Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6679447 Proceedings of the Combustion Institute 2009 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
The quasi-steady-state approximation (QSSA) has been widely applied for the purposes of chemical kinetic model reduction. Although it is essentially a low-order approximation, it can be shown to lead to significant reductions in the number of fast variables within a mechanism without significant loss of accuracy for model predictions. Due to the couplings between QSSA expressions, the species are commonly solved for using numerical inner iteration techniques. Therefore, although the stiffness of the model system can be reduced, there is a computational overhead in solving the often nonlinear QSSA equations. Greater computational savings can be made where QSS species can be removed from the chemical model via explicit analytical expressions. In many cases these expressions are equivalent to reaction lumping. Where such reaction lumping can be achieved, a reduced mechanism in standard kinetic form can be developed, which contains new lumped reaction rate coefficients, but leads to the removal of QSS species. This paper describes such an approach for mechanisms describing the oxidation of the hydrocarbon fuels n-heptane and cyclohexane, and shows that significant reductions in both species and reactions can be achieved, leading to substantial computational speed-ups. The resulting schemes clearly demonstrate the main atomic flux patterns within the oxidation process. Patterns related to the time-scales of hydrocarbon radical species within alkane oxidation mechanisms are discussed, as well as the potential significance of non-QSS radicals in determining ignition behaviour.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
, , , , ,