Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8113649 Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
CH4 and CO2 are the main compounds of biogas, such as landfill, agricultural and sewage gas, after the removal of the trace amounts of organic compounds. For the same equivalence ratio, the presence of CO2 in the fuel feed results in substantial reduction of the laminar flame speed and flammability limits. Several research projects have shown that the decrease in the laminar flame speed of a fuel mixture containing dilution components is caused by the increase in specific heat capacity and the decrease in heat release, flame temperature and thermal diffusivity. The most promising strategies to increase the laminar burning velocity and the flammability limits of biogas are revised and discussed. The thermodynamic conditions under which these properties are determined are analyzed and the work still required for a comprehensive laminar burning velocity and flammability limits determination, at typical ICEs thermodynamic conditions, is addressed. The article provides a brief review of pollutant emissions of ICEs running on biogas and the current and future technological solutions to meet the increasing strict regulation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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