Both Raman measurements and numerical simulations attested a transport-limited catalytic conversion of the deficient O2 reactant over the gas-phase induction zones. The agreement between measured and predicted homogeneous ignition distances was better than 12%, thus establishing the aptness of the employed hetero-/homogeneous chemical reaction mechanisms. Analytical homogeneous ignition criteria revealed that the catalytic reaction pathway introduced a scaling factor 1/p to the homogeneous ignition distances. This outcome, in conjunction with the intricate pressure dependence of the gaseous ignition chemistry of hydrogen, yielded shorter homogeneous ignition distances at 14Â bar compared to 1Â bar. The practical implication for gas turbine burners utilizing the catalytic-rich/gaseous-lean combustion concept was that the high operating pressures of such systems promoted the onset of homogeneous ignition within the catalytic module. Sensitivity analysis has finally identified the key catalytic and gaseous reactions affecting homogeneous ignition.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Ran Sui, Et-touhami Es-sebbar, John Mantzaras, Rolf Bombach,