Abstract

Numerical and experimental results of studying the formation of carbon clusters due to propagation of deflagration and detonation waves in enriched acetylene-oxygen and acetylene-air mixtures are described. Experiments are performed in tubes of different diameters (including tubes filled by a porous medium) with wide-range variations of the initial pressure and the fuel-to-oxidizer ratio. A large variety of carbon clusters formed in different regimes of burning of the mixture is found. A typical size of condensed carbon particles is 15–100 nm. In the case of detonation in a porous medium, the size of carbon particles is 15–45 nm; in some tests, large individual fullerene-type particles 150, 400, and 950 nm in size are formed. The fraction of condensed carbon in the total amount of carbon in the initial mixture is found to depend on the wave type; detonation is characterized by the minimum “yield” of condensed carbon. The amount of condensed carbon increases with increasing acetylene concentration in the mixture and initial pressure. The size of carbon particles in the case of deflagration is greater than that in the case of detonation. Cooling of reaction products decelerates condensation and interrupts the growth of carbon particles.

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