Abstract

Soot is an important component for heat transfer in combustion processes. However, it is also a harmful pollutant for humans, and strict emissions legislation motivates research on how to control soot formation and release. The formation of soot is known to be triggered by high temperature and high pressure during combustion, and it is also strongly influenced by the local stoichiometry. The current study investigates how the formation of soot is affected by increasing the oxygen concentration in the oxidizer, since this affects both the temperature profile and partial pressures of reactants. The oxygen-to-fuel ratio is kept constant, i.e., the total flow rate of the oxidizer decreases with increasing oxygen concentration. Propane is combusted (80 kWth) while applying oxygen-enriched air, and in-flame measurements of the temperature and gas concentrations are performed and combined with available soot measurements. The results show that increasing the oxygen concentration in the oxidizer from 21% to 27% slightly increases soot formation, due to higher temperatures or the lower momentum of the oxidizer. At 30% oxygen, however, soot formation increases by orders of magnitude. Detailed reaction modeling is performed and the increase in soot formation is captured by the model. Both the soot inception rates and surface growth rates are significantly increased by the changes in combustion conditions, with the increase in soot inception being the most important. Under atmospheric conditions, there is a distinct threshold for soot formation at around 1200 °C for equivalence ratios >3. The increase in temperature, and the slower mixing that results from the lower momentum of the oxidizer, have the potential to push the combustion conditions over this threshold when the oxygen concentration is increased.

Highlights

  • Emissions of soot from combustion processes in engines, boilers, and other industrial processes can have hazardous effects on human health and are detrimental for the environment [1,2,3,4]

  • Several studies have investigated oxygen-enriched combustion for co-flowing diffusion flames experimentally [18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33], and many have noted a significant increase in soot formation when the oxygen content in the oxidizer was increased

  • air with 32% O2 (Air-32)-Fit used the predictability for soot formation

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Summary

Introduction

Emissions of soot from combustion processes in engines, boilers, and other industrial processes can have hazardous effects on human health and are detrimental for the environment [1,2,3,4]. Oxygen enrichment, which may be used to increase the peak-flame temperature, decrease flue gas losses, or reduce equipment size, is applied in some industrial applications (e.g., glass manufacturing and aluminum recycling) and in oxy-fuel combustion for carbon capture. Several studies have investigated oxygen-enriched combustion for co-flowing diffusion flames experimentally [18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33], and many have noted a significant increase in soot formation when the oxygen content in the oxidizer was increased (due to higher temperatures and reaction rates). The gas analysis system used paramagnetism (O2), non-dispersive ultraviolet sensors

Methodology
Interpretation of Experimental Results
Oxidizer is
Sensitivity Analysis and Φ-T Maps
Results & Discussion
In-flame
Photographs
Interpretation of Results for Air-21 and Air-32 Cases
Results for andinducing
17. Profiles of the mass not concentrati
Sensitivity Analysis
Temperature and Injection Profiles
Pressure Dependence
Conclusions

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