Abstract

A chemical reaction mechanism has been developed for modeling the combustion process and polyaromatic hydrocarbon formation of diesel and n-heptane/toluene fuels. A reduced n-heptane/polyaromatic hydrocarbon mechanism was applied and updated to better predict the formation of polyaromatic hydrocarbon up to four rings (A4) in ethylene and n-heptane premixed flames. In addition, a reduced toluene mechanism was updated and combined with the n-heptane/polyaromatic hydrocarbon mechanism to predict the combustion and polyaromatic hydrocarbon formation of diesel and n-heptane/toluene fuels. The final mechanism consists of 71 species and 360 reactions. This mechanism was validated with experimental ignition delay data in shock tubes, premixed flame species concentration profiles, homogeneous charge compression ignition combustion and direct injection spray combustion data. A practical multistep soot model was integrated with the polyaromatic hydrocarbon kinetic model to predict soot emissions of diesel and n-heptane/toluene direct injection engine data. Constant-volume combustion vessel simulations were also conducted and the effects of combustion parameters, such as temperature and equivalence ratio, together with the n-heptane/toluene ratio on polyaromatic hydrocarbon and soot formation are discussed. The results show that the present mechanism provides promising agreement in terms of polyaromatic hydrocarbon prediction for various fuels in premixed flames and highlights the importance of aromatics on the polyaromatic hydrocarbon formation and soot emissions. Homogeneous charge compression ignition combustion and direct injection spray combustion simulation results confirm that the present mechanism gives reliable predictions of combustion and soot emissions for both diesel and n-heptane/toluene fuels under various conditions.

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