Abstract

To use piston engines and their pressure and temperature histories as a chemical rector to produce valuable chemicals, accurate chemical kinetics models are necessary so the engine parameters and mixtures can be designed. Using piston engines in such a way could lead to the production of target chemicals with net-negative CO2 emissions. This benefit is especially true for ethanol, a very common biofuel. To validate models, the dry reforming of ethanol and CO2 was investigated experimentally in a shock tube (50/50 ethanol/CO2 in 99.75% dilution) by following the formation of CO with a laser absorption setup. The effect of the presence of CO2 in the mixture was also investigated by comparing the results of the 50/50 ethanol/CO2 mixture with those from the pyrolysis of ethanol (without CO2) at various concentrations (99.75 and 98% dilution). The 98% dilution results compare extremely well with results from the literature, whereas the other conditions had never been investigated prior. The experimental data were compared to modern detailed kinetics mechanisms, and the experimental CO profiles were poorly predicted overall. Recent literature developments on ethanol pyrolysis were incorporated into the models, and the predictions were improved in some cases and conditions, although further improvements are still necessary. A numerical analysis (rate of production and sensitivity) was performed for the most accurate modified model to highlight the most important reactions involved in the formation of CO under our conditions.

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