Abstract
Combustible gases, dusts and their mixtures are widely present in human production and life,and the fire and explosion disasters caused by them pose a serious threat to the field of energy security applications. Studying the ignition process of mixtures is essential for disaster risk assessment and safety protection. In this work, the explosion characteristics and OH* emission spectra of the mixtures were experimentally tested by varying the fuel equivalence ratio ( ER ≈ 0.79 ~ 1.71), and the evolution of the transient flow field structure during the ignition process was quantitatively analyzed using the schlieren image velocimetry method. The results indicate that the emission spectrum of OH* is closely correlated with the maximum explosion pressure, and the spectral intensity of OH* at 306.4nm is consistent with the maximum rate of explosion pressure rise. The flow field during the ignition process of the mixtures shows that a small amount of coal dust (concentration≤30g/m3) can significantly promote flame acceleration and instability as the methane concentration is in lean combustion or stoichiometric ratio. However, when the concentration of coal dust increases (concentration≥40g/m3), coal dust will suppress flame acceleration and instability. For methane concentration in fuel-rich combustion state, coal dust always suppresses flame acceleration and instability. The experimental results contribute to a further understanding of gas and coal dust mixed explosions and provide a verification database for the construction of chemical kinetic mechanisms.
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