Abstract

The aim of this work is to develop and discuss a lumped kinetic model to simulate the pyrolysis and combustion behavior of methyl decanoate. Validation of the lumped kinetic model of methyl decanoate in a very wide range of conditions, with temperature ranging from 500 to more than 2000K, pressures up to 16bar and equivalent ratios from lean to pyrolysis conditions, proved that, despite the drastic simplifications, the model can properly reproduce the experimental measurements in pyrolysis as well as in an oxidation environment, in both the low temperature regime and in flame conditions. This model is an extension of the lumped model of methyl butanoate developed and discussed in the first part of this work [1]. Thus, the lumped kinetic model of methyl butanoate and methyl decanoate is also quite simply applied to simulating the combustion behavior of intermediate methyl esters, by using the lever rule between the two reference components. The overall agreement with experimental measurements is very encouraging and lays the basis for the extension to the lumped kinetic scheme to soy and rapeseed biodiesel fuels.

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