Abstract
Present experimental study reports on the effects of CO2 dilution on intrinsic instabilities of non-adiabatic n-butane/air cellular flames on McKenna burner at initial 300 K temperature and 0.1 MPa pressure. The Planar Laser Induced Fluorescence (OH-PLIF and CH2O-PLIF) optical diagnostic technology was utilized to probe the structure of cellular flames. The results show that the cellular flames can be obtained under the conditions with lean, stoichiometric and rich CO2 diluted n-butane/air mixtures. At lean conditions, hydrodynamic instability was dominant and the cellular flames were formed by connected wrinkles. However, at rich conditions, diffusive-thermal instability was dominant and the cellular flames were formed by separated cells. It confirmed that the CO2 dilution can enhance flame instability significantly, as well as the enhanced effect was positive correlation with CO2 dilution ratio. Furthermore, the enhanced effects of flame instability was stronger by CO2 dilution than by N2 dilution. The chemical and thermal effects by CO2 dilution were attributed to enhance flame instability.
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