Abstract

The combustion of stoichiometric Ethyl-hexyl-nitrate (EHN)-doped n-heptane/oxygen/argon and (EHN)-doped n-heptane/air mixtures, respectively, was investigated in a low-pressure burner with a molecular-beam mass spectrometer and ignition delay-time (τign) measurements were performed in a high-pressure shock tube. The experiments with the low-pressure flame were used for the determination of the flame structure including concentration profiles of reactants, products and important intermediates in the flame. The shock tube experiments provided τign for a temperature range of 690K⩽T⩽1275K at a pressure of 40±2 bar for stoichiometric and lean mixtures under engine relevant conditions. A chemical mechanism for n-heptane/EHN mixtures was developed from an automatically generated mechanism for n-heptane by manually adding reactions to describe the influence of EHN. This mechanism was validated against the shock-tube data for various temperatures, levels of EHN-doping and equivalence ratios by homogeneous reactor calculations.The ignition delay times predicted by the model agree well with the shock tube results for a large range of temperatures, equivalence ratios and EHN concentrations. The influence of EHN onto ignition delay was largest in the low-temperature regime (770–1000K).Numerical analysis suggests that the prevalent reason for the ignition-enhancing effect of EHN is the formation of highly reactive heptyl radicals by thermal decomposition of EHN. Due to this comparatively simple and generic mechanism, EHN is expected to have a similar ignition-enhancing effect also for other hydrocarbon fuels.

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