Abstract

Oil field-associated gas is typically a mixture of light alkanes. To ensure production safety, it is essential to investigate the combustion characteristics and the reaction mechanism of light alkane gas mixtures to uncover the underlying mechanisms of the combustion reaction. This paper investigates the equilibrium gas component concentrations resulting from the reaction of a gas mixture of methane, ethane, and propane at specific ratios through experimental tests. The study's results demonstrate that the equilibrium concentrations of methane, ethane, and propane initially decrease and then increase with the rise of the equivalence ratio under the same initial pressure conditions. In oxygen-poor conditions, the equilibrium concentration ratio of methane gradually increases in proportion to the equilibrium ratio, confirming that ethane and propane are the preferred participants in the reaction. Furthermore, a study of the equilibrium concentration of the critical intermediate product, ethylene, revealed that it does not completely oxidize in the combustion reaction. It can persist under both oxygen-rich and oxygen-poor conditions, with an equilibrium concentration of approximately 0.02%. The findings of this paper can serve as a theoretical supplement to the research on explosive gas combustion and explosions.

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