Abstract

ABSTRACT Flame stability and pollutant emission performances of a porous burner fueled with ammonia/hydrogen blend were investigated numerically in this study. In this regard, a 2D solver based on finite volume method was developed in order to simulate reacting flow and heat transfer modes through a porous medium. Combustion characteristics in terms of porous structure, equivalence ratio and fuel component were studied and the pollutant emission trends were discussed. Flame stability limit was observed to be extended with increasing equivalence ratio regardless to ammonia fraction. Results proved that addition of ammonia in the fuel blend reduced the flame stability limits and thermal flame thickness but led to the enhanced NO emission. Increasing equivalence ratio led to a decrease in thermal flame thickness under fuel-lean conditions while it caused that the thickness of flame zone to be increased slightly under fuel-rich conditions. It was found that flame stability limits were extended as the mean pore diameter of the porous medium increased. The maximum amounts of NO concentration were achieved at stoichiometric conditions while, NO emission increased as equivalence ratio increased at fuel-lean conditions and it decreased as equivalence ratio increased at rich combustion regimes.

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